A long life less ordinary
Newport Beach resident Monaca Green had a birthday party on
Wednesday, but this wasn’t any old birthday celebration -- she turned
100.
Green’s parents came to America as immigrants, and she grew up in
New York when it wasn’t as bustling a metropolis as it is now. She is
very stylish and has a painting of Marilyn Monroe in her room. She
enjoys playing Scrabble and speaking with former New Yorkers, like
the Daily Pilot’s Doug Zimmerman. She enjoyed her time in New York,
but loves being out in Southern California.
The centenarian sat down with the Pilot’s Luis Pena this week and
talked about her life.
To what do you owe to your longevity?
The answer is hard drinking and smoking. You’re laughing. You
didn’t expect that?
Where did you grow up, and what kind of place was it?
I was born in New York City, and I’m very happy that I was. When I
hear people say that they’re annoyed, it’s too busy, and so forth,
I’ll say, ‘You don’t really know it.’ It wasn’t as bustling then as
now, but it was home, and we liked it. You had everything there --
all the finest theaters. When I was older, you had art shows,
museums, best schools. I went to city college. It was for poor
people; there was no charge. I got a job as a bookkeeper, then I
later was employed by investment firms. And I stayed with that. I
liked figures.
What kind of childhood did you have?
My parents were immigrants, and to them America was just a place
to be realized. The first thing my parents did individually before
they married was they learned to speak and write English. My father
came from Russia, and my mother from Austria-Hungary. We weren’t
wealthy, but my father had a great idea that [for] his girls, nothing
was too good for them on their birthday. He’d go out, buy one large
orange for her birthday rather than get a dozen little ones. Or a big
apple. If I had money, I’d buy the biggest something else. So, we
always treasured that. We went to museums a great deal. They were
free of charge. We were very poor. A birthday never went by without
having a beautiful birthday party and cakes and so forth. [My mom]
had a cousin who was a seamstress, and so the seamstress made dresses
for us, and in return, my mother made cakes for the seamstress. It
worked out well. I had some pretty dresses that she made.
How did you end up in Newport-Mesa?
My daughter came to California for special reasons. Her husband
died, and they had a baby of 10 months old. And my husband and I took
care of the baby, and then my daughter came to California to live.
And then my husband died, so I came out to California to be with my
daughter, and I never went back, probably 30 years ago.
What are your greatest accomplishments in life?
I’m proud of my daughter. She is a registered nurse. Well, when
you have children, you’ll know that you’re proud of them, that they
don’t have to be anything special. They’re your children, and they do
well, and they’re good students, and they’ve done some good deeds, so
you’re proud of children.
If you could re-do one moment or incident in your life, what would
it be?
I wish I could re-do my relationships with my family. I would have
treated them better than I did and so forth. I have a guilt complex.
One of my sisters had no children, and my daughter had her children,
had grandchildren and so forth. And I never made a to-do about
sending pictures to her.
What profession other than yours would you like to have tried?
I would have liked to have been a marvelous musician and played at
Carnegie Hall. I would have liked that. We had a piano, but I didn’t
have much talent. My other sisters did. We lived in a tall house that
was rather narrow. The piano could not be carried through the halls,
so it was pulled up on ropes outside the window. We were the first
family with a piano.
What’s the greatest lesson you learned in your life?
It’s a big answer. The family lived out of town, the sisters. Two
of them had no other children, and I really should have shared my
grandchildren with them. I really regret that. Be good to your family
and cherish them.
What do you treasure most?
I thought I would cherish my money, and I was lucky, and I really
did save enough, and now I can’t use it, and now I can’t spend it.
So, spending money wisely when you can enjoy it, and travel.
How did the 1929 Stock Market Crash and the ensuing Depression
affect you?
We got married during the Depression, and my husband was an
architect, and he lost his job immediately, but I worked, so I
supported him. That was a sad time in my life because we had just
gotten married and every Saturday we’d go down and have lunch. At 5th
Avenue, there was a shop where they would set up rooms of furniture,
and to me, this was so elegant, and I’d love to see every month or
so. It was changed, and I’d go down and I would pick out a thing or
two and say, ‘I’d like this,’ and so forth, and probably buy it
elsewhere. We married during the Depression years, which was a stupid
thing to do. He lost his job, and I had to carry on, but I never
minded it. He later built a very beautiful house for it. It was in
the suburbs in the Rockaways. You can’t help it. There were so many
people who were homeless. It was a very bad time. There were
businesspeople selling apples on the corners. That was true. That was
not an exaggeration.
How did World War II affect you?
My husband was very patriotic. He joined the army. We had a child
then, but he said, do I mind if he goes, and I knew that he wanted
to, so he went, then the war was over in a short time. And I recall
he didn’t stay overseas. He stayed at a very posh hotel in the
southern states. And they treated them so well. He said he had eight
steaks that were 3 inches thick, and he felt guilty that he ate it
knowing that we couldn’t buy meat here.
Do you have any advice on relationships?
A girl that likes you doesn’t look at how much money you have.
It’s the personality and the work you do. You don’t have to look for
wealth. It will come later. If there is love in the family, that’s
worth all the wealth.
What would you like people to always remember about you?
I’d like to feel basically that I was a good person. I never
harmed anyone, I never cheated anyone, and I helped friends where I
could.
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