Friday, January 24, 2020

Fun Finds: Photoplay Magazine, February 1971

We've unearthed another Fun Find, a vintage magazine from a slightly unusual year for us (we tend often to gravitate to either 1960s mags or late-1970s as a rule.) I was a mere child of three and a half when this was published, so it's just before I had much consciousness about the stars, though I've since made up for that with endless TV & movie viewing and voracious reading! Let's see what the entertainment landscape was like in (pre) February of 1971! (Oh, and a little shout-out to subscriber Audrey Belton... LOL!)
Sharon Farrell, an actress who runs hot and cold where I'm concerned, very nearly died during this delivery. Little known (practically unknown!) at the time was that she developed amnesia and a level of brain damage following an embolism she suffered. Steve McQueen, a former costar and alleged lover, advised her to keep all of that under wraps or she'd be considered an insurance risk and lose her career. She never did have another child, but she and third husband John Boyer split in 1972 and she wed two more times. Her first, and briefest, marriage had been to Andrew Prine!
Interesting interview with Candice Bergen, who had been acting for a few years, but without her heart in it until this point. In 1980, she married French director Louis Malle and was with him until his death, later marrying for a second time.
I don't know where I've been (probably buried under DVDs of Mannix, The White Shadow, I, Claudius and so on! LOL), but I had never heard of Toni Holt before this. That's some hairdo! A former model turned Hollywood columnist, she later became heavily involved in politics (oddly enough with both major parties.) Gee, I wonder what project Frank Sinatra and Otto Preminger were mulling over... And Rita Hayworth as Aimee?! Interesting prelude to the Cosmo centerfold explosion. As for the marriage talk, Richard Harris did wed in 1974, to Ann Turkel. No children. When Anne Baxter finally did remarry in 1977, her husband died within a year of unexpected illness! Johnny Carson, of course, marred TWO more times, the final one lasting till his death.
I had no clue that there had ever been an attempt to turn Lolita into a Broadway musical. As it happens, the show "Lolita, My Love" had book and lyrics by Alan Jay Lerner and music by the great John Barry. Despite a cast including John Neville, Dorothy Louden, Leonard Frey and Denise Nickerson (of Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, 1971!) as the title temptress, it closed prior to reaching the Great White Way...
Those who were "ailing"... Tennessee Williams lived until 1983, dying when the cap from a container of eye drops fell into his throat while he was reclining to put them in! Barbara Hutton had much tragedy to come at this point. In 1972, her only child died in a plane crash and she continued to deteriorate until her death in 1979. I have Jolie Gabor's book and it was a compelling read. As for Zsa Zsa Gabor and George Sanders, she went back home to find that Sanders had opted to marry her own sister! Sanders and Magda Gabor wed in December of 1970, but it was kaput within a month. Doug McClure's marriage produced a child, but was over by 1979. He then wed a different Diane who was with him until his death in 1995. Cynthia Bouron? Now there's a story. A showgirl and something of a con artist, she fabricated an elaborate plot against Cary Grant (this only a few years after her second husband killed both himself and the estranged wife of Mickey Rooney!) and then was found dead in 1973 at age thirty-nine, having been tied-up, bludgeoned and stuck in the trunk of a car!! Truth is often stranger than fiction...
Tony Bennett did marry Sandra Grant, though they hit a rough patch during his career decline in the late-1970s and eventually divorced. Barbara McNair did divorce her husband in 1971 and proceeded to marry three more times. Rex Harrison's marriage to Elizabeth lasted only from 1971-1975. His final marriage in 1979 lasted until his 1995 death.
No one's "Naked." It's just the first page of a "Naked Hollywood" section. Look at Paul Newman's taller, but similar looking, brother! I can't recall seeing him before.
Case History Number One is Peter Lawford. Case Number Two I'm not sure of. Could quite possibly be George Hamilton, though he certainly lasted long beyond this.
The Jacqueline Bisset/Michael Sarrazin movie saw release as Believe in Me (1971.) Hold on, Jon Voight used to date Miss Beadle from Little House on the Prairie?!! (Charlotte Stewart.)
As a matter of fact, Phillippe Forquet was never again to work in Hollywood! He returned to France and was out of the acting biz by 1978, though as a real life count he hardly needed the money. As for Elliott Gould and Portnoy's Complaint (1972)? Sorry, but Richard Benjamin played that part. Warren Beatty's movie with Julie Christie was released as McCabe & Mrs. Miller (1971.)
I didn't scan in any ads apart from those on partial pages, but this one was too hooty to leave out. Just look at this crap and read the descriptions for it! Although a sick part of me wants that centerpiece for an atmospheric indoor luau. Ha ha!
Still on with the gossip...! Ethel Kennedy, mother of ELEVEN, trips the light fantastic. I am so in love right now with the term "compromise midi!" As for Claudine Longet and Andy Williams... no wonder they call it "La La Land." And so much more was to come. Her Celeb-Am Tennis Open reminds me of the later SNL parody on her only with skiers! Jack Jones' elaborate third wedding was not to be. He married six times in all!
Joe Namath never made "Johnny Miami." His next film after The Last Rebel (1971) didn't come until 1979! Poor Debbie Reynolds worked and worked (and spent and spent!) to try to preserve Hollywood's history with that museum and could never get it to last successfully. Sad. The actress that Lee Meriwether replaced was Claudette Nevins, a frequent TV guest star from the 1970s through the 2000s. Bobby Sherman made no movie around this time until the little-known He is My Brother (1975.)
Though no one ever talks about it, The New Dick Van Dyke Show actually ran for three seasons and costarred Hope Lange and Fannie Flagg. Only two seasons were done in Arizona, the third in Hollywood. Creator Carl Reiner left when CBS refused to air an episode they felt was too far afield from Van Dyke's image and the show folded soon after. Michael Ansara and Barbara Eden divorced in 1974.
He might have been innocent on this occasion, but Bob Crane was a swinger! I had never heard of Dick Jensen, who was Hawaii's answer to James Brown and Tom Jones for a period of time. Doug McClure's baby turned out to be another girl, called Valerie.
A cross-section of movies then in release. They were surprisingly kind to Song of Norway (1970), a notorious dud. I hadn't ever heard of The Pizza Triangle (1970), which made quite an impression on the reviewer.
We're still not done chewing the celebrity fat! Now columnist Pamela Mason has her turn. When she divorced James Mason in 1964, she took him to the cleaners...!
Portland Mason was the daughter of the columnist and a child actress in the 1950s and '60s. She died at fifty-five after a stroke, not long after her father James' passing.

David Hedison had one of Tinseltown's most enduring marriages. He wed Bridget in 1968 and they remained together until her death in 2016. He passed away three years later at age ninety-two. Lee Marvin also got it right in marrying Pamela Feeley (after his celebrated "palimony" trial) as she was with him until his death in 1987.
Interesting blurb about a slick hold-up at Georgio's boutique in Beverly Hills. Needless to say, Burt Lancaster didn't retire anytime soon. Regarding the Linda Henning bit about her cats, Pamela and James Mason always had teeming hordes of cats and presumably she kept up that habit after their divorce. The references to Blood, Sweat & Tears' David Clayton Thomas are due to the fact that Portland Mason was his then-girlfriend.
You just know this headline is going to be some sort of bait & switch...
Yep!
Little-remembered now after their thirty-five year marriage, but Cash had been married beforehand with four daughters and June Carter wed twice prior with a daughter from each when he divorced his wife and married her. As you can guess, this article was about their great love for their one and only boy amid six girls. He grew up to be a successful singer, songwriter and country music producer.
This was quite a television assemblage on The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson, featuring winners of the Photoplay Awards. Man at far left was the president of Photoplay. Check out that set...!
Karen Valentine's husband is listed as "Steve" though his name was actually Carl McLaughlin. I get a little giddy when I see men in tuxes like his since that is the style found in favorite movies of mine like The Poseidon Adventure (1972) and The Towering Inferno (1974.) Mrs. Brolin, by the way, was Jane - Josh's mother. They divorced in 1984.
I always like to see lasting couples in Hollywood, especially since there are so few. Peter Lupus married Sharon in 1960 and they are still together today! Mark Slade (barely visible in the seam of the mag) is still wed to his wife Melinda since 1968.
Robert Lansing's blonde wife Gari would find herself divorced from him this same year. How awful that the only pic they published of frail Groucho Marx was an unflattering one from behind. He lived until 1977.
I think we all know this couple upon first glance.


The Burtons seem pretty happy still at this stage though, cinematically speaking, the bloom was coming off the rose with duds like Under Milk Wood (1971) and Hammersmith is Out (1972) - and other individual films - on the horizon.
This looks like a pretty affectionate photo between John "The Duke" Wayne and his third and final wife Pilar.
Then you see the headline next to it! Wayne and his wife did hit a rough patch three years in, mostly thanks to his unforgiving movie schedule, but generally held it together afterwards despite some fiery arguments along the way. This one allegedly began because she was taking too long to get ready for Oscar night! In any event, they remained wed until his death in 1979 and shared three children. (She remarried and divorced two more times after that!) She is still alive today at ninety-one.
Doris Day was very close to her son. He died of melanoma in 2004 while she lived on until 2019 when pneumonia claimed her at age ninety-seven.
Doris' TV show was still on the air at this time and she had yet to recede almost completely from the limelight to her home in Carmel.
The unusual relationship of Claudine Longet and Andy Williams...
As noted earlier in this magazine, she and Williams were separated, yet continued to vacation as a family and even played tennis doubles together against her current boyfriend! They finally did divorce in 1975 and the following year she shot and killed her Olympic skier boyfriend. Williams paid all her legal fees and accompanied her to trial whereupon though mishandling of evidence she wound up serving only a 30 day sentence (fulfilled on weekends!) and then turned around a few years later and married her attorney...! You can't make this stuff up. The two live together in the ski paradise of Aspen, Colorado.
Continuing with the crazy, we come to Gig Young. A once-promising young actor, his personal life spiraled thanks to alcoholism though he was able to continue with a successful mid-level career. He even took home a Best Supporting Actor Oscar for They Shoot Horses, Don't They? (1969.) He'd been married and divorced, then widowed, then married and divorced from Bewitched's Elizabeth Montgomery, then wed again to a woman already pregnant with his child.
After their divorce, during a child support battle, he suddenly denied parentage of the daughter! (He claimed a 1938 vasectomy at age twenty-five was the proof, but he was later declared the child's father regardless.) In 1978, he wed for a fifth time, this time to a German gal half his age. Three weeks later, he shot her to death and then took his own life! No note was left, nor any reason known for the act.
Raymond Burr is yet another captivating figure. A middling movie star with a few bright spots (such as Rear Window, 1954), his theatrics as a trial attorney in A Place in the Sun (1951) helped win him the role of Perry Mason, a TV show that ran for nine seasons and would have continued had the expense of switching to color not become a factor. He went into Ironside next, as a wheelchair-bound investigator, and that ran for eight more seasons.
Always struggling with his weight, he got progressively larger as Perry Mason wore on and the same can be said of his time on Ironside. (By the time of the Perry Mason TV-movies...? Help me, Jesus!) Living in a wheelchair can very hard on a person who doesn't actually need it. (I know this from personal experience.) And a three pack-a-day cigarette habit didn't help his overall heath. But what fascinates is that this iconic television figure, who every viewer welcomed into their home week after week as an ideal example of a heterosexual male hero of sorts, lived with his male lover from 1960 until his death in 1993 and had put forth a litany of untrue backstories about prior wives and a deceased son. I don't think one could quite get away with that in today's information age.
Catherine Hawn, shown here with Dean Martin, eventually became his third wife in 1973. The union only lasted until 1976, however.
The man Jeanne was being squired around by, Frank Calcaginni, went on to star in the comedy flick The Last Porno Movie (1974), which was not actually a porno movie. It's generally acknowledged that Dean and Jeanne should not have split (being wed since 1949), but they did. They managed to remain friends and, later, it was she who was there to help ease him through the lung cancer and emphysema that led to his death at seventy-eight. She lived to be eighty-nine.
Okay, well this time the story actually is rather creepy!
The drug-addled man was beginning to get too familiar and a little dangerous, so Chad Everett went and got one of the Colt revolvers he'd kept from his time on The Dakotas and ordered the guy out! Then he got the license plate and gave it to the police. The Everetts were still another example of a happy Hollywood marriage, albeit a very old fashioned one in which he wore the pants. Their marriage lasted from 1966 until her death of an aneurysm in 2011.
Another marriage that ought to have lasted, but didn't was that of Steve McQueen and Neile Adams. Having met and married in 1956, their union couldn't survive his later superstardom. During this period of together/not together, Adams had an abortion of their child. They divorced in 1972.
McQueen married two more times. She married once more in 1980 and was wed until her husband's 2005 death. Adams is still alive today at eighty-eight. Her grandson, Steven R. McQueen is a successful television actor.
Mary Tyler Moore apparently wrestled with the notion as a young girl of entering the convent as a nun. Maybe this is why she took the role of a (false eyelash-wearing) nun in Change of Habit (1969) with Elvis Presley!
Had she become a nun, we wouldn't have had the same version of The Dick Van Dyke Show we all know, not to mention The Mary Tyler Moore Show. She and second husband Grant Tinker shocked everyone in 1981 when they split. She married her mother's doctor in 1983 and that lasted until her 2017 death.

Whatever one thinks of Andy Griffith, he definitely was not a loser. Dirt poor as a child, sleeping in a dresser drawer as a baby, he eventually found acting on stage, proceeded to humorous monologues, the recording of which led to TV acting and the Broadway stage. Then he starred in a few movies and went on the considerable success of both The Andy Griffith Show and, later, Matlock. (I just watched my very first ever Matlock last week! LOL Kevin Conroy was a guest and I had to see him.)
We're used to seeing Kennedy family members in funeral attire. This instance is a rather rare one, I think.
Cardinal Cushing, a close advisor and counselor to the family had died of cancer at age seventy-five. Cushing (who retired one year before this) had presided over JFK's marriage to Jacqueline Bouvier and performed the mass at JFK's funeral.


Our final story involves Patty Duke and Desi Arnaz Jr. They were part of a paternity scandal that stretched from this point up through the 2000s when the baby became a noted actor himself.
Lucille Ball was not at all amused that her son Desi (who was seventeen when he dated Patty Duke!) might be the father of Duke's soon-to-come baby. Duke didn't know if it was Desi's baby or music promoter Mike Tell's. She married Tell, but the union lasted only thirteen days. After the baby was born, she married John Astin, who adopted the baby, but still believed it to be Desi's.
Years later, the baby - Sean Astin - became an actor in his own right. He had been told Arnaz was his father, was adopted by Astin, but from 1986 on had a stepfather through Duke's subsequent marriage to Michael Pierce and then through DNA testing found out that his actual father was Tell all along. "My Four Dads!"
BONUS PICS

You're never going to see a "tribute" here to alcoholic murderer Gig Young, but I did want to share some photos of him as a young man when he held such promise. It's a shame that his life went off the rails the way it did. For so many years, he'd been a genial and well-liked person in Hollywood, but clearly grappled with some internal demons.

Prior to 1942, the actor was known as Byron Barr. When he played a role called Gig Young in The Gay Sisters (1942), and was so beloved by preview audiences referring to "Gig Young," he took the name professionally thereafter!




Young almost never did beefcake in his movies or in still photos.

He played on-screen men devoted to both Bette Davis...

...and Joan Crawford.

It was he who hosted Warner Brothers Presents on TV.


Rare shirtless photos of Mr. Young in a predicament.

He was twice Oscar-nominated for portraying alcoholics: Come Fill the Cup (1951), with the award going to Karl Malden in A Streetcar Named Desire, and Teacher's Pet (1958), with the award going to Burl Ives in The Big Country. When he won for They Shoot Horses, Don't They? (1969) he was an alcoholic himself and it affected much of his later work (including his being fired from Blazing Saddles, 1974. The role went to Gene Wilder with just days notice.)

He was a handsome young man.

5 comments:

A said...

Hi Poseidon!

Wow, what a great post. Was Photoplay a monthly? This issue was over 80 pages long! Did reporters really go to all of these events or did the info come from publicists?

With all the near weddings, weddings and divorce in this issue, it's interesting to note Adam West stayed married to Marcelle Lear until he died a couple of years ago. She was married to the Lear Jet herr when they met).

I always liked Gig Young; what a train wreck he was.

And finally, what spread that would have been with 1970's Frank Langella in Cosmo.

Thanks again!

A.

Gingerguy said...

1971 is not a year on my radar either, as people and movie/tv sets got ugly. This had some good dish though.
I never heard of Toni Holt either but like that she spelled her name like the home perm.
There is a Dark Shadows thread running through this issue, which is perfect as the actor Jphn Karlen who played Willie Loomis died this week. Denise Nickerson from that delightful sounding Lolita musical was on the show as different characters. And that fabulous ad for Barnabas' music box. Which actually played a pretty annoying tune if it's the same as the one on the show.
I got the Jolie Gabor book recently and it looks juicy. I was skimming it and there is some Hungarian escape drama with Nazis and Diplomats, and smuggled jewelry I would bet.
Oddly I just finished a really good fictional book about Tennessee Williams and his partner of 15 years, Frank Merlo. In real life Frank died of cancer but I had no idea poor Tennessee met such a sad end to his storied life.
Thanks for the time travel and the great photos of Gig Young

rigs-in-gear said...

Strangely enough, I met Patty Duke's baby-daddy, Mike Tell, in 70 or 71. He was being introduced around the head shop I worked in by the owner, who I suspect was wanting to do some business with him. Tell was promoting a concert in Denver, and the local press on him was mostly about how he was ex-husband to Duke and was involved in building an ark in the desert for the coming Armageddon. (?) Anywho, he was gorgeous and quite aware of the effect this had on people. Friendly, but soft-spoken, he was very amused by the questioning about his desert ark and his ex, who I recall him characterizing as "crazy". But then, she wasn't the one preparing for the End Times.

Poseidon3 said...

A, I THINK that Photoplay was monthly. It was one of the the longest standing and most influential film rags in its hey-dey. Published in Chicago for the longest time, believe it or not! Imagine getting the info from NYC and LA to Chicago for publication back in the 1920s and 30s! I would bet that the columnists from this issue personally attended the events they spoke of, those shindigs were bread and butter for chit-chat and gossip. Thank you for reminding me about Adam West and his wife. He has his own tribute here if you've never seen it! Lots of info and (rare?) photos:

https://neptsdepths.blogspot.com/2012/09/are-you-ready-to-head-west.html

Gingerguy, I didn't know about John Karlen's passing. I also didn't know that Denise was ever on "Dark Shadows!" I thought the Jolie book was a hoot. She was really a piece of work!

rigs-in-gear, FASCINATING about Mike Tell. Despite his own loony notions, Duke truly was crazy back then. Manic-depressive personality disorder. Had to be quite a handful for her (many!) men. Fortunately, she seemed to have overcome or managed it, at least, in later years. This whole thing with Sean was a cover story at the time on many movie rags. Amazing that he turned out so level-headed (it seems. I don't know him, obviously!) What a tumultuous start he had.

David Kenilworth said...


Trivia intertwine:

Richard Schaal had multiple roles on the Mary Tyler Moore show:

Howard Arnell
Chuckles the Clown
Dino
Paul Arnell

and had a guest spot on The Dick Van Dyke's S5.E21 "Dear Sally Rogers", also of course featuring Mary Tyler Moore.

Further intertwines: Schaal and Valerie Harper were featured in the MTM episode "Today, I'm a Ma'am" (second episode of season one). Schaal and Harper were married for fourteen years.

Incidental trivia: the Rhoda episode "The Return of Billy Glass" (episode 19 of season two) featured both Harold Gould and Jack Gilford, characters on Golden Girls (Miles Webber and Max Weinstock, respectively).