Friday, February 18, 2022

TinselTales: Hair-Raising Gossip!

I think by now, most of us are familiar with the epic screamfest Valley of the Dolls (1967), the gloriously garish film presentation of Jacqueline Susann's runaway best-seller of the same name.  Brimming over with late-'60s clothing, hairstyles and makeup and filled with quotable dialogue, it's the pinnacle of tasteful tastelessness, coming as it did just when the standards for what could be said and shown on-screen were loosening considerably, yet studio pictures (such as this one's 20th Century Fox) still sought a degree of restraint in their product.  During one particularly howling moment, Patty Duke (as the vitriolic singing actress Neely O'Hara) comes home stumbling and drunk to find her husband naked in their pool with another woman.

Unable to locate her hubby upon arriving home late at night, she hears suspicious sounds while grabbing yet another drink.
Having already been aware that her husband had been gay before their marriage, Duke is particularly perturbed to find that he's cheating on her with another woman!
During her tirade against the gal who's been caught skinny-dipping with her spouse, Duke empties a bottle of booze into the water to "disinfect" it.
When she confronts her husband (Alexander Davion), he explains that his little plaything makes him feel "ten feet tall."
 

I've loved this movie from the first moment I ever laid eyes on it (sometime in the late-1980s) and also enjoyed reading the source novel. Recently, as part of a Christmas present (derived from Amazon gift cards), I received and read the book Dolls! Dolls! Dolls! by Stephen Rebello. If you don't know, Rebello was once half of "The Hollywood Kids," gossip mavens of Movieline magazine (basically the best film-oriented magazine ever to have been published as far as I'm concerned!) He and his late writing partner Edward Margulies interviewed celebs who were often past their "best if sold by" date and would run saucy blind items in their column. They also had a regular feature called "Bad Movies We Love" which led to the compilation book of the same name, my own cultural Bible... Rebello had done a very well-received book on Psycho (1960) in 1990 before penning this highly in-depth examination of Dolls. (The Contents page shown above-right from Movieline depicts The Opposite Sex, 1956, as that month's "Bad Movie We Love" and Mamie Van Doren as the Q&A subject, along with a feature interview by Rebello with then-hot Sharon Stone.)

Anyway, the scenario involving Duke walking in on her cheating husband was hardly a novel concept (in fiction or in life!), but in Dolls! Dolls! Dolls!, Rebello made a suggestion as to what inspired Susann to include that interlude in her novel. Nestled in the fact-heavy tome of his was this gossipy nugget:
"Kingsley" refers to one of the scriptwriters assigned to adapting the novel for the screen. Rebello quotes his close associate Margulies for this tinsel-tale, which I must say I had never heard before (nor could I locate any reference to it anyplace else!) But it was so startling I just had to examine it a little bit further.

Ida Lupino was a noted actress, born in London to a family long-immersed in show business. She had no longing to be a performer herself, preferring writing, but was pressured into it as a result of her family legacy. Nevertheless, she excelled and was playing juicy supporting roles on stage and screen while still in her mid-teens! Initially working in England, she ultimately wound up in Hollywood in 1933 and was presented in Search for Beauty (1934) as one of many young people who exemplified physical excellence. Her hair bleached platinum and her eyebrows tweezed nearly away, she scarcely resembled the woman we'd later come to know.

Her costar in Search for Beauty was the deliriously handsome Buster Crabbe, who later became known for his serials as Flash Gordon and Buck Rogers.

As far as I'm concerned, the search for beauty definitely came to its conclusion when the cameras landed on Mr. Crabbe...!

You'll forgive this brief diversion from the topic at hand, I'm sure?

Eventually reverting to a more believable hair color and allowing her brows to come back in, Lupino emerged in the 1940s (following a breakthrough in 1939's The Light That Failed) as a popular and dependable leading lady in many key films, many of which have only grown in appreciation over the years. They include: They Drive by Night (1940), High Sierra (1941), The Hard Way (1943), Devotion (1946) and Road House (1948.) Slim and pretty, Lupino had a lifelong disdain for her looks, never finding herself beautiful, though movie cameras sometimes proved otherwise. She had particularly lovely eyes, which reflected light in a striking way on screen.

Lupino had been married to actor Louis Hayward from 1938-1945 and to writer Collier Young from 1948-1951, but she left him for Howard Duff. She was actually pregnant with Duff's child when they wed in 1951 and their only child, Bridget, was born the following year. She and Duff had met during the filming of 1950's Woman in Hiding.

From the outside looking in, The Duffs were happy as clams. They made four more movies together in the 1950s, worked on TV in the same shows and dove into the movie magazine publicity machine with gusto.

They even starred in a TV sitcom of their own called Mr. Adams and Eve, a series created and produced by her ex-husband Young using (and exaggerating) events from her current marriage into comic showbiz fodder. It ran for two seasons.

Their off-screen life was quite tumultuous, however. (Scene above is from their collaboration with humpy Steve Cochran, Private Hell 36, 1954.) There were disagreements, blowups, separations... These were followed by periods of happy reconciliation. Lupino was known to have a stubborn streak and Duff was rough & ready with his fists, occasionally indulging in physical altercations over this and that. But did he really ever step out on her with a man??

Forlornly handsome Duff parlayed his service in the US Army Air Corp as a radio broadcaster into a post-war gig on the radio with "The Adventures of Sam Spade." His rich voice was familiar to many a listener from 1946-1950. (He also pursued work in movies from 1947 on. His debut in Brute Force, 1947, billed him as "Radio's Sam Spade" Howard Duff.)

Duff had long been known as a real ladies man and was very fond of puss - no, I won't say it! Ha ha!! But nonetheless he was crawling in it during his early days as a radio and motion picture actor.

One of his most publicized romances early on was with feisty Ava Gardner. The two had a roller-coaster relationship (as did most anyone when it came to her!) Many years later, these two reunited on Knots Landing as the parents of William Devane's character!

Thanks to their affair and the resultant pregnancy, there wasn't a lot of choice at that time when it came to marrying Lupino. But regardless of anything else, there was genuine feeling between them. They clearly enjoyed one another's company. Still, speculation has also been raised that his marrying an established and much-liked star such as Lupino helped him avoid being blacklisted during the McCarthy witch hunt. You see, Duff had been named in the infamous publication Red Channels as a possible Communist. And Universal did not renew his contract when it expired. But what about this Leif Erickson thing?

6'3" Leif Erickson was a US Navy combat photographer who was shot down twice during WWII and earned Purple Hearts in the process. Working as a cowboy in some Zane Grey serials, he was married to the highly unstable Frances Farmer from 1936-1942, followed by a month-long union with actress Margaret Hayes. In 1945, he wed for a final time, which lasted until his death in 1986.

He and Duff did know one another, working together in 1949's Johnny Stool Pigeon. That's Erickson standing near the coffin, with Duff at crotch level. (You know I had to choose this pic for this post!) Could they really have become fond enough of one another to later be discovered canoodling by a distraught Miss Lupino...??

Erickson enjoyed a long career in movies and also on stage (he originated the role of the overcompensatingly masculine coach in Broadway's Tea and Sympathy, repeating the part in the watered down film version.) He also popped up in fun flicks like Strait-Jacket (1964), The Carpetbaggers (1964) and I Saw What You Did (1965) among many others. He's probably best-known, though, for his leading role on the TV western The High Chaparral, seen here with costar Cameron Mitchell. We've already taken note of his eye-popping "gun" elsewhere in Poseidon's Underworld.

You can see for yourself from the pics of Lupino and Duff that she took to wearing (sometimes okay, sometimes horrible) wigs during the course of their marriage. She had suffered a bout of polio upon her arrival in Hollywood (allegedly attributed to contaminated swimming pools!! Scotch anyone?!) But was that why her hair fell out later? Or was it delayed effects from all that early bleaching? Or is there something to this lascivious rumor?

On paper, The Duff's marriage lasted till 1984, but it really ended in 1966. Even separated, they continued to work together occasionally, such as in this 1968 appearance on Batman as Dr. Cassandra and her husband Cabala, who are able to turn invisible and commit robberies.

Duff was always in demand for television (and was a far greater actor than ever given credit.) He starred on The Felony Squad, did some fine work on Police Story and had a moment of glory as the slimy villain Titus Semple on the short-lived Flamingo Road (seen here with Mark Harmon and Christina Raines.) He died of a heart attack in 1990 at the age of 76, not long after doing The Golden Girls (as the subject of one of Sophia's jinxes.)

Lupino also acted often, but usually to pay the bills and to allow her the leeway to write and direct. She was an accomplished director of tight melodramas with touchy themes like bigamy and rape. Her body of work as a director has been cherished by many film fans and critics and is considered progressive for the time. Those who worked for her were generally highly appreciative of her insight and guidance. She exited the screen by 1979 and her final years were punctuated by alcohol abuse and ill health. She died in 1995 of colon cancer at age 77.

I haven't solved anything about this rumor, only examined it a bit as I said I would. It says a lot about "the telephone game" of gossip in general; how the story gets distorted slightly with each telling. I.E. - was the alleged act on a pool table or in a pool?! But perhaps Susann had heard about it and placed a similar scenario in her roman à clef best-seller. (Though I am aware of another rumor in which a young starlet discovered her dreamboat husband getting it on with his butler, leading to divorce! So the Duff-Erickson tale is hardly the only example that was out there.)

It's surely nothing but coincidence, too, that in Valley of the Dolls, Susan Hayward's wig is similar to the sort that Lupino wore. There were only so many popular styles available. Remember Eva Gabor coming out with a dazzling line of them?!

If Lupino didn't inspire the swimming pool adultery sequence, maybe she helped give Susann the idea to have Helen Lawson hiding (in the book, at least) a nearly bald head under her wigs. Eventually, Miss Lupino had almost no real hair at all, poor thing.

And that's about all I can add about this subject before I flush it along...!

Till next time, dah-links!

27 comments:

Dan said...

Whatever “Private Hell” was, dump me in the middle of it!
By coincidence, turned the TV on just in time to catch poor Patty Duke writhing in an alley screeching “I am Neely O’Hara!”. Breathless, BREATHLESS!
You don’t watch VO the D, you wallow in it.
Lupino had the same distinctive cheekbones as Katherine Hepburn, the glorious Marie Windsor, Cher, and Anjelica Huston. Like them, she was better than conventionally pretty - she was interesting to look at.
I’m always dubious about these stories of who-did-it-with-who, although it’s always fun to fantasize. I suspect the truth was disappointingly mundane. It usually is.

josh said...

buster crabbe was certainly handsome - big fan of his.
now as far as VOTD - as a little boy, i was always smitten with paul burke from first seeing him with joan crawford in 1964's DELLA failed tv pilot to "12 o'clock high", VOTD & THE THOMAS CROWN AFFAIR - he didn't float everyone boat but i would have adored him LOL :)
there is one scene in particular in DELLA where joan is just chewing him out - he's shirtless - and i kept praying that she would tweek his manly nipples - but alas - she does not & it was a dream never to happen LOL :)
he had a lot of other work like NAKED CITY which i've never watched, but sadly in the late 1970's or early 1980's he went somewhat crooked with the law & never recovered by the time he died - but he is so adorable to me LOL :)
thanks for making me think of him today :)

David Kenilworth said...

Gallimaufry:

"Kingsley" was Dorothy Kingsley, creator a few days later of Bracken's World, touted as the most realistic portrayal of Hollywood -- "dazzling, glamorous, heartless" -- since Dolls.

The cruelty was scheduling this show, far ahead of its time, into the Friday night 10:00 death slot, along with rewriting Eleanor Parker's star role into a bit in the ensemble.

Nearly all episodes are now on YouTube.

More trivia: Ida Lupino guest-starred along with Janet Leigh in the episode "Anonymous Star" in the second truncated season, a retooling of the classic which was quickly cancelled.

A said...

Great post, Poseidon, but really, who hasn't been caught canoodling in a pool?

Sign me up too, for Private Hell 36,'

Thanks again Poseidon, I suspect you're a treasure.


A.

http://ricksrealreel.blogspot.com/ said...

Hi Poseidon,
I remember reading a blind item eons ago about a golden era actress who lost her hair early in fame to illness and had to resort to wigs and instantly thought of Ida Lupino. Even in the '40s, those pompadours looked phoney.

As for Ida walking in on a naughty hubby, hmm. I always took Neely's Ted Casablanca to be Vincente Minnelli. Though I'm sure Judy knew the score when she married him, perhaps she walked in on him at home with another him...

Also, Natalie Wood's first marriage to RJ supposedly ended when she walked in on him with a man. When sister Lana asked why she married RJ again, Nat said it the devil you knew was better than the one you didn't...

I can think of any number of "straight" golden era heroes who might have had their wives walk in on them with another movie hero!

Now get outta my way, I gotta man waiting for me!

Forever1267 said...

I don't think I've seen anything that Ida Lupino has bee in, except her guest star sting on "Charlie's Angels"!!!

Howard Duff had a great, well, gruff voice.

Another fun post!

Unknown said...

Apparently when they bleached Crabbe's hair for Flash he took to wearing hats off set, he didn't like the attention, despite spending most of his career in swim trunks & getting nekkid for the cameras in Search For Beauty, his Tarzan shorts also famously brief, as documented here (or was it his faux Tarzan role? Can't believe MGM hired lump Weissmuller>Adonis Crabbe, but Johnny owned the role for over a decade so what do I know?
Perhaps Buster just didn't enjoy masculine attention, had lifelong marriage & kids, 1 daughter was early anorexia victim, 60 lbs. when she died). Was it Lupino's bleach job in Search For Beauty that caused her hair loss? Happened to Linda Thorson when The Avengers bleached her, Tara King wore wigs for early episodes.

Unknown said...

Judy Garland was hired as Helen Lawson, no footage exists beyond wardrobe tests & 1 song recording & press conference with author Susann. Perhaps Judy essentially playing herself (incl. repeating Minelli pool incident IF it happened) was TOO much high camp for even this classic, @ least Garland left with a cheque & some wardrobe, which according to thejudyroom she wore to perform @ concerts.

Huttonmy710 said...

Glenn Morris as in the lackluster Tarzan's Revenge was a physically perfect/gorgeous Tarzan. Its a shame it was a disappointment. It appears they built Morris up as the newest Tarzan and it went nowhere. His contract was bought out, his marriage to his sweetheart failed, he was injured during service in the war and then flounderrd afterwards until his death in a hospital at 61. Sad.

Huttonmy710 said...

According to author Anne Edwards Judy Garland biography: Judy felt from the very beginning that signing onto VOTD was a mistake as she felt the film would be dirty and do nothing for her career. So she did what she could to get out which was to simply refuse to appear before the cameras until she was fired.

BrianB said...

For the life of me I cannot picture Howard Duff and Leif Erickson canoodling in a pool. But throw in Buster Crabbe, now that I can picture!

I can remember Ida and Howard guesting on the Lucille Ball Desi Arnez hour long tv show. They were playing it a bit like screwball comedy, but it was fun watching Ida being silly. Howard was also in the wonderful crime movie, The Naked City. He was a real worm, and it was fun watching this good looking, husky guy squirm. Was the TV series Naked City that Paul Burke was in taken from this movie? Interesting that the two of these guys are connected that way. First time I saw Burke he played gay on Medical Center and that was the first time I saw a gay character on tv.

Love the picture of Ida and Howard as Dr Cassandra and Cabala! He's looking like Buddy Hackett with his bangs, if he would just cross his eyes and screw up his mouth!

BrianB


Anonymous said...

A bit off-topic, but your post got me thinking about 'women's support-garments' of Hollywood-yesteryear, as they could nearly be construed as 'contraptions,' considering how much structural engineering was involved in their creation!

And in today's Hollywood, it's all about implant-surgery to give a starlet, or an older actress with sagging career-options (no pun), a much-needed upward trajectory.

Thanks, Poseidon, for another, fun jaunt down mammary, er I mean memory lane! And, along that pointed line of thinking, I believe it was 'The Outlaw' that used the saucy tagline, 'What are the two great reasons for Jane Russell's rise to stardom?'

My, it looks like times haven't changed much, when it comes to presenting women in pictures!

Dan said...

Paul Burke double header today - “Perry Mason” this morning, VO the D on the Movie Channel this afternoon. And speaking of women’s elaborate foundation garments - years ago a friend and I were looking for the Christian Science reading room and quite accidentally wandered into an, uh, “adult novelty” store. While we were looking at all the novelties, wondering where they went and what they did when they got there, a Wally Cox type walked in carrying a paper bag. He pulled out this elaborate contraption, all red velvet, leather, and chains, and said “My girlfriend can’t figure out how to put it on”. The clerk gave it a going over and determined tab A was in slot B or something. Had to take it apart and complete reassemble. Yes, this really happened.

Poseidon3 said...

Dan, I hear ya! One man's hell is another one's heaven and I could do with some shirtless Steve Cockring, er, I mean Cochran. LOL

Josh, I just am NOT drawn to Paul Burke at ALL, but... he does have his fans out there, so I understand it. One time, quite a while back, someone directed me to a black & white western he was in where his jeans were showing some heavy artillery! But for whatever reason, his voice? his acting style?, he just never emerged as a fave of mine.

A, if I'm a treasure, it's well buried...! Ha ha!

Rick, I recall once hearing that some of the problems during "The Pirate" were exacerbated because Judy walked in on her husband Vincente getting it on with Gene Kelly!! But as someone noted above, you never can truly be sure what is fact or fiction with gossip. LOL at "Now get outta my way..." I love that line.

Forever1267, Ida was GOOD in many 1940s and '50s things. My hilarity is that as a child, staying at my grandparents, I'd hear her name bandied about now and then if they were discussing old movies and I was in my LATE TEENS before I found out that Ida Lupino was the same "Ida Lou Peeno" I'd *heard* them speaking of. Ha ha ha!! (Likewise, I was about 12 when I found out that "Yavonda Carlo" was Yvonne De Carlo...!)

BrianB, I recently saw that ep of "Medical Center!" It was interesting (not to mention sad in some ways... being outed was basically a career-ender!) Ha! - Buddy Hackett! Although I don't think they're terribly connected, character or story-wise, I do believe that "Naked City" is a (decade-long) belated continuation of the police procedural shown in "The Naked City."

Dan, I'm so ashamed to say that once, on a trip to Florida with my father and step-mother, she insisted that we drive to a Christmas Store. And, once there, next to it was a huge adult/XXX warehouse store. In the store window was a raggedy mannequin with a bra on that had slits for the nipples to be exposed... My father said, "Oh, I HAVE to go in there..." !!! So all three of us went in and also, thankfully, went our separate ways, laughing later about the things we saw (such as sand sculptures made like penises and a movie section with titles like "Gilligan's Bi-Land" and "Shaving Ryan's Privates!") ::head down in shame::

Gingerguy said...

Juicy all around! I got the Dolls book and loved it. So smart as they start with the movie and then rewind (since anyone buying that book knows the film by heart). I have really appreciated Ida in the past few years. I only knew her as a kid from cameos on tv shows. The wigs stood out, always bad. Duff was a hotty but then looked much older by the 50's. I always think booze but that's probably not fair. Who knows how these stories get started but I think where there is smoke there is fire. That Batman photo is a scream, I can't unsee it. Gold star for including!

Dan said...

Ida Lou Peeno is my new backup drag name - right behind Jenna Tulwartz.

Anonymous said...

Dan, I think those two drag names are just superb! Now, I'd like to add one; though, I don't feel it's in the big leagues, like the other two. So, the lady-in-question is, Caressa Johnson.

Unknown said...

Tawdrey Rugburn
Tallulah Bunkbed
Myrna Boy
Katharine Hepburn
Bela Lugosi

Dan said...

Fiona Haddabrain
Athena Puddytat
Marsha de Penguins
Carlotta Tendant
Dawn N. deDumps
Legs Akimbo
Dixie Normous

Unknown said...

Omg. Those Rupaul amateurs are such wannabes, here's the reel deal (pun).

Shawny said...

Hannukah Lewinsky
Anne Thracks
Jalapeno Bottoms
BJ Givins
Dewey Decimal
Barb Itchywit
Gay Vusgass

Dan said...

Will this madness never end?
Liz Tureen
Bessie Mae Mucho
Rhonda Campfire
Patty O’Furniture
Leda Doggslife
Kitty Litter
Bess Twishes
Polly Wannacracker
Bette Yeras
Bunny Pellits
Amanda B. Reckonwith
Rhoda Biggin
Mabel Sirup

F. Nomen said...

I read Dolls Dolls Dolls back at the beginning of lockdown. Just downloaded Rebello’s Psycho book (so he can thank you for his next royalty check). I may have to dig my copy of Bad Movies We Love out of storage next!

Anonymous said...

Sir Hardon-Thicke
Sukya Dong
Dick Gozinya
Jack Meehoff
Anita Feltcher

Oh my, the tone of the current posts (including my own) duly offend by Victorian sense of propriety. I feel like Madeline Kahn in 'What's Up Doc.'

bobraleigh said...

Love Ida, one of my favorite movies “ The Man I Love” .

My fave drag name, Bertha Venation.

Thanks for all your hard work!

David Kenilworth said...

Valley of the Dolls (VOTD) screenplay was written by Dorothy Kingsley (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dorothy_Kingsley).

Not incidentally, Ms. Kingsley was also the creator of Bracken’s World (BW). I always thought that BW had a “Valley of the Dolls” patina, at least in the first season before the second-season unnecessary revamping, same that ruined the seventh season of L.A. Law.

OK, the loss of Eleanor Parker was a low blow, but things carried on when Dennis Cole put on the suit. Guest starring Anne Baxter? Richard Thomas? Sam Elliott? Martin Sheen? Monte Markham? Lee Major? Joseph Campanella? LEE GRANT?! Cameos by Jane Russell and James Coburn?

William Schallert, the TV father of Patty Duke (VOTD), played in BW season 2 (S2.E5, 16 Oct 1970).

The REAL trivia: Daoma Winston wrote three books about Bracken’s World around 1970: Bracken’s World, Bracken’s World: The High Country, and Bracken’s World: Sound Stage. On the jacket of the first book, it reads: “Not since Valley of the Dolls has there been a story that lays bare the Hollywood scene like Bracken's World.”

So I could not have been too far wrong!

BTW more trivia pertaining to this post: Ida Lupino guest-starred, along with Janet Leigh, in AA buddies in BW’s “Anonymous Star” (S2.E9, 13 Nov. 1970).

BTW more trivia, not pertaining to this post, but pertaining to BW: Janet Leigh’s ex-husband, Tony Curtis, had a cameo in the BW pilot “Fade In” (S1.E1, 19 Sep. 1969).

* https://www.amazon.com/s?k=Bracken%27s+World+%2B+Daoma+Winston&i=stripbooks-intl-ship&crid=3A79JIYDOSDDX&sprefix=bracken%27s+world+%2B+daoma+winston%2Cstripbooks-intl-ship%2C179&ref=nb_sb_noss

David Kenilworth said...

Patty Duke/VOTD crossover:

Judith Lowry(1890-1976) played Aunt Amy in VOTD.

Miss Lowry was also in

-- two episodes of The Patty Duke Show (Patty, the People's Voice and It Takes a Heap of Livin')

-- The Miracle Worker as 1st Crone

In all of these, she was uncredited.

(She came into her own as Mother Dexter on "Phyllis".)