Bruce Springsteen: 'Here we lived in the shadow of the steeple', Tony Awards performance - 2018

11 June 2018, Radio City Music Hall, New York City, USA

I grew up on Randolph Street with my sister Virginia, she was a year younger than me, my parents Adele and Douglas, my grandparents Fred and Alice, and my dog Saddle. We lived spitting distance from the catholic church, the priest's rectory, the nuns' convent, the Saint Rose Of Lima Grammar School, all of it just a football's toss away across the field of wild grass. I literally grew up surrounded by God. Surrounded by God and, and all my relatives. We had cousins, aunts, uncles, grandmas, grandpas, great grandmas, great grandpas, all of us were jammed in five little houses on two adjoining streets. And when the church bells rang, the whole clan would hustle up the street to stand witness to very wedding and every funeral that arrived like a stale occasion in our neighborhood. We also had front row seats to watch the towns when in their Sunday suits carry out an endless array of dark wooden boxes to be slipped in the rear of the Friedman's Funeral Home long black Cadillac for the short ride to Saint Rose cemetery hill on the edge of town. And there all our catholic neighbors, all Zirillis, and the McNicholases, and all the Springsteens who came before, they patiently waited for us. Now when it rains in Freehold, when it rains, the moisture in the humid air blankets the whole town with the smell of moist coffee grounds wafting in from the Nescafe plant on the town's eastern edge. You know, I never cared for coffee, but I loved that smell. It was comforting, it united our town just like our clanging road mill in a common sensory experience. It was a place here, you could hear it, you could smell it. A place where people made lives, where they danced, enjoyed small pleasures, where they played baseball, and where they suffered pain and had their hearts broken. Where they made love, had their kids, where they died, and where they drank themselves drunk on spring nights. And did their very best, the best that they could to hold off the demons outside and inside that sought to destroy them, their homes, their families, their town. Here we lived in the shadow of the steeple, crookedly blessed in God's good mercy one and all, in the heart stopping, pants dropping, race rioting, fricating, soul shaking, redneck, love and fear making, heartbreaking town of Freehold, New Jersey.

I was eight years old running with a dime in my hand
Into the bus stop to pick up a paper for my old man
I'd sit on his lap in that big old Buick, steer as we drove through town
He'd tousle my hair and say son take a good look around
This is your hometown
It's your hometown
Your hometown
This is your hometown
This is your hometown

Source: https://www.facebook.com/TonyAwardsCBS/vid...