Author Fannie Flagg releases sequel to ‘Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Café’

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Photo courtesy of Andrew Southam.

Photo courtesy of Andrew Southam.

In 1987, actor, entertainer and writer Fannie Flagg first introduced us to Idgie, Evelyn, Ninny and the other inhabitants of the fictional and oh-so-Southern Whistle Stop, Alabama.

The best-selling book was “Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Café,” and its pawned a cookbook and a hit movie starring Kathy Bates, Jessica Tandy and Mary Stuart Masterson.

It also spent 36 weeks on The New York Times bestseller list and was praised by Southern literary giants Harper Lee and Eudora Welty.

Flagg based the Whistle Stop Cafe on the long-popular Irondale Cafe, bringing the eatery worldwide renown.

It’s as a writer that Flagg has found her greatest success, with books including “The All-Girl Filling Station’s Last Reunion,” “A Redbird Christmas,” “Can’t Wait to Get to Heaven,” “The Whole Town’s Talking,” “I Still Dream About You,” “Standing in the Rainbow,” “Welcome to the World, Baby Girl!” and “Fannie Flagg’s Original Whistle-Stop Café Cookbook.”

Now, 33 years after her first book, Flagg, who grew up in Woodlawn and still calls Alabama home, is revisiting Whistle Stop in a big way.

A sequel, “The Wonder Boy of Whistle Stop,” came out in the fall, and an NBC series based on the original book, starring country superstar Reba McEntire, is in the works.

“It all happened at once,” Flagg said from her home in Montecito, California. “I didn’t plan this at all. It never occurred to me.”

Flagg grew up in Birmingham, working with Town and Gown Theatre and on Tom York’s popular “Morning Show” TV program on WBRC-TV.

She came to national prominence working with Allen Funt on “Candid Camera” and was a constant game-show guest in the 1970s.

Flagg is best known for her appearances on the game show “Match Game,” normally occupying the lower right-hand seat next to regular panelist Richard Dawson.

In addition to her multiple game show appearances, Flagg has been a guest on many talk shows over the years, including those hosted by Joey Bishop, Dick Cavett, Merv Griffin, Johnny Cash, Dinah Shore and Rosie O’Donnell.

Flagg appeared on Broadway in “The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas” and “Patio/Porch” and had small roles in such movies as “Five Easy Pieces,” “Stay Hungry,” “Grease” and “Crazy in Alabama.”

Her most well-known book, though, is “Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Café,” which tells the story of Idgie and Ruth, owners of the small-town Alabama cafe; Evelyn Couch, a middle-aged housewife; and Ninny Threadgoode, an elderly woman in a nursing home.

“The Wonder Boy of Whistle Stop” focuses on Buddy Jr., Ruth’s son, who lost an arm in an accident.

“He winds up in a retirement home in Atlanta, and he wants to go home, so he escapes from the nursing home,” Flagg said. “The town of Whistle Stop is closed down and he can’t find it, but he reconnects with Evelyn Couch and they bring the town back.”

For Flagg, revisiting Whistle Stop was welcome, particularly in 2020.

“The world is so depressing right now, so it was a real pleasure for me to get away and go back to a time like this,” she said. “It was a real escape for me. There are so many political books out there, so much angry stuff out there, and I just said I’m going to write a book that’s not about politics. It’s just the story of happy people, has a happy ending and is positive.”

Flagg is an executive producer of the proposed NBC series, which she said is “somewhat of a sequel.”

“It’s about the original Idgie’s niece, who is named Idgie, and she comes back to the café,” Flagg said. “I really wasn’t interested in doing it, but I had lunch with Reba, and she’s just so adorable. If there’s anybody in the world I’d want to play her, it would be Reba. She’s so positive and so up.”

The series is on hold because of the pandemic, which has kept Flagg in California, mostly at her Montecito home.

“I have been really sequestered because I have underlying health things and am of a certain age where I’ve got to be careful,” she said. “The hardest thing about this COVID for me is that I usually get to come home to Alabama two or three times a year, and I haven’t been able to get back. So it was kind of fun for me to go back in my mind to Alabama and visit, because I couldn’t do it in real time.”

She also can’t do her normal book tour, which would take her to Birmingham, Fairhope and other Alabama cities for signings.

However, she has done some virtual events in recent months via Zoom. This included events with Books-A-Million in October and Fairhope’s independent book shop Page & Palette in November.

For the past five or 10 years, Flagg has always thought her new book would be her last, and this one is no exception.

“I think if I do anything else, I’ll do short stories,” she said. “A novel is just getting harder and harder to write.”

And if “The Wonder Boy of Whistle Stop” is her last novel, it’s fine with her.

“Alabama is my home, always has been and always will be,” she said. “If it’s my last book, I’m glad it’s set back home.”

This story was edited by Village Living.

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