This one was fairly unforgettable. Miss Gloria DeHaven, who was a teen actress during Hollywood's golden age and continued to act up through 2000, was reporting for makeup and hair early one morning and decided to wash her hair in preparation for the day's routine. As she was craning over the basin to wet her hair down, she felt two hands clasp her head.
Turns out it was no less than Miss Marlene Dietrich, offering to wash the young girl's hair for her, which made an indelible impression on her, to say the least! The starstruck and thunderstruck Dehaven could hardly believe her eyes that a mega-star like Dietrich was pitching in this way (though, truth be told, she greatly enjoyed doing this and DeHaven was far from the only recipient. A couple of her other "clients" wondered with good reason if the only hair Dietrich wanted to get her hands on was that on their heads! LOL)
Miss DeHaven is still with us today at age eighty-nine. Her first husband (of six years) was the handsome John Payne, with whom she had two children. She enjoyed a busy TV career from the late-1950s on and made her final feature film appearance in the 1997 Jack Lemmon-Walter Matthau buddy comedy Out to Sea.
Next comes 1950s actress Patrice Wymore, who was the widow of legendary swordsman Errol Flynn. (They were separated at the time of his death in 1959, with him cavorting around with teenager Beverly Aadland, but were not divorced.) In her interview, she reflects on the caliber of his acting.
He was eternally frustrated by his image as a swash-buckler versus that of an actor who could really act. It seemed as if any time he truly tried to act with any sort of deep commitment, the box office take didn't match that of his adventure pics. Still, as Wymore points out, even in his westerns and sword-playing affairs, he accomplished something that few others could, which is slipping into all manner of period costuming without looking foolish and dashingly performing all sorts of memorable moves. And, yes, at certain times, providing some terrific acting. Wymore inherited the bulk of Flynn's estate and, after retiring completely in 1967, presided over his farm/ranch in Jamaica and ran a wicker business. She passed away in 2014 at age eighty-seven of pulmonary disease.
Tony Martin was a smooth-sounding singer of the 1930s and '40s who proceeded to a career in movie musicals. Most of his early appearances were brief or otherwise unspectacular, but in 1941's Ziegfeld Girl, he was given quite a showcase, serenading Hedy Lamarr, Lana Turner and (to a lesser degree) Judy Garland along with a parade of other beauties with the tune "You Stepped Out of a Dream." His large roles in movies still remained scarce, though there was that (not very good) western he starred in, Quincannon, Frontier Scout in 1956.
Martin enjoyed a sixty-year (!) marriage to dancer-actress Cyd Charisse and together they made a rather dazzling couple. Sometimes forgotten in the shadow of that memorable union is the fact that for four years he was the husband of major musical star Alice Faye. They divorced in 1941 having had no children. Martin lived until 2012 when he passed away of natural causes at the ripe age of ninety-eight!
This next gentleman had a showy career in the mid-1950s, but it petered out into a (still considerable) string of TV guest appearances afterwards. John Kerr is known for The Cobweb (1955), Tea and Sympathy (1956) and South Pacific (1958) among other movies.
Once the 1960s dawned, he found less and less big-screen work. He became an attorney while enjoying acting gigs on many popular television shows. He retired from the screen in 1977, but did pop up briefly in bit parts in two 1985 TV-movies. Kerr passed away of heart failure in 2013 at the age of eighty-one.
Though his TCM interviews center on his more famous parents, Robert Walker and Jennifer Jones, Robert Walker Jr. did enjoy a considerable career of his own. Not only did he appear on many TV shows (and is unforgettable as "Charlie X" in that particular episode of Star Trek), but he also worked on films from Ensign Pulver (1964) and The Happening (1967) to The War Wagon (1967) and Easy Rider (1969.)
He worked rather steadily on TV and in the occasional movie up through 1993 (with a pop-up appearance in a 2012 independent film.) Only eleven when his namesake father died of a drug overdose, he was mostly raised by Jones and her next husband David O. Selznick. Now seventy-five, my biggest question is why he chose to wear what he did for this posterity-laden interview!
Noted film noir bad girl Audrey Totter reflects on her career with MGM. As the 1950s dawned, Totter gravitated more towards TV with a significant string of guest appearances. She also wound up with recurring or regular roles on Cimarron City (1958-1959) and Medical Center (1969-1976) before retiring completely in 1987.
Like many of the folks who appear in these clips (and in my posts on them), Totter lived a long life. She passed away in 2013 of heart failure at the age of ninety-five. Totter is featured, along with five other significant actresses of the film noir genre, in the book Dark City Dames: The Wicked Women of Film Noir and I cannot recommend that enough. It is a supremely captivating and rewarding read with the six careers examined in the first half and then their later lives, post-stardom, in the second half.
Reed-thin Sylvia Sydney had a pretty roller-coaster career with consid-erable stardom in the 1930s followed by a more sporadic one in the '50s and '60s. Then she came back with a bang in 1973's Summer Wishes, Winter Dreams which landed her an Oscar nomination at age sixty-three. (It must have been a bit galling to see it taken by pre-teen Tatum O'Neal for Paper Moon!) She remained busy from then on, popping up all over the place and working practically right up to her death (in the dreadful 1998 re-imagining of Fantasy Island.)
Always a fairly prickly personality, which was part of her appeal in later years, Sydney recalled how she longed to work for the exacting Fritz Lang on Fury (1936) because of his intense attention to detail and the demands he made upon those working for him in front of and behind the camera. Sidney was eighty-eight when throat cancer claimed her in 1999. Fans will recall her ghostly, smoking secretary in Beetlejuice (1988), with her open throat allowing wafts of cigarette smoke to waft out of it!
Julie Harris was an actress's actress with a rich stage background (five Tony wins plus five additional nominations and a Lifetime Achieve-ment Tony as well.) She also appeared in several wonderful films from The Member of the Wedding (1952) to East of Eden (1955) to The Haunting (1963), to name a few. (Her one Oscar nom, for Wedding, went to another stage fixture making her movie debut, Shirley Booth in Come Back, Little Sheba.)
Later in life, Miss Harris spent seven years playing Joan Van Ark's sometimes worrisome mother on Knots Landing (1980-1987.) She won three Emmys for her television work over a nearly fifty-year span and was nominated numerous other times as well. In 2005, she was granted a Kennedy Center Honor. The woman who once told her high school drama teacher, "Acting is my life!" truly meant it. She died in 2013 of heart failure at the age of eighty-seven.
I wish I could recall the tale Karen Morley told because I seem to remember it being amusing and charming (at least based upon the selected photos.) Morley was a blossoming star in the 1930s (she was seen in ten movies in 1931 alone!), with Scarface (1932) as one of the most memorable.
Her career was sidelined two ways. First, her marriage to director Charles Vidor didn't sit well with either her fans or her studio (MGM) as it went against her image as an ingenue. She did continue to work after leaving the studio in 1934 and had a modicum of success, but never with the same momentum she'd previously enjoyed.
Then, after divorcing Vidor in 1943 and remarrying actor Lloyd Gough, she found herself in the midst of the McCarthy Witch Hunt. Her career came to a crashing halt in 1947 when she refused to name names before the House Un-American Activities Committee. Only a smattering of credits, mostly bits or as a TV guest, followed. She died of pneumonia in 2003 at age ninety-three (after having been considered for a featured role in the Drew Barrymore comedy Duplex, which ultimately went to an actress named Eileen Essell.)
Talented French composer Maurice Jarre tells of being convinced by producer Sam Spiegel to provide the score for 1961's Lawrence of Arabia with the promise of an Oscar in the end. Amazingly enough, Jarre did win the Oscar for his sweeping, rousing score, but he wasn't able to attend the ceremony as he was already working on another assignment by that time.
He relates his utter astonish-ment at, having asked Spiegel for his award (which the colorful producer had accepted on his behalf), being given the runaround until one day when he entered Spiegel's office and saw it, along with others, on display! He had to practically wrangle it from the other man's possession. He went on to many other nominations and two more wins, both for films directed by David Lean (who'd directed Lawrence), Doctor Zhivago (1965) and A Passage to India (1984.) Mr. Jarre died of (unspecified) cancer in 2009 at the age of eighty-four.
Film and TV funnyman Red Skelton had a truly delightful tale in which he was cast in a Conrad Veidt film Whistling in the Dark (1941) in a supporting role, but kept pleasing the director with his comic antics, ad libs and line delivery until his billing began to improve with each edit of the movie. By the time the film was set for release, he was top-billed!
He even went on to two more films (Whistling in Dixie, 1942, and Whistling in Brooklyn, 1943) featuring that character and directed by the same man, S. Sylvan Simon, who became a favorite of Skelton's for obvious reasons. Skelton (who I cannot deny is really not my cup of tea as a comedian) died of pneumonia at age eighty-four in 1997.
Joan Leslie has appeared in one of my prior Word of Mouth posts with regards to her work opposite James Cagney, but she has another one in which she discusses Robert Walker (the tormented father of Robert Walker Jr. who is shown a few entries above.) The two of them costarred in The Skipper Surprises His Wife (1950.)
She describes his kindness and his profession-alism, but notes his intense depression and despon-dency. (His and Jennifer Jones' marriage came to a messy end when she left him for powerful producer David O'Selznick. Though he did remarry briefly in 1948, his life was never the same after he stumbled into alcoholism, emotional breakdowns and prescribed drugs.) For her part, Miss Leslie is still kicking around as we type at age ninety!
The afore-mentioned Tony Martin's wife Cyd Charisse has also appeared in a prior post of this type but here she is again, in a whole different interview (and looking much better than in the other one, I must say. I love the hair!)
Ms. Charisse has her share of detractors, but I've always admired her movement ability, her elegance and her everlasting sense of fashion sense! I loved the way she looked in Two Weeks in Another Town (1962) as well as in Marilyn Monroe's unfinished final film "Something's Got to Give" with Dean Martin (also 1962), not to mention 1966's The Silencers. Charisse died of a heart attack in 2008 at the age of eighty-six.
Keir Dullea, gone tomorrow, as Noel Coward once put it! The boyishly handsome actor with crystal blue eyes enjoyed a relatively brief run in the 1960s as a popular leading man and supporting actor in movies like David and Lisa (1962), Bunny Lake is Missing (1965), The Fox (1967) and in particular 2001: A Space Odyssey (1969.)
He's most highly regarded in The Underworld, though, for his work in 1966's Madame X, a treasured favorite! He also costarred in the cult horror flick Black Christmas (1974), which quite a few people hold in high regard. Mr. D still acts today, albeit in lesser known movies (nevertheless starring folks like Zoe Saldana, Mark Ruffalo, Patrick Wilson and Matt Bomer.) he is seventy-nine at present.
Time was you could scarcely turn on the TV or watch a movie without busy, useful character actor William Windom appearing in it! From Broadway to Hollywood he played everything from closeted homosexuals to racists to murderers, but with every sort of normal guy in between (including a friendly congressman on The Farmer's Daughter, 1963-1966.)
He won an Emmy (with his only major on-screen award nomination) for the short-lived series My World and Welcome to It in 1970. In later years, he played the entertainingly curmudgeonly local doctor on Murder, She Wrote opposite Angela Lansbury whenever one of the weekly murders happened in her (apparently deadly!) hometown of Cabot Cove. Windom died of heart failure in 2012 at age eighty-eight.
This one was rather hooty. James Stewarts adult daughters Kelly and Judy (fraternal twins) are reminiscing about their legendary father and the way he spent quality time with them running movies on a home projector and screen.
Both of them very animatedly describe the way he slowly, method-ically and not very adeptly threaded the film into the projector as they would teeter on the verge of complete meltdown.
These gals both clearly take after their mother Gloria, who had very vivid blue eyes, blonde hair and, like them, a life-long love affair with the sun. They are sixty-four today. Stewart only married once and that was to Gloria in 1949 when he was forty-nine years old! The happy union ended with her death in 1994 of lung cancer at age seventy-five and he passed away from a blood clot in 1997 at age eighty-nine. Knowing he was going to die, he expressed happiness at being reunited with her.
His interview concerned director William Wellman trying to trick both he and George Brent into throwing real punches at each other in the 1932 movie The Purchase Price. Talbot balked at the stringent contracts that studios held performers to in the early days of Hollywood and joined others in bucking them. He was one of the founding members of the Screen Actors Guild, which went so far in establishing boundaries and benefits for actors. Talbot married for the fifth time in 1948, but it "took," resulting in four children and a happy union until her death in 1989. Talbot died in 1996 of natural causes at the age of ninety-four.
Allyson relates how awkward it felt to be given the star dressing room and the star treatment when Astor had once been in the same position herself years before, but was now relegated to supporting status.
O'Brien affectionately spoke of how she could be stern on-set in order to keep everything in line and on time during filming.
Lockhart became elated at the very mention of her name, adoringly recalling how great an actress and a person she was. All three ladies clearly thought the world of her.
Our final participant is now and always has been a favorite, even more so recently for a reason that will be revealed in a moment! Dame Joan Collins talks about her 1956 musicalized remake of The Women (1939) called The Opposite Sex, in which her bad girl character Crystal Allen makes one too many catty remarks to the wife of the man she's currently having an affair with. The woman (played by June Allyson) hauls off and wallops her across the face!
During filming, Allyson had been a bit hesitant about it, but in the heat of the moment she actually gave Ms. Collins a smack that not only sent her earring flying off out of the frame, but left an impression of her hand on Joan's face!
If you're a fan of Joan Collins, you must try to tune in to TCM tonight because she's a guest program-mer and will be chatting with Robert Osborne about her selections Gilda (1946) and Boom Town (1940) as well as both The Women and The Opposite Sex. The always-entertaining actress is eighty-two years young at present.
But what really sent us into the stratosphere recently was an e-mail from one of our faithful readers. A man from London, England, who happens to visit Poseidon's Underworld with some regularity and who happens also to be a long-time associate and personal friend of the divine Dame Collins took a moment to share with her one of my various posts about her! ("Joan of Art") She enjoyed the selection of pictures that I had collected and got a kick out of the captions I'd composed for each one. (She even relayed that one of the photos was taken by no less than Yul Brynner! Then there was the amusing factoid that I'd mis-labeled one photo with a child in it as having been of her sister Jackie when it was in fact her brother Bill! I'll be correcting that...) She perused some other posts, mostly ones filled with those terrific old head shots of the stars and remarked that she was flattered by my interest in her and her career. Needless to say this made me VERY happy.
But that's not all! This friend of The Underworld did me a great kindness. He snapped a photo of Joan Collins holding up a menu from the restaurant at which they were dining (San Lorenzo in London) onto which she had personally written, "To Jon -- I really enjoyed your blog! Love Joan." (Yes, that's my real first name...) He next sent the photo to me via e-mail and then, in an even greater gesture, obtained my address and sent the menu directly to me!
(I must add that, although I treasure the photo, there was another one in which the pose and lighting was twice as good and which really showed Collins at her dazzling best, but I didn't post that as it seemed an invasion of her private evening with the friend and with Joan's now-grown daughter Katy. I include a cropped rendition as proof of her still-wonderful appearance.)
To say that the whole interlude put me over the moon is an understatement. I'm forty-seven years old and have no memory of my life without the joys of Joan Collins in it, be it from appearances on Star Trek, Batman and other countless TV shows, her many movies and, of course, Dynasty, of which I was a devoted fan. To think that I managed to capture her attention for even a moment, make her smile and actually have her know my name (apart from all the other millions of fans of hers) is a gift beyond measure. And if you were to know the incredible generosity of spirit and kindness that Collins showed the friend from their first meeting on, you would marvel that anyone at any time could ever have mistaken Collins for one of the villainous people she has often portrayed. What a pleasure to know that she is such a beauty inside and out. Till next time, Jon!
Wowee! Congratulations on you new friendship with Miss Collins!
ReplyDeleteI just discovered you wonderful blog and I am hooked! I grew up watching and loving the same movies and TV shows as you did. I so appreciate your funny, astute and affectionate observations and love reminiscing with you. I'm glad that no less a starbthan Joan Collins appreciates it too! Thanks!
ReplyDeleteWhat a wonderful treat for you Poseidon! Joan always seemed like an open friendly person who had a clear idea of who she was and what was right for her, a trait that can often be construed as being difficult.
ReplyDeleteLove these posts and this series on TCM. I've always been struck by how much Gloria DeHaven's looks changed as she aged. I'm not saying that she aged badly but her look was so different when she was at MGM to how she appeared in the 70's and beyond.
Speaking of someone who changed completely through the years I remember being flabbergasted the first time I connected the brittle, raspy tough but fun Sylvia Sidney of An Early Frost and Summer Wishes, Winter Dreams with the apple cheeked delicate beauty of Fury and Dead End.
Tony Martin sang beautifully but as an actor...he sang beautifully. I've seen Quincannon which you're right is not very good but I think his worst is the ill advised semi-musical remake of Algiers called Casbah with him an improbable Pepe Le Moko!
I think Robert Walker Jr. is a good example of star quality being innate. He was about as close to a carbon copy of his father as was possible but having seen him in several films and TV episodes he was always missing that inner spark that made Walker Sr. pop off the screen and someone you wanted to see more of.
Julie Harris-sniff, Miss her so much. :-(
I loved William Windom in pretty much everything. I just saw his Word of Mouth segment again the other day. Really liked My World and Welcome to It, it was so oddball. And I LOVED The Farmer's Daughter, when I read the biography of Inger Stevens, The Farmer's Daughter Remembered, the author had talked extensively to Windom about her-they had remained friends after the end of the series and he spoke very highly and quite affectionately about her. One small thing he played Dr. Seth Hazlitt, the town doctor, on Murder, She Wrote. Tom Bosley and then Ron Masak played the sheriff of Cabot Cove.
I also recently saw that triple header Word of Mouth with the two Junes and Margaret O'Brien, I think Little Women was upcoming, and it was a charming vignette.
I can see Jimmy Stewart in Judy Stewart especially in her expressions but my goodness she loves the sun!!
I was also surprised by Lyle Talbot's appearance in his segment, he was so burly when he was younger but he was an engaging presence in his interview.
As always Poseidon this was terrifically entertaining and what a fantastic story about the marvelous Miss Collins.
I love Word of Mouth, all those stars, many of them no longer with us, talking a little bit about themselves and other stars and filmmaking is fascinating. And it's always interesting to see how they have changed through the years. Cyd Charisse aged beautifully, for example, and for a moment I thought William Windom looked like Russ Tamblyn.
ReplyDeleteCongratulations on your newly acquired treasure. Looks like you've got a new fan!
Thank you, Felix! As you can understand, things have been giddy around here lately! (PS-I'm watching JC on TCM as I type and this recent long-distance encounter has made it so much more fun for me.)
ReplyDeleteGreetings, Roberta, and thank you for your wonderful compliments. I'm glad you like wading through all the posts here. Most of them are pretty long and comprehensive (sometimes I'll look back on one and forget having written it!)
Joel, thanks as always for your in-depth reactions to the subjects presented. I agree with you about Ms. Sydney. Night and day! I loved her craggy old self, though, in things like "Damien: Omen 2" and "Snowbeast" to name but two. As for Tony Martin, I've yet to encounter "Casbah" and I think I should count myself lucky! Maybe Robert Walker Jr lack the neurotic, desperate qualities his father had, perhaps due to being part of a highly successful family rather than having to struggle for opportunities. Robert Sr. seemed always having to fight an uphill battle after Jennifer left him, while probably never HAD to act? William Windom on "Murder, She Wrote"... Shit! How could I mess that up?! It's fixed now. I cannot begin to tell you the frantic race I was in to get this post up this morning in order to alert folks to Collins' guest programming stint. (And I have sheriffs on my mind lately for reasons I won't bother going into now.) BTW, Do you recall what Windom's Word of Mouth segment was about??
Armando, thank you much! I agree about Cyd. She wasn't trying to look young in a ludicrous way like Edy Williams or Mamie Van Doren, but managed to look much younger than she was in a more classic way with her sharp suits and cleanly arranged hair.
Ahh!!! I meant to program "The Opposite of Sex"...and I forgot!
ReplyDeleteFans of Keir Dullea might want to check out the lesser-known early-70s Canadian movie "Paperback Hero" in which he appears in a lengthy nude shower scene with co-star Elizabeth Ashley. As a young teenager, it would occasionally play on late-night Canadian television. I was blessed...unfortunately, at the time, I only had a twelve inch black and white TV in my room...but you take what you can get!
Oops! I meant "The Opposite Sex"...
ReplyDeleteMust have temporarily and sub-consciously had Christina Ricci in the back of my mind!
WOW! That is fantastic about Joan, what a treat. She's a great "Dame". Funny enough was watching "Gilda" last night and reading this today. Love "Word Of Mouth" and the John Kerr bit reminded me he kind of got the sensitive roles, and played gay/not really gay in "Tea And Sympathy". Nice work and enjoy your menu.
ReplyDeleteJon Poseidon ; )
ReplyDeleteCongrats on getting some Collins luv! Nice to see the appreciation you get for your hard work and good-hearted, fun posts!
Cheers,
Rico
Thank you folks for the additional comments and remarks!
ReplyDeleteKnuckles, I would love to see "Paperback Hero" in all its glory! I have a screen cap of that shower scene on my tribute page for Elizabeth Ashley, but it's blurry.
Gingerguy, yes, Kerr did play those sorts of roles. He inherited "The Cobweb" when James Dean died and perhaps Dean might have gone on to that and more had he lived, which would have made a career for Kerr even rougher (though they really were nothing alike!)
Rico, thank you! My only regret is that with building season in full swing and life always go-go-go, I never get to post as much as I'd actually like to.
Ah, I LOVE this post! I thought I was the only person who derived pleasure from those "Word of Mouth" interviews (I wish I could DVD-R those suckers but alas, I only catch them if I record the odd movie). Your witty observations make them all the better.
ReplyDeleteAnd the cherry on top? You're now best friends forever with Dame Joan Collins! That really was cool of her to give you a shout out. She's a real class act.
Hi Poseidon, I think the William Windom segment was about To Kill a Mockingbird where he played the prosecutor but I'm not 100% certain. I caught it on the fly.
ReplyDeleteHI,
ReplyDeleteFirst of all, great blog! I came upon it while doing research for my website dedicated to William Windom. I wish I could find that clip. Bill was actually a student of Margaret Hamilton back in NYC. While shooting the TCM clip told the interviewer that he was so rambunctious that Hamilton skipped him a grade to get him out of the class. Year's later they would star in an unsold pilot together. However, they didn't know about their NYC past until after THAT. Apparently they would get together at the Russian Tea Room.
tvnutt, thank you so much! I'm glad you liked some of the things you've found on this blog. Sorry for the late reply, but I am in the midst of career craziness thanks to the lockdown and barely have time to do much of anything. I always love when "Word of Mouth" interviews pop up on TCM. All of these (and the ones in another post much like this) are from ones that came on after movies I had DVR-ed. I rarely watch anything live. Take care!!
ReplyDelete