22. December 2008 at 00:00

Paul Newman’s roots were in Humenné

PAUL Newman, the legendary American actor who died on September 26, was born in Shaker Heights, Ohio, but his mother – whose birth name was Terézia Fecková – was born in the Slovak town of Humenné. The actor’s grandmother is buried there and some of his relatives still live there, the Pravda daily wrote.

Blue-eyed boy: Paul Newman had roots in Humenné. Blue-eyed boy: Paul Newman had roots in Humenné. (source: SITA)
Font size: A - | A +

PAUL Newman, the legendary American actor who died on September 26, was born in Shaker Heights, Ohio, but his mother – whose birth name was Terézia Fecková – was born in the Slovak town of Humenné. The actor’s grandmother is buried there and some of his relatives still live there, the Pravda daily wrote.

SkryťTurn off ads
SkryťTurn off ads
Article continues after video advertisement
SkryťTurn off ads
Article continues after video advertisement

“His Slovak relatives ‘met’ [Newman, through his films] in 1965 for the first time,” Slovak film historian Richard Blech said. “By then, Newman’s film Sweet Bird of Youth had been shown in Humenné.”
Newman never personally visited the town, but knew he had roots in this part of Europe.

According to Blech, Newman mentioned his heritage to U.S. journalists who were surprised when he referred to Czechoslovak President Václav Havel as “Dear Václav” during his visit to the USA in the early 1990s.

Terézia Fecková followed her father to the USA at the turn of the 20th century, when she was still a small child. Her mother and grandmother had already died. Her father married in the USA, as did she – twice. Her first marriage ended in divorce, but the second endured. Her second husband was a furrier named Newman, with whom she had two sons. The older one was named Arthur and the younger one was Paul.
Both sons served in the Pacific during the Second World War. When they returned home in 1946, their mother wrote excited letters to her family in Slovakia. She also sent a family photo, on which she wrote text in the eastern-Slovak dialect.

SkryťTurn off ads

“She also sent home Paul’s army uniform,” Blech added. “Her sister then re-sewed it into a suit, but the unstitched emblem on the uniform’s sleeve remained preserved.”

SkryťClose ad