A love for Newport life
- Share via
Ron Winship has had an eventful 62 years, from working on Apollo
rockets to running for the Newport Beach City Council.
During his early years, Winship moved in and out of the
Newport-Mesa area, but he always came back and decided to stay for
good after his tour of duty in the Army ended.
The Pilot’s Luis Pena recently sat down with the longtime Newport
Beach resident, who co-owns Parker-Longbow productions along with his
wife, Anna Winship.
Where did you grow up? What kind of childhood did you have?
I was born in Santa Monica, California, then we moved to Culver
City, then to the San Fernando Valley, and my early years were in
Sunland, until 1952, when we moved to Lido Isle in Newport Beach. We
were in Lido Isle until about ‘55, and then my dad had to move, so we
moved up in Fullerton, and I went to four years of school in
Fullerton for high school. Then my parents moved back down to Corona
del Mar and Cameo Shores in 1959, and I went off to USC.
What kind of childhood did you have?
We had a dog named King. We had a swimming pool, a pool table, a
ping-pong table and a badminton court. We lived on an acre of land
basically in Fullerton. My first car was a ’44 Ford business coupe
with an engine I built myself and customized. It was midnight blue
and it would go from zero to 60 in about four seconds, and that was
the limit on how fast it would go. My childhood was one where I was
lucky enough, although I had gone to so many schools. We moved many
times before high school, but I was able to stay in one school for
all four years in high school and as a result, I became pretty
involved in school activities. I was the campus DJ. I was on the
debate team. I went to all the school dances, did all the stuff that
kids do -- went to all the drive-ins and the movie theaters. Failed
miserably at dating when I was in high school
How did you end up in Newport-Mesa?
That’s a long story. When I went off to USC, I was there about a
year, then I failed miserably, and then I came home. I went off to
Hawaii and surfed for a year, and when I came back I loved Newport
Beach so much that I decided to stay in Newport Beach for while. And
everybody else that I knew was off to Tahoe or Aspen or all those
places in the mid-’60s. So, I stuck out here and then I got involved
in the aerospace industry. I was already involved in the aerospace
industry and I worked at North American in Seal Beach. I lived for a
short period of time at Sunset Beach, but moved back to Newport as
soon as I could. This was just the place to be in the ‘60s. There
wasn’t a better place probably on the planet than Newport Beach
during the ‘60s. There were more girls from all over the country,
there were more fast cars and surfing that I liked doing, so there
wasn’t a better place to go.
What happened is that, in the aerospace industry, I wound up going
on these missions. I wound up going to Mississippi to work on the
second stage of the Apollo rocket, and then I went off to Huntsville,
Ala., to work on the Apollo rocket, then I went to Cape Kennedy and
wound up moving to Cape Kennedy from the late part of ’65 until ’67.
Then I got drafted in the Army.
When I got out of the Army, I had a choice of going back into the
aerospace industry. My two choices were either Houston or in
Cleveland, Ohio. I decided that I would rather stay in Newport Beach,
because even though I enjoyed Florida, I really hated it compared to
California. I really loved California much more. So when I got back
here to California after I had served my time in the Army, there
wasn’t a better place that I thought wanted to go. But as soon as I
got back from the Army, I went on a trip with Don Burns and his
captain on a boat called the Tempest, which was a big 72-foot
motorboat, and he needed to take that from Newport Beach to St. Croix
Virgin Islands. So, I took a boat trip for a year and a half and went
on that. When I came back, I worked on boats here in Newport Beach
for a while. After I did all those boats, I decided that I was tired
of the Navy and I thought I’d try to go back and actually get a real
job. That didn’t work out too well and I wound up in the restaurant
business. There were two things that you could do in California in
Newport Beach, particularly back about 1970. You’d either go into
real estate or you’d go into the restaurant business. So, in 1971, I
went into the restaurant business. All these stories all circle back
to why I live in Newport Beach: because that’s where I wanted to
live; there wasn’t another place that I wanted to live, so I had to
find work that I wanted to work in that was available to me so I
could remain in Newport Beach.
What are your greatest accomplishments?
Marrying my wife would be my first great accomplishment, finding
her would be my second greatest accomplishment. Why, because it’s
very difficult to find someone that you respect and that you care
about to the point where you’re willing to listen to them on all
things, and it’s one of those rare occurrences that happens. It’s
something where the person has to be much smarter than you are. Women
have to be a lot smarter than men are, and then for them to like you
is a difficult situation. It’s one of those things that are very hard
to find -- that perfect combination where you kind of agree on all
the mundane affairs of state where the big issues of life come to
calling that you can work together to solve those.
If you could re-do one moment or incident in your life, what would
it be?
In 1977, my mom passed away. If I had to do it all over again, I
would have done a lot more research into the medical issues that were
involved and I would have gotten much more involved in her treatment
and what happened to her, because she passed away in 1977 of bone
cancer. I always felt guilty about the fact that I didn’t put enough
effort into not listening to anybody, but just going out and finding
out for myself what the issues were and perhaps I could have saved
her.... Who knows.
What profession other than yours would you like to have tried?
FBI agent. That was always a childhood dream of mine, that I
always wanted to become an agent in the FBI. That was always a dream
that I always had. That and becoming an airline pilot, but I
determined that the boredom and the tedium would get to me eventually
and I’d be more inclined to find a lot of investigation.
Investigation has always been what I really enjoy doing -- finding
out things. I think to do something bigger than just work to make
money -- it would be more fun to solve important cases to correct
things that could happen that might have gone wrong.
What are some differences between a typical day in your life now
versus a day in your life 20 years ago?
A lot more freedom now. When you’re in your own business, you have
to set your priorities more functionally so you can see what you want
to do. There’s just a heck of a lot more freedom to go after issues
that you want to go after than when you’re working for somebody else.
So 20 years ago, I had to do what a lot of people told me to do now
-- I’m doing less of that.
What is the greatest lesson you’ve learned in your life?
I think it’s that you don’t have control over everything. I always
thought that I could control just about anything that came into my
eye line, and it’s one of those things where you only attempt. If you
can focus on what you want in life and you focus on how you want to
accomplish it, you still may have to make some in-course corrections
along the way, because it doesn’t always work out like you had
planned. There’s a lot of uncontrollables out there. There’s a lot of
things that you can’t manage and think that are going to happen the
way you want them to happen, so you have to be flexible.
What do you treasure most?
I treasure my wife and our relationship and all of the people that
have helped us along the way. I treasure all the people that are
doing good things for other people in life. I treasure good energy
from people that want to help others, period. Because that’s what
makes your life what it is. I think that if you don’t treasure other
people in your life, it’s an empty existence.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.