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Posts tagged van johnson

We Hear About VAN JOHNSON (and others) — Readers Speak Out!

Mar01
2013
Leave a Comment Written by classicmovieguys

Hello, everybody.  Joe Morella and Frank Segers, your classic movie guys, once again with our arms elbow-deep in our email bag.

We are very pleased to received your missives, and enjoy hearing a range opinions that occasionally — only occasionally — conflict with our own.

We’ve published at least three blogs over the last year or so on Van Johnson (above with Elizabeth Taylor), the last of which (Was Van Johnson Gay? Continued, Feb. 3, 2012) drew this response from Rebeca:

I and my mother love Van Johnson. I miss him a lot and I feel pity that he is dead and some people are still talking about if he was or not.  Let him have some peace now. Who cares about it? The real fans of Van don’t care a thing!

It’s all bull…!

Hard to disagree, Rebeca.  As Johnson fans, Joe and Frank respect the actor’s wide body of work.  He was so often an underrated actor.  But we were also intrigued by the lengths the studios went in the Forties to invade and “protect” their stars’ private lives. MGM was particularly intrusive in the case of Johnson. In any event, R.I.P, Van.

Here’s Laura weighing in on our Family Business blog of Feb. 15, focusing on the Knox-Harmon-Nelson clan that, among others, produced Tracy Nelson – daughter of Kristin Harmon and Rick Nelson — who had a modest tv career.

Enjoyed your post!  I always enjoy reading about Hollywood families.

Here’s some more fun trivia — Tracy was formerly married to William R. (Billy) Moses, a steadily working actor whose best-known role was in FALCON CREST.  He was himself from an acting family — his brother Rick Moses caused a brief sensation on GENERAL HOSPITAL in the ’80s.

Billy appeared in an episode of NCIS, so he was working with his ex-wife’s uncle (Mark Harmon)  in that show.

Impressive, Laura.  We may steal your idea in our next “Six Degrees of Separation” parlor game, linking Kevin Bacon and many other Hollywood personalities.

Finally, Anonymous has been on our case re James Dean.

To put it mildly, Anonymous disagrees with our view that Dean is highly overrated as an actor (but not necessarily as a “legend.” ) We began our recent Dean blog with these sage words – if you have the ability to provoke controversy nearly 60 years after your death, you definitely qualify as someone exceptional.

Writes Anonymous:

“If you have the ability to provoke controversy 60 years after your dead, you definitely qualify as someone exceptional….”

Gentlemen, that was my WHOLE POINT from the beginning. I’ll consider your remark as some kind of clenched-teeth capitulation.

Not so fast, Anonymous.  Our critical view of Dean was based strictly on his acting ability, and excluded (we think) consideration of the hype that has developed since his death and surrounds the actor’s “legend” today. In short, Dean the actor had shortcomings which have not stood well the test of time.

 

 

 

 

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Posted in Rare Photos - Tagged Billy Moses, James Dean, Mark Harmon, NCIS, Rick Nelson

Actor Loyalty In Hollywood? (Can that be?) — Classic Examples!

Sep11
2012
Leave a Comment Written by classicmovieguys

Hello, everybody.  Joe Morella and Frank Segers, your classic movie guys, wondering today about a certain tradition of actor loyalty, especially big stars using their clout to protect younger actors.  Does it still exist in Hollywood’s cutthroat culture of today?

We were able to come up with two indisputable instances of exemplary behavior in this regard from two very different movie personalities.  Both stuck their necks out, and battled studio front offices on another’s behalf. Both won their loyalty battles. Ironically, the studios benefited from the movies that resulted.

We’ll cover the first of these good Samaritans today.

Van Johnson’s career breakthrough came in 1943 in Victor Fleming’s romantic fantasy A Guy Named Joe. Johnson plays a young serviceman adopted by the ghost of a grizzled fighter pilot (Spencer Tracy), who was killed in a crash but returns to earth to advise the younger man in the wooing of Tracy’s former girlfriend (Irene Dunne). Thanks to this movie, Johnson, then 26, was about to be propelled from promising-MGM-talent status to stardom.

The movie almost didn’t get made with Johnson, however. In March 31, 1943, the actor 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.

Johnson was thrown from the car, sustaining a fractured skull, multiple facial cuts, a severed artery in his neck and bone fragments piercing his brain. At the hospital, Johnson overheard a doctor say, “He’ll never work in pictures again, even if he does live.”

Because Johnson was expected to perform in just about every scene in A Guy Named Joe, director Fleming shut down the picture indefinitely in late April.  MGM brass then set about choosing the young actor’s replacement so that production could quickly crank back up.

That was when the 43-year-old Tracy stepped forward.  The senior actor took a meeting with MGM boss Louis B. Mayer.  Let’s wait for Van, urged Tracy.

Recalled veteran studio publicist Eddie Lawrence (as quoted in author James Curtis’ massive biography of Tracy): Now that was really something to do because that was a (matter) of time commitments…They stopped the picture because of Spence.  For Van Johnson, they wouldn’t stop the picture. Spencer had to put his weight in there because they wouldn’t have done it otherwise. 

Tracy visited the younger actor often at Hollywood Presbyterian Hospital, repeatedly assuring him that his A Guy Named Joe role was safe.  ”That gave me a goal, it gave me sunlight at the end of the tunnel,” Johnson later recalled.

Yes, there is a flip side of  ”no good deed goes unpunished.” Johnson recovered faster than anyone expected, and the movie resumed production in July 1943, wrapping the following September.  When it A Guy Named Joe was theatrically released, it was an instant hit — the highest grossing movie Tracy had ever made to that point.

Tomorrow –our second tale of loyalty in tinseltown.

 

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Posted in Rare Photos - Tagged classic movies, MGM, Spencer Tracy

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, lucille Ball, murder she wrote, woody allen

WAS VAN JOHNSON GAY?

Feb02
2012
2 Comments Written by classicmovieguys

 

 Hello Everybody.  This is Mister Joe Morella and Mister Frank Segers here again at ClassicMoviechat. MRS. Norman Maine is out, wandering about.

We thought we’d reprise an old column for some of our newer readers.

In the 1940’s, MGM supremo Louis B. Mayer pondered the question posed above, and he wasn’t sure he liked the answer. At stake, after all, was the future of one of MGM’s biggest studio-groomed stars.

The blunt fact of the matter is that being gay back then was a career killer for a Hollywood leading man on the rise. In the case of Van Johnson, subterfuge if not tight secrecy could well be called for.

Born Charles Van Dell Johnson in 1916 in Newport, Rhode Island, raised as an only child in a grim, motherless household (an alcoholic, she left early; Van was raised by his dour Swedish-American father, a tight-lipped plumber), Johnson fled to New York after high school, undertaking countless chorus boy jobs in Broadway shows and touring musicals.

On Oct. 18, 1939, he found himself in the Broadway opening of the Rogers and Hart musical Too Many Girls, directed by George Abbott. Van was cast in one of the many “student” roles in the production; more important, he was the understudy to the show’s stars: Eddie Bracken and a handsome new Cuban sensation by the name of Desiderio Alberto Arnaz ye de Acha the Third, billed as Desi Arnaz.

Johnson not only became friends with the future Ricky Ricardo, but accompanied the show’s stars to Hollywood when RKO bought the rights to the musical as a big screen vehicle for Richard Carlson, Bracken, Arnaz, Ann Miller – and its rising star, Lucille Ball. (Van has an un-credited part in the 1940 movie as a chorus boy.)

If for nothing else, the Too Many Girls movie version is notable today as the first onscreen evidence of the obvious romantic sparks set off by what became perhaps the most powerful married couple in entertainment history.

Although Lucy’s love interest in the movie was Carlson, off screen the 29-year-old actress actually fell head over heels for the 23-year-old Desi.  The couple quickly became an item, with Van cheering on their incipient romance (the trio’s friendship lasted for years, long after Lucy-Desi’s ensuing marriage).

To a considerable extent, it was Lucille Ball who set Johnson’s movie career in motion. After being dropped by Warner Brothers after an abortive six-month stint, Johnson was prepared to return to the East Coast to attempt his luck again in New York.

Arnaz and Ball took Johnson to Chasen’s restaurant for a farewell dinner.  Sitting at a nearby table on that night was Billy Grady, MGM’s talent chief, who had recently signed Ball to a studio contract. Lucille got up from the table, and took Johnson over to see Grady.  Ball persuasively pleaded Johnson’s case with the MGM official.

The result was an invite to Johnson from Grady for a screen test at the studio. The boyishly personable Van passed the test, and was signed to a contract paying him $350 per week.  Johnson’s 12-year, 50-film career at MGM had begun.

His breakthrough at the studio came in 1943 in Victor Fleming’s romantic fantasy A Guy Named Joe. Johnson plays a young serviceman adopted by the ghost of a grizzled fighter pilot (Spencer Tracy), who was killed in a crash but returns to earth to advise the younger man in the wooing of Tracy’s former girlfriend (Irene Dunne).

By this time, Johnson began drawing noticeable piles of fan mail – always an unfailingly accurate measure at MGM of an actor’s growing (or waning) popularity.

Fan magazines of the period were pressing for interviews. A bobby-sox idol in the making, the blue-eyed, freckle-faced, carrot topped actor had a promising future

Mayer was nonetheless troubled.  He had been hearing things about Johnson’s chorus-boy escapades. The girls on the lot were curious too. And when the rumors reached a certain level, MGM’s reigning sex symbol, Lana Turner decided she’d be the one to find out the truth.

Lana had co-starred with Clark Gable in 1942’s Somewhere I’ll find You. In which Van had a supporting role. By the early-Forties, the vamp from Wallace, Idaho, herself a hot property at MGM, was one of the most popular of the World War II pinups.  She also was notoriously  promiscuous, quite the sexual athlete.

Supposedly, Lana had sexually engaged mogul Howard Hughes on the cockpit floor of his huge plane while cruising on autopilot over the California coast. Who better to “test” Johnson by taking him to bed?

Turner did, and returned to the studio the next morning with this memorable assessment — “He did it, but he didn’t like it.”

 

 

 

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Posted in Rare Photos - Tagged Lana Turner, MGM, stars who were homosexual

PUBLISHED HERE FIRST

Sep08
2011
Leave a Comment Written by classicmovieguys

 

 

 

 

 

Hi, everybody, Joe Morella and Frank Segers back again with a special note to you.

We at Classic Movie Chat pride ourselves on bringing you photos that have never been seen before on any other blog.  In fact these photos have never been published before –ANYWHERE.

That’s because they are from a private stash, The Donald Gordon Collection.

You ask, who was Donald Gordon?

Donald was a young actor who found himself under contract at Columbia Pictures during World War II.

The studios in this wartime period were a bit less fussy about male hires, so Donald made the grade although he never quite made it big. He appears to have spent much of his time making friends on and off the studio lot, made easier by the fact that Donald was an outgoing, amiable type, easy to like.

And, if you were a friend, Donald took your picture. Then to seal the deal he had someone else snap a shot of him posing with his famous pal.

As you’ll continue to see on our blog in the coming weeks, the amazing informality – almost intimacy – of Donald with his subjects is a pleasure to behold.  No posed studio shots in full makeup, staged with the precision of a Swiss watch.

These were shots of some of Hollywood’s best-known personalities in mufti, so to speak, lounging around pools, front lawns, departing restaurants or in actual costume on the set.

The photo above of singer Allan Jones and his wife actress Irene Hervey– (parents of Jack Jones) and the snapshot of  MGM star Van Johnson were first seen on our site.

We hope that you will let others know about Classic Movie Chat as a great source of never before seen photos.  

Even if the picture running that day isn’t an original, you and your friends will be treated to what we hope you’ll find is an interesting picture, and tidbit about films and stars from Hollywood’s Golden Era.

Please tell us who your favorite stars are and we’ll try to run a piece about them AND a never before seen photo.


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Posted in children of stars, Never Before Seen Photos - Tagged Jack Jones, MGM, Never Before Seen Photos

ESTHER Slaps Powell — Right In The Kisser!

Aug18
2011
Leave a Comment Written by Joe Morella and Frank Segers

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Despite her relentlessly cheerful on-screen demeanor, “America’s Mermaid” — one of MGM’s biggest stars of the Forties and Fifties –was no simpering pollyanna.

Judging by Esther Williams‘ outspoken comments about her famous fellow workers, she subscribed to Alice Roosevelt Longworth’s naughty dictum.

Said Teddy’s daughter, “If you have nothing nice to say about anybody, sit next to me.”

Hi everybody, we’re back again with another sampling of cheerful Esther’s acerbic (and honest!) appraisals of her famous costars as excerpted from her excellent tell-all book about herself, “The Million Dollar Mermaid” co-authored with Digby Diehl.

ELIZABETH TAYLOR:  Esther was hardly alone in being dumbstruck at Taylor’s physical precocity. “Barely a teenager, (she at 14)) was already more beautiful and voluptuous than Miss America.”  Esther admits that Taylor filled out a swim suit better than she did. “With that superstructure of hers, she floated just fine (in a Beverly Hills pool). What she couldn’t do was sink.”

VAN JOHNSON (Esther’s costar in five movies):  ”Through the years, I swam with Van, married him, fought with him and made to love with him — all on camera.” Esther and Van shared knowledge of their private secrets, which in Johnson’s case there were quite a few. Together they were “a sweetheart couple who had that MGM look that was so ‘American,’ with no ethnic traces whatsoever.”

JOHNNY JOHNSTON (A former night club and radio crooner who was Esther’s costar in 1947′s “This Time For Keeps”):  Johnston isn’t widely know today but he had his moments of costardom at MGM. He was carrying on a torrid affair with actress-singer Kathryn Grayson (they married in 1947) while he and Esther were making their movie on location in upper Michigan. To amuse his “dewy-eyed groupies” on location, Johnnie would read aloud Kathryn’s intimate letters “including the all-too-graphic details concerning what she liked about his love-making. I was appalled.” (So, apparently was Grayson; she was one of Johnston’s half dozen wives.)

GENE KELLY (Esther’s costar in 1949′s “Take Me Out To The Ballgame.”)  Esther disliked Kelly, “one of the most the most winning and likable men on-screen, (who) was nothing less than a tyrant behind the camera — at least with me.” He resented Esther’s height (5-feet-8-1/2 inches). “There was no hiding that I was half a head taller than he was.”

FRANK SINATRA (Esther’s other costar in “Take Me Out To The Ball Game.”) Williams liked Sinatra” “I not only adored the way he sang, but admired his underrated natural approach to acting….He told me that both of us approached acting the same way, speaking like you talk to a friend, as if the camera wasn’t there.” Esther also noted that Sinatra loved to party. “As soon as the day’s filming was done, he went rushing off to one bash or another.” As a result, he sometimes showed up on the set “fighting a hangover.” The picture’s unit manager reported this to studio higher-ups. “When Frank told me that he had heard the rumor that he was getting bounced off the picture, I tried to reassure him.” (As it turned out, Sinatra had nothing to be concerned about.  He’s pretty good in ‘Take Me Out To The Ballgame.”)

WILLIAM POWELL (who costarred with a 27-year-old Esther in 1946′s “The Hoodlum Saint.”) In one of the picture’s first scenes, Williams was required to slap Powell, not gently but, as director Norman Taurog ordered, to “really connect with Bill’s face in order to make that distinctive hollow thwack of palm against cheek.”  So a young, athletic Esther did as instructed, hauling off and really smacking the 54-year-old Powell in the cheek. “Then I watched in horror as one side of his face collapsed.” As an apologetic Esther approached hysteria, a team of make-up specialist rushed onto the set to reconstruct the elder actor’s face. “When the makeup men were finished, it looked as if somebody had pulled all of his face up towards the top of his head,” recalled Williams.  ”It was an instant face-lift, which is what they did for older actors instead of plastic surgery back then.”


 

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Posted in Rare Photos - Tagged Elizabeth Taylor, Esther Williams, Face Lifts, Frank Sinatra, MGM, Plastic surgery

NEVER BEFORE SEEN PHOTO OF SYDNEY GREENSTREET

Apr13
2011
1 Comment Written by classicmovieguys

 

Hello Everbody.  Those men, Joe Morella and Frank Segers,are here again, with another photo from the Donald Gordon Collection.

YP (yesterday’s pic)

Also a shot from the DG collection.  That was the cute young lad Van Johnson when he first arrived in Hollywood and was on the threshold of a Big career.

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Posted in Never Before Seen Photos - Tagged maltese falson, Sydney Greenstreet

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