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Who’s the Third Woman? Mystery Monday Photo Time

Sep10
2012
3 Comments Written by classicmovieguys

We’re always going on on these pages about The Third Man.  So with this week’s Mystery Monday Photo we’ve decided to concentrate on The Third Woman.

Hello. everybody. Joe Morella and Frank Segers, your classic movie guys, with another Monday challenge to identify the personalities featured in candid shots from our photo collection.

We’re betting that you’ll easily recognize two of the three film stars in the above photo.  But who’s the third?

We’re in a generous mood some here are some hints.  The actress to the left is best remembered as the partner of one Frederick Austerlitz.

The one in the middle was a fiery type, once slapping at a Hollywood party a man she accused of pimping for her foreign-born husband. She also became in her second life America’s most popular tv comedienne.

All three actresses were under contract at RKO.

Don’t feel bad if the name of that “third woman” doesn’t come to mind.  Her movie credits are both slim and forgettable.  She made herself felt much more on television.

Bonne chance, and keep the guesses coming.

As for last Monday’s stars, if you named Elizabeth Taylor and Montgomery Clift, you win the prize (about which we haven’t a clue).

Also, we forgot to name those individuals in the photo we ran on Aug. 27, you know, the picture with awful resolution showing several well known and not-so-well known figures. Might be worth clicking onto the blog for a photo refresher.

First off, the woman to the left is then First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt.  Next to her is actress Frances Gifford (no relation to former sportscaster Frank).  Next moving right is singer-actress Frances Langford and then Elyse Knox-Harmon (wife of Tom and mother of Mark).

You probably had little trouble naming the trio at the right beginning with Cary Grant, then Claudette Colbert and Bob Hope. 

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Posted in Rare Photos - Tagged classic Hollywood, Ginger Rogers, RKO

WAS VAN JOHNSON GAY? Continued

Feb03
2012
4 Comments Written by classicmovieguys

Hello everybody.  Joe Morella and Frank Segers, your classic movie guys, here again with more dirt on Van Johnson.

By 1945, Johnson was voted by movie theater owners as the No. 2 biggest box office star, second only to Bing Crosby.     But questions still were asked about his sexual preferences.

As author Scott Eyman recounts in his biography of the MGM  mogul, Louis B. Mayer,  “homosexuality was not necessarily an insurmountable obstacle.”  Surely with the “right” woman,” Johnson could be cured of his “malady”, figured Mayer.

As a result, every gorgeous babe on the MGM lot was urged to pursue Johnson. Surely he could be married off to any one of the beautiful, young women both stars and starlets.

By this time Johnson had become a genuine star in the MGM galaxy.  The press of those years certainly could be controlled – especially by the renowned studio fixer team of Eddie Mannix and Howard Strickling.

Unwanted information rarely if ever saw the light of print. Farsighted MGM managers took considerable pains to head off potentially negative reports or rumors about their charge.

There are many versions of how Van Johnson married Evie Wynn.

One is that in March of 1943, Van Johnson, a new but promising talent at MGM, was driving to a studio screening with friends – said to be fellow actor Keenan Wynn and his wife, Evie.

At a Culver City intersection a car came barreling through a red light and slammed into the side of Johnson’s convertible.  The force of the impact rolled the vehicle on its side, seriously injuring Van..

Another version is that Johnson was alone on his motorcycle when the accident occurred.  But this was not the image MGM wanted for their bright new star.

In any event, the fact was that  Johnson sustained a fractured skull, multiple facial cuts, a severed artery in his neck and bone fragments piercing his brain. There is no good time for a near-fatal accident but at this early point in Johnson’s career, the timing was atrocious.

He had just experienced his first big movie break, being cast in a juicy role in director Victor Fleming’s A Guy Named Joe costarring Spencer Tracy and Irene Dunne – established stars with real empathy for the struggling, young actor and the horrible predicament he faced.

During Johnson’s subsequent, three-month hospital stay, Tracy and Dunne fought off repeated studio attempts to recast Van’s part in the picture. “Joe,” finally completed with Johnson aboard as a young fighter pilot, turned into a box office hit when it came out. Van’s stellar career was off and running.

The accident left Johnson with a scarred forehead and a metal plate on the left side of his head.

The good news – if you can call it that – was that the accident also generated huge amounts of sympathetic publicity in movie fan magazines of the time. And because of that metal plate, Johnson was declared exempt from wartime military service, giving his career additional tail wind because so many Hollywood stars were otherwise preoccupied in uniform.

The accident also set in motion a series of events that very much related to Johnson’s personal life, and address the question posed by the heading of this blog.

After being released from the hospital, Johnson moved in with the Wynns, and their young two sons. It proved to be quite a ménage-a-cinq, with Van with Evie Wynn discovering that they got along very well.

One version of the story is that Johnson just couldn’t get over how kind she was to him while he was recovering.  He was so moved that he often mused out loud at how lucky his close pal Keenan Wynn had been to snare such a lovely and ingratiating woman.

That’s not to say that Evie was fooling around behind Keenan’s back. She had harbored something of a crush on Johnson but Keenan, perhaps aware of Johnson’s sexuality, deemed him “safe.”

By the time this unusual domestic arrangement was in full flower, MGM boss Mayer was already concerned (some say convinced) that Johnson was indeed gay, and that this perception was leaking out to fans and general moviegoers.

One version of the story is that  the studio boss got wind of Johnson’s admiration of Evie Wynn. What exactly did happen has been dissected by Hollywood historians ever since.

Mayer, of course, was motivated by protecting an increasingly valuable piece of studio talent. In fact, Johnson was already considered worthy of the status of a top-billed star — for the first time in Richard Thorpe’s Two Girls and a Sailor in 1944.

What to do?  Force an arranged marriage for Johnson?

The harshest interpretation of ensuing events is that Mayer coerced Evie Wynn, who was also Keenan’s manager, to divorce her husband and marry Johnson.  The not-so-hidden threat was that unless Evie agreed, Keenan’s MGM contract would not be renewed, and she would never be allowed to represent anyone at the studio again.

Another version of the story is that Evie “traded up”.  She knew Keenan Wynn whould always be a character actor and that Van was a star.  She seduced him and enlisted Mayer’s aid in her plot.

Whatever the preliminaries, on Jan. 25, 1947, the Wynns were driven to Juarez, where a Mexican divorce was pre-arranged.  The couple then drove back across the border to El Paso where Johnson and the former Evie Wynn were married four hours later.

For the remaining seven years Johnson worked at MGM, the gay rumors were effectively neutralized.  The very much-married Van Johnson starred in such macho titles as director Sam Wood’s Command Decision and William Wellman’s Battleground as well as lighter fare including as Robert Z. Leonard’s Too Young To Kiss.

As for Johnson’s marriage to Evie, it ended badly. The couple had a daughter, Schuyler, in 1948, and managed to make a go of it until the early 1960’s, Then Van left her,  supposedly for  an affair with a chorus boy Johnson had met in a stage production of The Music Man. The divorce decree followed six years later.

Unshackled from MGM, Van did in our opinion his best work – particularly his strong performance as the earnestly upright U.S. Navy Lt. Steve Maryk in director Edward Dmytryk’s The Caine Mutiny, produced by Stanley Kramer for Columbia Pictures.

Johnson appeared as a Navy enlisted man, warrant officer Darrel Harrison, in Melville Shavelson’s Yours, Mine and Ours (1968).

Stars of the family comedy were Henry Fonda and Lucille Ball, Van’s close friend who perhaps more than anyone else in Hollywood was responsible for setting Johnson’s movie career in motion some 25 years before.

Yours, Mine and Ours was made for United Artists release by Desilu, the immensely successful movie and tv production company formed by Ball and husband Desi Arnaz. We suspect Van was cast by Lucy and Desi as a professional token of their longstanding friendship.

In any case, Johnson continued to work sporadically in films. In 1985, Johnson was cast in a small role in Woody Allen’s 1985 fantasy-comedy The Purple Rose of Cairo.

By the time he died at 92 in a Nyack, New York nursing home in 2008, Johnson had compiled an extraordinarily busy show business resume including years of doing television (Murder She Wrote in the 1980’s), performing in regional, dinner and Broadway theater (he appeared on Broadway in La Cage aux Folles at the age of 69, and touring as Captain Andy in Showboat at 75).

Getting back to our headline question – was Johnson gay?  Undoubtedly bisexual. But who really cares today, in a time when Hollywood movie and tv personalities seemingly can’t wait to tell us about all aspects of their lives, including the sexual?

Johnson was a creature of his secretive times.  We salute the body of work compiled over nearly half a century by “Cheery Van,” as he called himself. In yesterday’s blog photo, we showed you Van with costar Lana Turner.

She found him wanting…but only off screen.

And who is that in the background of Van above?  Looks like Fay Bainter, doesn’t it?

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Posted in Never Before Seen Photos - Tagged Cage aux Folles, keenan Wynn, murder she wrote, van johnson, woody allen

CLASSIC MOVIE COUGARS — (Older Women Bedding Younger Men)

Nov17
2011
1 Comment Written by classicmovieguys

Older women bedding and wedding younger men is nothing new in Hollywood.

Keeping straight who’s hitched to whom in contemporary Hollywood is always a challenge. But we can say that Madonna, Liza Minnelli, Priscilla Presley, Roseanne Barr, Mira Sorvino, Fran Drescher, Vanna White and Barbara Hershey are among the many actresses who are currently, were, or have been married (or seriously involved) with younger men.

For every Demi Moore and Ashton Kutcher (pictured above; she said today she’s filing for divorce), for every Susan Sarandon and Tim Robbins (that too didn’t work out well!), the past had provided many examples of older women wanting –and getting–younger studs. (By the way, for Kutcher-Moore the age separation is a full 15 years. Sarandon and Roberts are a dozen years apart.)

Hello everybody. Joe Morella and Frank Segers, your classic movie guys, about to embark on a swift journey through the mating habits of some of Hollywood’s lustiest leading ladies of the past.

This may surprise and even shock some of our classic movie companions, but it’s the truth: Norma Shearer really was one hot tamale. We have the testimony of The King himself, Clark Gable, who shouldn’t have been but was surprised at how ardently Norma played their love scenes in the three movies they made together.  (Gable, a year older than Shearer, was himself the willing prey of older woman including Josephine Dillon and Ria Langham.)

Norma Shearer was known on the lot as Mrs. Irving Thalberg. She was married to MGM’s fabled production chief from 1927 until his death in 1936.

Six years after Thalberg died, Norma married a ski instructor, Martin Arrounge, who was a full 20 years her junior. But there’s nothing to get snarky about since the union was a happy one, lasting 41 years until Shearer’s death in 1983 at the age of 80.

The marriage also provided a bonus for classic movie fans for it was while the couple was vacationing at a northern California ski lodge that Norma spied a picture of a very young Janet Leigh.  She liked what she saw and the rest is….

(Shearer also “discovered” another younger man, former actor and former Paramount production chief Robert Evans, lounging around a Beverly Hills pool.  Less said about that the better.)

Then there is Madeleine Carroll, who was literally linked (via handcuffs) to Robert Donat in the 1935 version of “The 39 Steps.” Carroll was regarded at the time as the “Queen of British Cinema.” But by the mid-Forties, the Hollywood portion of her movie career was largely over.

Carroll had a fairly busy personal life.

Married and divorced four times, the second of her husbands was the then ruggedly, handsome, 6-foot-5 actor Sterling Hayden (born in Montclair, New Jersey as John Hamilton).  Hayden was 10 years younger that Carroll, but that didn’t stop him from falling for his leading lady. She became the first of the actor’s three wives.

The British-born actress had assessed Hayden’s physical attributes highly, and reportedly used her influence to land him a studio contract at Paramount.  (The two costarred in a pair of early Forties romantic dramas, Virginia and Bahama Passage.)

Alas, the Carroll-Hayden union didn’t last much longer than four years.  Carroll was a piker in the cougar department compared to Lucille Ball, both of whose husbands (Desi Arnaz and Gary Morton) were much younger than she was (she had Desi beat by six years and Morton by 13).

Greer Garson encountered Richard Ney, 12 years younger, when they costarred in 1942′s Mrs. Miniver.  He played her son in the picture. A year later they married.  It lasted about as long as the Carroll-Hayden union did. (That’s the couple in happier times in the photo below.)

Our capper today is the introduction of one man — an obscure Dutch-born actor by the name of Robert Wolders — who is linked to not one but two cougars who happen to be among the famous actresses in movie history.

Wolders, who appeared in the 1965 tv series Laredo and the 1967 Universal war drama Tobruk, starring Rock Hudson, married Merle Oberon in 1975.  He was 38.  She was 64.

They had costarred two years before in Oberon’s last movie, Interval (which she co-produced), a melodrama about a worldly woman with a shady past who finds true love with a much younger man.  The couple stayed married for four years until her death.

After that Wolders teamed up with Audrey Hepburn. Her second marriage had ended in 1982. Wolders was seven years her junior. Both shared European roots (the actress’ mother was Dutch; her father was British). They never married but were constantly a couple until Hepburn’s death of cancer in 1993.

Coming attractions: Tomorrow, we spill the beans about one Hollywood’s most predatory cougars — Joan Crawford — and her steamy encounter with a former child star.  Stay tuned! 

 

 

 

 

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Posted in Rare Photos - Tagged clark gable, Cougars, Demi Moore, Greer Garson, Older Women-Younger Men, Susan Sarandon

NEVER BEFORE SEEN PHOTO OF…That Other Judy!

May16
2011
Leave a Comment Written by classicmovieguys

 

Hello everybody, Classic Movie guys Joe Morella and Frank Segers here again.

Today we’ve decided to come clean and, in the immortal words of the late Howard Cosell, tell it like it is.  Ok, we admit it.

THERE IS MORE THAN ONE JUDY IN OUR LIVES.

Of course there is the Frances Gumm of “Love Finds Andy Hardy,” “The Wizard of Oz,” “Meet Me in St. Louis” and “A Star Is Born.”

But today’s Judy (pictured above in a never-before-seen photo from The Donald Gordon Collection– we ran the full length picture last Friday) is known as the star of “Scatterbrain,” “Joan of Ozark,” “Singing in the Corn” and “The Wac From Walla Walla.”

We’re referring to Judy Canova.  Judy who, you ask?

We can’t blame you.  This Judy was not remotely in Garland’s league, not even close.  But she was an interesting figure at the margins of Hollywood movie making from the late 1930′s into the 1950′s, as well as a national radio and TV star right into the 1970′s.  At least give this Judy credit for professional longevity. (She died of cancer in Hollywood in 1983, just shy of 70.)

Like Garland, she came from a show biz family.  Her singing mother pushed the young Juliette Canova into a family act with siblings Anne and Zeke (and later, brother Pete). The act was known initially as The Three Georgia Crackers (no matter that Judy was born in Florida).

The ensemble played various vaudeville circuits in the southeast, and wound up doing radio shows in New York, eventually making their Broadway debut in 1934′s “Calling All Stars,” a musical revue that last all of 36 performances.

But the exposure was invaluable and Canova — always the comic standout of the family act — landed a solo berth on Rudy Valee’s radio show.  This in turn led to a 10-year stint as the house hayseed comedienne on bandleader Paul Whiteman’s radio series.

Of course, the public wanted to “see” their radio personalities.  Warner Brothers therefore hired her as a “specialty singer” to clown around in her first feature film, 1934′s “In Caliente,” a tuneful ditty directed by Busby Berkeley and costarring one of Hollywood’s more improbable romantic duos, Delores De Rio and Pat O’Brien.

In 1940, Canova downshifted to Republic Pictures, which churned out countless low-budget programmers, and began to receive above the title billing as a star.  She was teamed with the likes of Joe E. Brown (1942′s “Joan of the Ozark” and 1943′s “Chatterbox”), and comedian Jerry Colonna and Ann Miller (in 1942′s “True To The Army.”)  Endowed with a large mouth, rubbery face and an agile figure, Canova, mugged, yodeled, played guitar, joked and sang.  Like Lucille Ball and Carol Burnett, Canova was a female performer with no compunctions about making herself look ridiculous to get a laugh.

Judy began her CBS radio program, “The Judy Canova Show,” in 1943.  Highly successful, the radio vehicle (later aired by NBC) gave her national exposure for the next 12 years. Also, Judy made recordings as a solo while she made movies.  By the time her film career ended in 1955,  Canova had appeared in about 25 pictures. After the mid-Fifties, when her radio show also ended, Judy made numerous guest shots on radio and TV shows pretty much playing herself.

Like Garland, Canova had multiple marriages (the former went through five; Canova stopped at four).  A product of her final marriage — to singer-radio personality Filberto Rivero from 1950 to 1964 — is Judy’s daughter Diana Canova, notable as an actress in her own right (although distinctly not of the hillbilly variety) in films (“The First Nudie Musical”) and on TV (including “Happy Days,” “Love Boat,” “Soap” and “Fantasy Island, among other programs.”)

 

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Posted in children of stars, Never Before Seen Photos - Tagged Carol Burnett, Judy Canova, Judy Garland, Paul Whiteman, Rudy Valee

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