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* T A Y L O R O L O G Y *
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* A Continuing Exploration of the Life and Death of William Desmond Taylor *
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* *
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* Issue 13 -- January 1994 Editor: Bruce Long bruce@asu.edu *
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* All reprinted material is in the public domain *
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CONTENTS OF THIS ISSUE:
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The Truth About Hollywood:
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Part 2 [Drugs, Alcohol and Sexual Morality]
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Part 3 [What Happens to a New Girl in Hollywood?]
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Part 4 [Brief Tour of Some Hollywood Studios]
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What is TAYLOROLOGY?
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TAYLOROLOGY is a newsletter focusing on the life and death of William Desmond
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Taylor, a top film Paramount film director in early Hollywood who was shot to
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death on February 1, 1922. His unsolved murder was one of Hollywood's major
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scandals. This newsletter will deal with: (a) The facts of Taylor's life;
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(b) The facts and rumors of Taylor's murder; (c) The impact of the Taylor
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murder on Hollywood and the nation. Primary emphasis will be given toward
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reprinting, referencing and analyzing source material, and sifting it for
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accuracy.
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The graphic images mentioned in the previous issue of TAYLOROLOGY are
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temporarily available on the gopher server at PI.LA.ASU.EDU port 70 in
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the directory
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Internet Sampler
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Selected Electronic Newsletters
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Taylorology
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Graphic Image Files for Taylorolgy
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The files are in Encapsulated PostScript format (Macintosh).
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March 19-April 2, 1922
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Thoreau Cronyn
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NEW YORK HERALD
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The Truth About Hollywood, Continued
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PART 2[Drugs, Alcohol and Sexual Morality]
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It ought to be possible to write sanely about the morals of Hollywood. It
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will be well to keep in mind the purpose of the slightly bewildered but
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resolute statesman who said "I will go to the end of the road, let the chips
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fall where they may." Recollection of the well known limerick may also be
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useful:
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"Said the Reverend Jabez McCotton,
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'The waltz of the Devil's begotten.'
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Said Jones to Miss Blye,
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'Don't you mind the old guy;
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To the pure almost everything's rotten.' "
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I went to Hollywood, to find out the truth, good and band. I talked with
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actors, directors, producers, screen writers, extras, merchants, doctors,
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ministers, bankers, detectives, performers, extollers, denouncers, newspaper
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men and women, publicity men, housewives, onlookers, lenders, spenders and
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others of high and low degree and varying standards of veracity. I sat with
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the heads of official agencies investigating the Taylor murder, the traffic in
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narcotics and bootleggers. I watched movie people at their work and their
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frolics. I went without instructions except to get the facts and without other
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attitude except that of reporter.
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In the minds of many persons who have read of the "Arbuckle party" in San
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Francisco and the Taylor murder in Los Angeles there has been created this
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picture:
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Hollywood, the motion picture capital; a community of dissolute actors
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and actresses and others of the movie industry; the worst of them unspeakably
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vile, the best suspicionable; a colony of unregenerates and narcotic addicts;
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given to wild night parties commonly known as 'orgies'; heroes of the screen
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by day and vicious roisterers by night; a section of civilization gone
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rottenly to smash.
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For comparison to the profligacy of Hollywood the critics go back to Tyre
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and Sidon and Rome; to Alexandria, Herculaneum and Pompeii, to the later
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Caesars, to Nero and Caligula; to the Herodian courts of Judea; to Belshazzar
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and Alexander. The sorriest historical procession is conjured.
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Hollywood, which had never thought of itself in quite that light, laughs
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merrily at first, as the accusation is echoed back from the East. Then,
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compelled to believe that a considerable part of the public is taking the
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indictment seriously, it soberly sets about preparing its defense.
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What is the evidence as to "orgies," narcotics, alcohol, vice,
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extravagant living? I shall tell in sequence whatever I was able to find out.
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But just before the plunge the heartening fact comes to mind that a little
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while ago the residents of Beverly Hills assembled to discuss the laying out
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of a polo field. Beverly Hills is part of the "Hollywood district," an
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"exclusive" part, where Douglas Fairbanks and Mary Pickford, Charles Ray, Will
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Rogers and many other stars live in sequestered comfort. When it was Rogers'
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turn to speak he said:
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"Folks, I've sort o' been looking over this corner of the world, and it
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does look as if there are some mighty pretty places for a polo outfit. But I
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also noticed another thing, and that is there is no church in Beverly Hills.
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Now, it probably would do my kids and me a lot of good to dress up and get out
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and play polo, but I figure it would be just as well if we attended to this
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church business first. I move you, Mr. Chairman, that we go ahead and raise
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the money, but spend it on a church instead of a polo field. I can chip in
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$500, if that's agreeable to you all." And those motion picture people gave a
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whoop at the brilliancy of Will Rogers' suggestion, and as soon as the
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architect gets his plans drawn that church will begin to materialize.
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There is some truth in the stories of wild "parties" in and about
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Hollywood. Those who have attended them contend that they have been no worse
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than similar things indulged in by persons of the same moral stripe in other
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parts of the country, notably New York. But of such stupidly disgusting
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conduct I never have heard. These "parties" virtually ceased after the
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Arbuckle affair in San Francisco. Their participants were a relatively small
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number of men and women, members of overlapping circles of movie parasites and
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occasionally a real star. The leading figure in several of them was a
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comedian, not now active, who mentally and morally never has risen above his
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low beginnings. His popularity with the public enabled him to earn a great
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deal of money. He spent it as such a man might be expected to spend it. He was
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generous and acquired a reputation in his set as a prince of hosts. A flock of
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flatterers gathered around to help him get rid of his salary. He gave party
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after party of the same general type, some of them reaching their climax in
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everybody getting drunk, some going indescribably further.
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An investigator whose word I have no reason to doubt told me he had
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definite evidence of four of the more extreme parties. Three of them were
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staged in Los Angeles hotels, the fourth in a private residence in Hollywood.
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The first one brought together ten men and ten women. Some of them were drug
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addicts. Liquor was provided by the host for everybody, and morphine and
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cocaine, with hypodermic syringes, for those who craved them.
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The second "party" of this type was held, the investigator told me, in
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the Hollywood home of an actor. It lacked one bad feature, but included all
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the others, and in addition some of the more intoxicated revelers disrobed ans
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they danced. This was a large gathering--more than 100 persons. Nearly all
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were disreputable and so regarded by the others of the Hollywood community.
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The third and fourth entertainments were not essentially different from the
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others.
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The same investigator told me there had been bathing parties on the
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beaches at which some of the "ladies and gentlemen" who had forgotten to bring
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their bathing suits were not prevented from going into the water comfortably.
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I have heard of a similar exhibition not twenty miles from New York.
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Scandalous stories may be heard in Hollywood and Los Angeles by any one
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who cares to listen. On this trip it was my duty to listen, but I do not
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present on this page as a fact anything which is merely hearsay. One of the
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stories I had read pictured a handsome and popular film actor as puncturing
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himself in the stomach with a hypodermic needle at the peak of an exciting
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dinner attended by "stars" and crying "This is the life." Most of the persons
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I met had never heard of this incident, although some of them believed the
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actor in question was a morphine user. [1]
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The only person I found who professed to know the truth of this tale was
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a newspaper man. He said he had attended the party and had seen the incident.
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But a veteran of Hollywood who has watched the stars blaze up and die down and
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has kept pretty close watch on them and their habits said to me: "I wish you'd
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tell me who this newspaper man is and I'll find him and tell him that he's not
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only a liar but a blank-blank one."
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It may be mentioned here that I met in Hollywood several friends whom I
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had known for years. They are in the best position to know what is going on.
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They are the sort of men who, despite their connection with the picture
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industry--or art--might be expected to tell me confidentially whatever secrets
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of public interest they knew, just as I would tell them if they came to New
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York.
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But the fact is that these learned and agreeable gossips did not believe
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one-thousandth part of the stories in circulation and were ready to fight at
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the drop of the bat to demonstrate the falsity of these tales. Their
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solicitude lest I should prove gullible was touching. And some of the dark
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mysteries of Hollywood that I had occasion to ask them about they had never
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heard of at all. They told me so, and I believe them.
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Now as to drugs, are they in common use in Hollywood? No. I looked into
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this question with special care and learned:
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The larger cities of California are cursed with an extraordinary number
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of peddlers of opium, heroin, morphine and cocaine. The Chinese brought the
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first opium to the West coast, and many Californians acquired the habit from
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them before the East heard of it and before alkaloids were used at all. Drugs
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are smuggled into San Pedro, the port of Los Angeles, by Japanese, Chinese,
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British and other vessels. They also come over the border form Mexico and
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down from British Columbia and the northwestern ports of the United States.
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Much of it also is manufactured in Philadelphia and St. Louis, exported to
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Mexico in ostensibly legitimate traffic and smuggled back to the United
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States.
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The Government and State anti-narcotic agents are absurdly inadequate in
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numbers. The Government did not have any agents in Los Angeles specially
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assigned to this work until two months ago, when two were sent from the East.
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Their investigations included an order to look into reports that drugs were
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being sold at motion picture studios. These agents have been trying to get
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evidence of "snow parties" as the gatherings of drug addicts are called, in
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Hollywood and Los Angeles, but have not yet succeeded. "Snow" is the modern
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underworld name for cocaine. Addicts speak of taking a "sleigh ride." The
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only actress to whose door the Federal men have traced forbidden drugs is not
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in the pictures but in vaudeville. They thought they had a good clew when
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told of a railroad conductor who had been invited to attend a "snow party" at
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the home of the director of a low grade movie company in Hollywood. The
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conductor went to the party in his ordinary Sunday clothes. He found the
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other guests and the host in pajamas. They tore off his collar and coat, but
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when he said that was enough they let him alone.
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There were plenty of opium and pipes in the house, and a Chinese was
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"cooking" for the smokers. None of them was a movie headliner. The conductor
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was not interested in things. He went upstairs and won $600 in a poker game.
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"There really are a good many drug addicts in the motion picture crowd,"
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an agent of the Department of Justice told me, "but most of them are among the
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low class, roustabout actors, and the extra people who are not working
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steadily but call themselves actors. However, the stories have been wildly
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exaggerated. And don't forget, young man, that New York has its dope fiends,
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too."
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A good many "extras" have been arrested as addicts at the instance of the
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California State Board of Pharmacy. A few years ago an officer of the
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Department of Internal Revenue having said there were 8,000 addicts in Los
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Angeles a narcotic clinic was established and maintained for a year, but the
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largest number of patients registered at one time was 300. A peddler arrested
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by the State board said he had sold cocaine to one of the fairest and most
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prosperous of screen actresses. No one else has accused her.
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The Los Angeles police have two detectives on the narcotic detail. One
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of them, who appeared to me both honest and intelligent, told me that not one
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in fifty of the city's addicts lived or worked in Hollywood. He also told me
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of a high salaried, dashing movie star who reported to the police that a
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peddler was stealing the stuff that dreams are made of into one of the finest
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Hollywood studios. The star and his valet helped the police set a trap for
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the peddler and catch him. This recital was hugely interesting to me for on
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the preceding day I had been assured that this same star was himself an addict
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and his abdomen pitted with needle marks.
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Some of the studio managements have paid no attention to rumors that
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drugs were being sold on or about their premises. Others are alive to this
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danger. One studio gave the police the address and telephone number of a
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woman listed as an "extra." She was sent to jail as a peddler of cocaine.
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She had been a cabaret entertainer and had done "bits" in pictures from time
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to time.
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"She claimed to be an important actress, but was a bum," was my
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detective's appraisal.
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A tip from the wife of a scenario writer enabled the police to round up a
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coterie of peddlers in a Los Angeles poolroom. A year and a half ago the
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Universal studio caused the arrest of a dispenser of morphine. He had hung
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around the studio, caught on as an "extra" and the moment he got past the gate
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began looking for customers among his fellows of the small fry. He went to
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jail and his wife divorced him.
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Cocaine is sold in Los Angeles in "bindles." A "bindle" is done up in
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waxed tissue, just like a drug store powder, weighs from two to two and a half
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grains and sells for $2 or $2.50. Some of the peddlers work on commission--50
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cents a bindle--others buy their stock outright from the wholesaler. In their
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unwritten code "eight pieces of iron" or of candy means eight ounces of
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cocaine or morphine, and "harmonica" is heroin.
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"Stories of 'snow parties' in Hollywood are vague. People call us up but
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don't give names or addresses. Personally I think all the 'dope' about 'dope'
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is exaggerated. It's the Mexicans and negroes who bother us, not the movie
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folk. A while ago we thought we had a good one when we heard of 'snow
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parties' in an old country house in Hollywood which had been rented to a count
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and sublet to others. The stars were supposed to gather there every night and
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have a 'sniff' or two. We spent three or four nights around the house. There
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were parties there, but it was only a mess of bootleggers."
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In certain published accounts of high jinks in Hollywood marijuana is
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mentioned as one of the drugs consumed by the insatiate performers. Marijuana
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is Indian hemp, sometimes called Mexican weed. It grows wild over much of the
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Southwest as ragweed, which it resembles, does in the East. Its seed is sold
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for birdseed. If the Californian has no back yard he can buy a quarter of an
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ounce of birdseed and raise enough marijuana in a window box to inspire a
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thousand bandits. The Mexicans mix the dried leaves with tobacco and smoke
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them in cigarettes. The effect is inflammatory stimulation.
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The marijuana excites the nerves, deadens fear, turns a coward into a
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swashbuckler, accentuates evil propensities. It does not soothe or produce
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pleasant dreams, and is scorned by the whites. Some cowboys have picked up
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the habit from the Mexicans, and whatever use is made of marijuana in
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Hollywood is restricted to punchers and peons.
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Before leaving the subject of drugs it should be pointed out that no
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prominent motion picture actor or actress has ever been arrested as an addict
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so far as I know. This merely is worth passing mention. The ready, of
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course, knows that addicts who are well up in the social or professional scale
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are seldom arrested anywhere. Does any one recall such an arrest in New York?
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Of much greater significance is the fact that even in the "inside" gossip of
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the California movie zone the number of well known players suspected of
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addiction is very small. Wherever I went I asked, "Who are these dope fiends
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we've been reading about?" Of the names given me by more than two persons the
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public would recognize only five. One of these was that of the handsome
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matinee idol heretofore mentioned. The others were women. There are in the
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Hollywood district when the studios are booming, which is not the case now,
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about 3,000 professional actors more or less regularly engaged, in addition to
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a swarm of extras. About 100 of these are stars or featured performers whose
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names sparkle in electric lights everywhere. Only five of the 100 were
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seriously mentioned as addicts even by lovers of scandal, and the only one
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concerning whom first hand testimony was offered was that of the screen hero
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said to have been seen jabbing himself with a needle.
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I admit that I was an outsider in Hollywood but I do not believe that any
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"dope cult" exists among the well known players, and am sure that the great
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majority of them have the same horror of narcotic drugs as other normal
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beings. And, by the way, it seems to be pretty well established that William
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Desmond Taylor, the director who was murdered, was not only trying to get a
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famous actress to give up morphine but was fighting a group of peddlers who
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were smuggling drugs into one of the Hollywood studio inclosures. He had
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caused one of the peddlers to be beaten almost to death at this studio. Most
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of the drug users are among the low grade extras, certain small comedy
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companies and a gunman type of hired hand. There has been until recently no
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concerted effort of the producing managements to stamp out the traffic.
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I was told by the Los Angeles police that such an effort now is under
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way. I might add here that a Hollywood physician who gave me a closeup view
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of the community as he saw it said that within the past year he had
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encountered only three addicts. Two were girls, both "extras." The other was
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a man, a relative of an actor. The Rev. Neal Dodd, an Episcopalian pastor,
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who is a sort of movie chaplain and is to have charge of a Little Church
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Around the Corner to be built in Hollywood, said he personally knew of only
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one "dope case" involving an actor.
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So much for narcotic drugs. Next alcohol. This topic can be dismissed
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with a few words. California under prohibition is one of the wettest States.
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Liquor easily is procurable in every large community, including Hollywood. In
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parts of Los Angeles it is sold openly, notably at soft drink counters. It
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cannot be bought openly anywhere in Hollywood, which always has been a
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saloonless town and is now. An old time said to me, "My daughter, 15 years old
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has never seen a drunken person."
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The homes of Hollywood are stocked with liquor in about the same
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proportion as elsewhere. Every thirsty burgher has his list of bootleggers'
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telephone numbers. He swaps telephone lists with his neighbor, just as he used
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to trade home brew recipes. He phones his order to the bootlegger and the
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stuff is delivered at the back door. The prevailing poison is synthetic gin at
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$8 a quart. There also is California wine to be had in any quantity,
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prohibition having at least doubled the price of the grape growers' product.
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Grapes may be bought in season by the pound or the ton. Unfermented grape
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juice is sold by the three gallon jar for $5 the jar, I believe. A friend told
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me that three parts of water added to the juice produced, after an interval
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and without any attention whatever, the rarest burgundy. How this exciting
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mutation is accomplished I don't know, but that is what he said. There is much
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drinking in Hollywood. Most of it is in the homes of movie and non-movie
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residents. Many homes are abstemious. Douglas Fairbanks and Mary Pickford are
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among the abstainers. They serve no liquor in their home except at formal
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dinners.
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An alcoholic cross section of Hollywood presents no phenomena not to be
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found nowadays in other communities East and West, with this exception: My
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impression is that movie people, taken collectively, have in the past given
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and attended more "booze parties" than most other communities of the same
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size, and that reckless indulgence has been more frequent. Hollywood probably
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will dispute this. Anyway, we can agree that since the Arbuckle explosion
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there has been a slowing up all around.
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|
Another count made against Hollywood is that girls who try to enter the
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movies or to advance in their profession are subject to the moods of
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unscrupulous directors and even of "magnates." I asked one of the best
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informed and frankest of men what truth there was in this.
|
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|
"I'll tell you," he said, "how the motion pictures got a bad name. They
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||
|
have come up, you know, rather chaotically, from nothing in a few years. A few
|
||
|
years ago the stock company was dominant. It put on cheap pictures costing
|
||
|
from $5,000 to $25,000, and ground out a picture in two or three weeks. Each
|
||
|
studio had a large number of employees earning from $5 to $150 a week.
|
||
|
Sometimes there were as many as twenty-five directors in one studio. The
|
||
|
profession of director was a new one. Some of these were men of bad character
|
||
|
but with a knack for this game. They got into the habit of telling actresses
|
||
|
that in order to become better actresses they needed emotional experience. The
|
||
|
next suggestion was, of course, that the director could help supply this
|
||
|
experience.
|
||
|
"I know of girls who were tricked by this sort of fraud, and the truth is
|
||
|
that some of them really did become stars. But as the new type of picture
|
||
|
developed the stock company passed. The director no longer is all powerful. In
|
||
|
the next phase the little tin king was the star. He picked his own company. If
|
||
|
he were a rotter, as some stars have been, he selected his women according to
|
||
|
their complaisance, and it is only fair to say that some of them were
|
||
|
exceedingly complaisant and evidently came to Hollywood with the intention of
|
||
|
throwing themselves at the first man they met who could give them rank in the
|
||
|
studios.
|
||
|
"Now that phase is passing or has passed. A new functionary, the casting
|
||
|
director, has appeared. In the selection of the cast he is supreme. He has
|
||
|
nothing to do with the players before the camera. He merely selects them. He
|
||
|
stays in his office. In most of the studios he is a fine type of man. The
|
||
|
director on the lot must use a woman in the role to which the casting director
|
||
|
assigns her. In the course of a year an actress may work under a number of
|
||
|
different directors. No one of them has dictatorial power over her.
|
||
|
"And the caliber of the directors is improving all the time. My judgment
|
||
|
is that at the present time if a girl at the studios is led astray it is
|
||
|
likely to be her own fault. You will hear the opposite view expressed, but do
|
||
|
not ignore the fact that many a girl who went to Hollywood to make her fortune
|
||
|
as a star and has had to go home because she has no talent has, to save her
|
||
|
face in her home town, told the neighbors that she fled that awful Hollywood
|
||
|
rather than submit to a wicked director.
|
||
|
"There is no question that some of the well known stage people who were
|
||
|
brought here a few years ago 'raised the deuce.' They could not get over the
|
||
|
idea that Hollywood either was a one night stand or a pleasure resort with the
|
||
|
sky as the limit. The natives, watching their carrying on, exclaimed: 'So
|
||
|
these are actors! God save the mark!' The 'joy rider,' the profligate fool,
|
||
|
always is under observation, while the silent, decorous majority is ignored.
|
||
|
Well, the irresponsible director and the small minded actor were what gave the
|
||
|
motion pictures a bad name in southern California. But I have watched
|
||
|
Hollywood a long time, and am convinced that it is steadily improving, despite
|
||
|
these occasional wild splurges we read about. Most of the bad ones were bad
|
||
|
when they came here.
|
||
|
"The bad ones flock together as affinities do everywhere. Every
|
||
|
experienced observer knows the source of the trouble that recently has come
|
||
|
upon Hollywood. One of the comedy concerns is rotten and ought to be blotted
|
||
|
off the face of the map. But the estimate that not 200 members of the 'fast
|
||
|
crowd' are actors, actresses, or directors is accurate. No census has been
|
||
|
taken, but I should say there are about 3,000 actors in the studio district. I
|
||
|
mean stars, leads and those who play small parts. The extras are as the sands
|
||
|
of the sea and many of them just as shifty. In boom times they gather around,
|
||
|
in slack times they go back to the foundry or wherever they came from. The
|
||
|
body from which the working extras are drawn numbers from 8,000 to 15,000
|
||
|
persons. About 150 of them are ex-pugilists. When the studios are busy they
|
||
|
work as rubbers and extras; otherwise they are absorbed in the mass. Living is
|
||
|
somehow easy for their kind.
|
||
|
"Among the extras are many decent and thrifty souls as well as many weak
|
||
|
and shiftless. They are just such humanity as you might think would be
|
||
|
attracted to the pictures. For a period of twenty months I carefully checked
|
||
|
all the newspaper stories of 'movie actresses' arrested for misdemeanors.
|
||
|
Often they were headlined as 'movie stars.' The fact was that not one of them
|
||
|
was even a player of small parts. They were comedy girls and extra girls. When
|
||
|
arrested, all said they were actresses."
|
||
|
While in Hollywood I also looked into the matter of divorce and informal
|
||
|
alliances. A long list of conspicuous players who have not been divorced and
|
||
|
who have no intention of being so was recited. A very able man who in the past
|
||
|
had been a police reporter in New York and other cities as well as smaller
|
||
|
towns testified that there was the least open immorality in Hollywood of any
|
||
|
place he had known. Another observer thought there was a greater percentage of
|
||
|
couples living together without being married than he had found to be the case
|
||
|
elsewhere, except, possibly, in New York. But as apparently everybody in the
|
||
|
picture fraternity knows who these couples are, this situation would seem to
|
||
|
be exceptional in Hollywood, as elsewhere.
|
||
|
A certain director who has had a succession of women friends devoted to
|
||
|
him is notorious because of that fact and is avoided by some of his former
|
||
|
friends. In the better circles of moviedom he does not show his face. On the
|
||
|
other hand, an actor and an actress who make no secret of being more than
|
||
|
friends are received socially because they are rated as "on the level." They
|
||
|
are introduced at parties by their individual names, and no questions are
|
||
|
asked. Liberal as may seem the social code of a community which regards the
|
||
|
other fellow's private affairs as strictly his own business, it does not
|
||
|
countenance disloyalty in the common law relations.
|
||
|
A woman succeeded in driving out of Hollywood a man who had cast aside a
|
||
|
friend of hers. A baby came to another pair, who were married after one of
|
||
|
them had secured a necessary divorce. The mother, who had not been a Puritan,
|
||
|
not only gave up drinking and profanity, but began giving humorous curtain
|
||
|
lectures to her friends who came to the house. She told them she was not going
|
||
|
to have her baby associating with "wild women." With the help of the baby, she
|
||
|
bettered the standards of propriety throughout her social circle.
|
||
|
Even those who accuse Hollywood of being a "Roaring Camp" must admit that
|
||
|
it has its little "Lucks" as well as its "Sals," and when the recording angel
|
||
|
gets around to the movie town will he not remember them.
|
||
|
The divorce register of Hollywood is formidably long, but the divorce
|
||
|
center of the United States, as a certain author pointed out, is in the Middle
|
||
|
West, not California. At the risk of offending stage people it must be said
|
||
|
that they seem to be more generally tolerant of divorce than others. That is
|
||
|
the case among the motion picture people. The average view is that divorce is
|
||
|
an evil but not necessarily a stigma.
|
||
|
If two persons can't get along together they are not criticized for the
|
||
|
act of separation. All depends on the circumstances. Divorce rarely is
|
||
|
questioned in Hollywood except when one or the other of the persons involved
|
||
|
is believed to have been badly treated. The most notably example of players
|
||
|
who have been divorced and remarried are Douglas Fairbanks and Mary Pickford.
|
||
|
In Hollywood one hears no breath of scandal concerning them. They had their
|
||
|
reasons for doing what they did; they are deeply in love with each other, they
|
||
|
behave themselves and that ends it. This is the Hollywood view.
|
||
|
One wonders to what extent Hollywood realizes how strange its notions
|
||
|
seem to the "good church people," or to small town people generally, who
|
||
|
constitute most of the audiences in motion picture theaters. I heard of a
|
||
|
small town, old fashioned, old lace and lavender mother who visited a relative
|
||
|
in Hollywood. The relative asked her what she'd like to see. "I do not want to
|
||
|
see Mary Pickford," she said emphatically. "There's been so much in the papers
|
||
|
about her divorce!" And yet many good people of Hollywood look up to Mary not
|
||
|
only as a leader of their profession, but all that a woman should be. In the
|
||
|
face of such conflict of views, you see, it is not the easiest thing in the
|
||
|
world to judge "the motion picture capital."
|
||
|
The whole roster of ten players under salary as Goldwyn stars was shown
|
||
|
me and I was told that not one of them had been divorced. I have no reason to
|
||
|
question this, and believe the news should be spread, broadcast to counteract
|
||
|
an impression that nobody in Hollywood knows today who his wife will be
|
||
|
tomorrow.
|
||
|
I was not much interested in the divorce problem of Hollywood, for there
|
||
|
and everywhere it is too deep for me, but for the information of any readers
|
||
|
who may want to know just who's who, the following list is submitted:
|
||
|
Divorced and not married again: Jean Acker, Mary Allen, Agnes Ayres,
|
||
|
Gladys Brockwell, Carlyle Blackwell, Genevieve Blinn, Sylvia Breamer, Herbert
|
||
|
Brenon, Lawson Butte, Mae Busch, Barbara Castleton, Charlie Chaplin,
|
||
|
Marguerite Clayton, Lew Cody (three times), Jack Conway, Donald Crisp, Kathlyn
|
||
|
Clifford, Dorothy Dalton, Allan Dwan, Elliott Dexter, Marie Doro, June
|
||
|
Elvidge, Bessie Eyton, Adele Farrington, Casson Ferguson, Maude Fealy, Fred
|
||
|
Fishbeck, Marguerita Fisher, Ann Forrest, Louise Glaum, Edna Goodrich,
|
||
|
Winifred Greenwood, Kenneth Harlan, Mildred Harris, Helen Holmes, E. Mason
|
||
|
Hopper, Jacques Jaccard, Dick Jones, Anna Lehr, Elmo Lincoln, Ann Little,
|
||
|
Katherine MacDonald, Marguerite Marsh, Christine Mayo, Harry Hillard, Jack
|
||
|
Mower, Anna Q. Nilsson, Marshall Neilan, Jane Novak, Doris Pawn, Irene Rich,
|
||
|
Ruth Roland, Alma Rubens, William Russell, Ford Sterling, Nell Shipman, Ruth
|
||
|
Stonehouse, Gloria Swanson, Myrtle Stedman, Hugh Thompson, Mary Thurman,
|
||
|
Lawrence Trimble, Rodolph Valentino, Lillian Walker, Pearl White, Marjorie
|
||
|
Wilson, Clara Kimball Young, James Young (three times).
|
||
|
Divorced and married again: May Allison, Leah Baird, Reginald Barker,
|
||
|
Frank Beal, Lawson Butt, George Beban, Noah Beery, Wallace Beery, Richard
|
||
|
Bennett, Francelia Billington, Hobart Bosworth, Bert Bracken, Hazel Daly,
|
||
|
Hampton Del Ruth, Ruby De Remer, Jack Dillon, William Edson Duncan, J. Gordon
|
||
|
Edwards, Robert Ellison, John Emerson (now married to Anita Loos), Douglas
|
||
|
Fairbanks, Franklyn Farnum, Eugene Ford, Allan Forrest (now married to Lottie
|
||
|
Pickford), Pauline Frederick (now married to a schooldays sweetheart), Fred
|
||
|
Granvill, Bert Grasby, Jack Gilbert, Hale Hamilton, James W. Horne, Louise
|
||
|
Huff, Irene Hunt, Paul G. Hurst, Peggy Hyland, Rex Ingram (now married to
|
||
|
Alice Terry), Thomas Jefferson, Emery Johnson, Leatrice Joy, Alice Joyce,
|
||
|
James Kirkwood, George Larkin, Edward Le Saint, Wilfred Lucas, John M.
|
||
|
McGowan, J. Farrell McDonald, Frank Mayo, Harry Millarde, Tom Mix, Owen Moore,
|
||
|
Tom Moore, Mae Murray, Marie Manon, Fred Niblo, Wheeler Oakman, Mary Pickford,
|
||
|
Lottie Pickford, Theodore Roberts, Wesley H. Ruggles, Paul Scandon, Rolin
|
||
|
Sturgeon, Conway Tearle, Mabel Van Buren, Eric von Stroheim, Henry Walthall,
|
||
|
Crane Wilbur, Kathryn Williams (married four times, now wife of Charles
|
||
|
Eyton).
|
||
|
Divorce suits now pending are omitted. No doubt almost as long a list of
|
||
|
undivorced persons could be prepared.
|
||
|
This article has come to the end of its allotted space without having
|
||
|
more than touched on the brighter and more wholesome phases of Hollywood life,
|
||
|
which do exist abundantly.
|
||
|
Making of pictures is called an "industry" in Hollywood, and it is so.
|
||
|
The cost of many feature productions is from $3,000 to $5,000 a camera day. It
|
||
|
takes at least five camera weeks to complete the picture, making the total
|
||
|
cost sometimes more than $100,000. The camera cannot be fooled--very much. If
|
||
|
an actor has been out all night rioting, drinking or gambling, the camera sees
|
||
|
it. He cannot go on. Unless scenes can be "shot" not requiring that actor's
|
||
|
presence, the whole production is held up. Result, loss of between $3,000 and
|
||
|
$5,000. If the picture has progressed so far that to call everything off would
|
||
|
be ruinous, the offending actor is retained, but unless he reforms that is his
|
||
|
last picture for this producer. He acquires a reputation for unreliability,
|
||
|
and nobody wants him.
|
||
|
In a girl of the pictures, youth, vivacity, freshness--they must be real,
|
||
|
not counterfeit--are everything. If they are all she has to give, if she does
|
||
|
not develop dramatically, the length of her screen life is only about five
|
||
|
years. They are precious years. Each day is a thing to be treasured and
|
||
|
guarded. To the camera she must look the same every day of the weeks and even
|
||
|
months that pass before a picture is finished. She cannot appear "on the lot"
|
||
|
with a haggard face, with circles under the eyes, with crow foot wrinkles
|
||
|
scarring the smoothness of her skin. All this is intolerable. The actors and
|
||
|
actresses know it as well as the producers and directors.
|
||
|
It follows then--and is a fact--that the typical actor and actress, even
|
||
|
if predisposed toward giddiness, is, during the long hard days when a picture
|
||
|
is being made, a model of behavior. The letdown, if it comes, is in the
|
||
|
interval between pictures. But, even in those vacations the players have to
|
||
|
remember that when the next engagement begins they must look their best. So,
|
||
|
to a degree, good conduct is self-enforced in Hollywood.
|
||
|
This is especially true of actors of "straight parts." The character
|
||
|
actors, whose faces are often changed by makeup, do not have to be so careful.
|
||
|
|
||
|
PART III [What Happens to a New Girl in Hollywood?]
|
||
|
|
||
|
The city of Los Angeles and all the surrounding towns are full of
|
||
|
beautiful girls toiling at homely occupations. The visitor sees them waiting
|
||
|
at table in restaurants, ladling macaroni in cafeterias, behind the counters
|
||
|
of department stores, selling cigars and newspapers in open air shops and
|
||
|
bobbing through the doors of factories. It is an exhibition of personal
|
||
|
comeliness not wholly to be accounted for by the rich endowment bestowed by
|
||
|
nature on the daughters of California.
|
||
|
The visitor makes inquiry and the answer he gets is this:
|
||
|
"So you've noticed all these picture faces? Why, they're the girls who
|
||
|
came out here to be Mary Pickfords. They were the belles of their own home
|
||
|
towns. Nice girls, most of them, and good looking enough, as you can see. But
|
||
|
they mistook good looks and ambition for talent, and now they're lucky to have
|
||
|
$25 in their pay envelopes on Saturday night. It's quite a story. Look into
|
||
|
it."
|
||
|
So the stranger looks into it and finds--
|
||
|
All over the country are girls eager to be motion picture stars. Such a
|
||
|
girl has perhaps won a prize in a beauty contest. Her friends have assured her
|
||
|
that she looks like Mary Pickford, Corinne Griffith, Enid Bennett, Mary Miles
|
||
|
Minter, Gloria Swanson, Anita Stewart or some other celluloid princess. A new
|
||
|
way of doing her hair, a penciled lift of the eyebrow add to the fancied
|
||
|
resemblance. Like as not the girl makes a hit with the local public as the
|
||
|
frolicsome ingenue of amateur theatricals. It dawns upon her that she is an
|
||
|
actress as well as the fortunate possessor of the type of beauty for which
|
||
|
(vide the screen magazines) the producers are searching the world with pockets
|
||
|
full of gold.
|
||
|
But she is reminded that dramatic ability is not necessary, or at least
|
||
|
can be speedily developed, for she reads of a big town beauty contest
|
||
|
guaranteeing the winner a five weeks' engagement at Hollywood at $600 a week.
|
||
|
To be fair to the press agents and the interviewers, the best of them also
|
||
|
tell the other side--the hard work, the sacrifice, the step by step climb
|
||
|
whereby the finest actresses of the films, like those of the stage, have
|
||
|
reached the height.
|
||
|
But to the typical screen struck girl, the spoiled darling of the small
|
||
|
town, this means little. She has been told of her beauty so often that she
|
||
|
believes it, and probably it is true--in Toonerville. She has yet to learn of
|
||
|
facts like this:
|
||
|
Nine delectable women pose successively before a motion picture camera,
|
||
|
under the pitiless glare of mercury vapor lights. To the untrained eye--yes,
|
||
|
and to the trained eye, too--the nine may look exactly alike. Not a mark, not
|
||
|
a line to distinguish one from the others.
|
||
|
The test films are developed and taken to the projection room. There
|
||
|
chemistry tells its grievous truths. Closeups of the nine women are thrown on
|
||
|
the screen.
|
||
|
Four of the nine appear to be Ethiopians. Four are ordinary looking,
|
||
|
neither attractive nor ugly, the kind that would pass unnoticed. The ninth--
|
||
|
one woman of the nine--is the handsome creature that she seemed to the human
|
||
|
eye.
|
||
|
As explained to me in Hollywood, this surprising variation is due to the
|
||
|
quality of the skin. Some skins reflect too much light, some absorb too much;
|
||
|
occasionally one has just the right actinic value. If it isn't right, there is
|
||
|
nothing a woman can do to change it. She may be another Helen, but the screen
|
||
|
will tell her she's a fright.
|
||
|
The proportion of good motion picture complexions is much smaller than
|
||
|
one out of nine, that figure having been chosen at random for the purpose of
|
||
|
illustration. And, of course, possession of the blooming cheek, the cameo
|
||
|
profile and the sparkling eye does not mean that the fortunate lady can ever
|
||
|
be an actress.
|
||
|
The ambition of our small town belle eventually carries her off to Los
|
||
|
Angeles. Sometimes her mother, dissuasion having failed, accompanies her.
|
||
|
Sometimes she is blessed with a relative in southern California, to whose home
|
||
|
she can go. Often she is a runaway, dreaming of the day when her obdurate
|
||
|
guardians will jump out of their seats at the movie show when they she her
|
||
|
starring in her first big release. Going home they will find a check from her
|
||
|
to lift the mortgage on the old place and perforce will nod their heads and
|
||
|
say, "Well, it looks as if Theodosia done the right thing after all."
|
||
|
Somehow the girl reaches Los Angeles. The chances are that as she looks
|
||
|
around the station she sees no friendly face. Welfare work for the motion
|
||
|
picture girls is scarcely begun. There is no agent of the Travelers Aid
|
||
|
Society to meet the stranger and guide her aright. Two Methodist deaconnesses
|
||
|
attempt the task, but what can they do, with trains arriving at frequent
|
||
|
intervals from the north, east and south, and the steamships sluicing their
|
||
|
passengers up to the city from San Pedro?
|
||
|
If the girl has made a little inquiry in advance she knows she can go to
|
||
|
the Y.W.C.A, the W.C.T.U. or the Salvation Army or one of the women's clubs
|
||
|
and at least be directed to a boarding house. Let us assume she is
|
||
|
sophisticated enough to do that. Let us even assume that she is so lucky as to
|
||
|
get into the Studio Club in Hollywood. This is under the supervision of the
|
||
|
national board of the Y.W.C.A. and the direction of Miss Marian Hunter and is
|
||
|
doing on a small scale a splendid work, which it ought to be doing on a big
|
||
|
scale.
|
||
|
It is a club for girls with serious dramatic ambitions. It gives them a
|
||
|
room, with breakfast and dinner on weekdays and three meals on Sunday, for
|
||
|
$10.50 a week. But it can accommodate only nineteen girls--nineteen of the
|
||
|
chosen among thousands who think themselves called.
|
||
|
Our small town Pickford will find it hard to find shelter elsewhere in
|
||
|
Hollywood. Hollywood is not a furnished room resort, but a fastidious suburb.
|
||
|
More than one-half of its population of 70,000 are not in the movie industry
|
||
|
and a good many of this majority entertain a prejudice against movie people.
|
||
|
In passing I might say that the prejudice struck me as largely without
|
||
|
justification at present. In the pioneer days--away back eight or nine years
|
||
|
ago--the movies were harum-scarum. Companies of actors "on location" used to
|
||
|
smash shrubbery and scatter milk bottles and lunch boxes over fine estates
|
||
|
they borrowed for camera purposes. Nowadays discipline is enforced and the
|
||
|
studio management sends along a special cleanup squad to remove any debris. If
|
||
|
accidently damage is done the producer pays for it promptly. The owner of
|
||
|
perhaps the finest show place in Hollywood now lets the actors in, charging a
|
||
|
small fee, which goes to his gardener.
|
||
|
Similarly the movie people early acquired the reputation of being
|
||
|
undesirable tenants. Landlords complained that they gave noisy parties at
|
||
|
night and massacred the furniture. One of the biggest landlords told me,
|
||
|
however, that the boisterous minority which did this had gradually been weeded
|
||
|
out and that some of his best tenants were actors and directors. He said there
|
||
|
was no longer any excuse for the newspaper advertisement that appeared not
|
||
|
long ago, "No children, no dogs, no movies."
|
||
|
My personal testimony is that for several nights I rode and walked
|
||
|
through the residential as well as the business parts of Hollywood. with ears
|
||
|
attuned to noise of any wave length and heard nothing but the metallic click
|
||
|
of eucalyptus leaves as the trade wind set brother against brother. One one of
|
||
|
these trips a tall and amiable stranger walked up beside me.
|
||
|
"Sure feels lonesome," he said. "I live up the hill a few blocks. Looking
|
||
|
for any one in particular?"
|
||
|
"No," I said. "I was looking for orgies."
|
||
|
He laughed.
|
||
|
"They're all doing that. Couple of nights ago two tourists came up to me
|
||
|
and asked if they could get in one some of these wild parties they'd been
|
||
|
reading about.
|
||
|
" 'Orgies?' says I. 'That's it, orgies,' says one of the tourists.
|
||
|
" 'A cinch,' says I. 'What kind of orgy do you prefer--merely dope or
|
||
|
love cult, or something deeper? I am one of the official orgy guides.'
|
||
|
"The tourists decided I was a nut and beat it. Orgies! There's many a
|
||
|
young blood around here would like to get into one once, just to see what
|
||
|
they're like, you know, but they can't find 'em. I've never located one, and I
|
||
|
been here three years had have had a bit of luck writing for the screen. Where
|
||
|
you from? Ever live in a small town?"
|
||
|
I told him I had spent several years in a New England village whose
|
||
|
population of 749 hardly varied from census to census.
|
||
|
'"That's the idea," my new friend said. "Hollywood at night is just like
|
||
|
your New England village. It's just a dormitory for the cops. I recollect one
|
||
|
night they had to wake up and tell Jack Dempsey some of his crowd were
|
||
|
disturbing the neighbors, but outside of that, nothing. Well, here's where I
|
||
|
live. Good luck on your search. Oh, for a jolly old orgy to take the creak out
|
||
|
of these joints. But don't believe all you hear. Good night."
|
||
|
But we have wandered away, through the scented night of Hollywood, from
|
||
|
the screen struck girl and what befalls her. Having found a room--$20 a month
|
||
|
is about the cheapest in Los Angeles, which embraces Hollywood, but is seven
|
||
|
miles away--she learns right away that there is no use in presenting herself
|
||
|
at a motion picture studio without a photograph of herself.
|
||
|
She finds one of the many photographers who make a specialty of emergency
|
||
|
calls like this one. She is rather stunned when the assistant tells her of the
|
||
|
thousands of pictures they have supplied to other girls. But with the dozen
|
||
|
precious photographs she sets forth. Originally she thought that it might be
|
||
|
enough to apply at just one studio, but her few hours sojourn have given her a
|
||
|
glimmering of the truth.
|
||
|
The first studio she goes to has a row of plain one story buildings
|
||
|
fronting the street behind a line of pepper trees. Automobiles by the hundred
|
||
|
are parked outside. A few shabby old men are standing by the curb.
|
||
|
The girl has been told to ask for the casting director. She asks one of
|
||
|
the old men where he can be found. This man has a face waffled by many a
|
||
|
desert sun. He removes his hat and points to a door in the side of the row of
|
||
|
low buildings.
|
||
|
"Are you--are you an actor?" the girl ventures. The old man is not
|
||
|
without a sense of proportion.
|
||
|
"Well, miss," he says, "it might be nigher the truth to say I'm a miner.
|
||
|
Montana, Death Valley, Mexico and all points between. I had a little hard luck
|
||
|
down to Sonora and came up here to take a whirl at a new game. No, miss, I
|
||
|
can't truthfully say I'm an actor. I'm what they call an extra. When I work I
|
||
|
get $10 a day because they figure I'm what they call a good rough and ready
|
||
|
type. Some gets $5, some $7.50, according to how they look and what they have
|
||
|
to do. I had two days work last week; so far this week none. Figuring on
|
||
|
getting into the movies?"
|
||
|
The girl nods her head. The miner surveys her gravely, seems about to say
|
||
|
something, but ends with, "Well, good luck; some gets away with it," and turns
|
||
|
away.
|
||
|
We can't spend much time following this girl's adventures, for there are
|
||
|
other phases of Hollywood to report upon. She enters through the door into a
|
||
|
narrow passage. At the other end she sees sunlight. But it is the sunlight of
|
||
|
a forbidden country--the "lot," the inside of the studio enclosure. Half way
|
||
|
to the alluring sunlight stands a barrier, a low gate, and beside a gate the
|
||
|
keeper thereof.
|
||
|
Nothing that has been written or said about the perfection with which the
|
||
|
studio gatekeeper plays his part is exaggerated. You get by or you don't. If
|
||
|
you belong in the lot you reach it; if you are not on the list of the elect of
|
||
|
the lord of the lot you stay outside.
|
||
|
Persons who have not been in Hollywood, but have tried to pass the stage
|
||
|
doorkeeper of a New York theater may picture a stage doorkeeper seven times
|
||
|
sterner and more bored looking, and that is the gatekeeper of Hollywood. But
|
||
|
just before she reaches him the girl sees a door at the left of the tunnel-
|
||
|
like passageway. That lets her into a small, square room against whose walls
|
||
|
are hard wooden benches. Half a dozen men and women are sitting there. They
|
||
|
strike the girl as decidedly frowsy--the whole lot of them. For their part,
|
||
|
they look the newcomer up and down in frank appraisal.
|
||
|
Between this room and a smaller one adjoining and open window has been
|
||
|
cut in the partition. A young man is sitting by this window in the smaller
|
||
|
room. The girl asks for the casting director. The man tells her the casting
|
||
|
director never sees strangers unless they come with cards or letters from his
|
||
|
friends, and often not even then. He is too busy. She doesn't know any of his
|
||
|
friends.
|
||
|
The young man explains, courteously, that he is an assistant casting
|
||
|
director. The girl says that she wishes to be an actress. She passes over one
|
||
|
of the photographs. The young man rattles off a list of questions and writes
|
||
|
the answers on a card. He records her age, weight, height, color, wardrobe,
|
||
|
type, experience and other personal details. According to the card, which goes
|
||
|
into a filing cabinet, her type is "school girl," her experience "none" and
|
||
|
her wardrobe "modern," she having told the man that she had brought from home
|
||
|
several frocks, including an evening gown.
|
||
|
"That's all," the man says. "We have your telephone number. If we need
|
||
|
you we'll call you. No use hanging around."
|
||
|
"And what am I to do when called?" she says. "Extra--mob stuff," he
|
||
|
answers.
|
||
|
Then, it being a slow day and assistant directors are not always
|
||
|
curmudgeons as painted, he takes time to ask her if she has also registered at
|
||
|
the Service Bureau. She learns that this is an employment agency, operated by
|
||
|
the Motion Picture Producers' Association in Los Angeles for the purpose of
|
||
|
effecting economy through centralization and also of weeding out superfluous
|
||
|
and undesirable extras. Later she finds out more about the army of extras in
|
||
|
whose ranks (if she is so fortunate as to be called) she must grub toward
|
||
|
stardom.
|
||
|
"At first," a wise man of Hollywood tells her, "they were mostly
|
||
|
hysterical kids rushing out to Hollywood to jump in and make a big splash. Now
|
||
|
they are pretty much shaken down to hard boiled persons looking for work. They
|
||
|
used to flock around the studios to loll, chew gum, read the movie magazines
|
||
|
and talk big. They cluttered the streets and didn't add anything to the
|
||
|
reputation of the town in the eyes of those who wish it well. Now they are all
|
||
|
card indexed and most of them stay at home beside the telephone, so as not to
|
||
|
miss a call. That is why you see so few movie people outside the studios
|
||
|
during the day. They are either on the lot, out on location or in their homes.
|
||
|
"You're registered as a school girl type. Well, if a director who is
|
||
|
shooting on the lot wants twenty-five school kids to floss up something he's
|
||
|
doing he sends word to the casting director; the casting director's assistant
|
||
|
grabs twenty-five 'school girl' cards from his card index and works the phone
|
||
|
until he gets the right number. Or he phones the Service Bureau in Los
|
||
|
Angeles: 'Have twenty-five school girls, swell dressers, here by 11 o'clock.'
|
||
|
Some of the studios work it one way, some the other.
|
||
|
"There are also half a dozen private 'exchanges' or employment bureaus
|
||
|
for extras. Many girls on piece work in factories are on the extra list. When
|
||
|
a lot of people are wanted for some big spectacle they get into the mobs and
|
||
|
make their $5 or $7.50 a day. Ordinary mob stuff pays $5. Then again mere
|
||
|
'atmosphere' may be wanted. That may bring in a crowd without any experience
|
||
|
or movie ambition at all--a lot of farmers right off the ranch, for instance,
|
||
|
to piece out a street scene in rural drama, or a lynching scene, or maybe a
|
||
|
bunch of Chinese from Los Angeles to swell the mob in a Boxer rebellion. This
|
||
|
pays $3 a day. The farmers get a lot of fun out of coming to the studios
|
||
|
occasionally and pretending they're actors.
|
||
|
"The extras--on the legitimate stage they're called supers--have to be on
|
||
|
the lot by half past 8 in the morning the same as the actors, for shooting
|
||
|
starts at 9. If there's no rush to get the production done, they're through at
|
||
|
5 o'clock, but if there's a rush, as there often is, they may have to stick
|
||
|
around late at night, or even all night.
|
||
|
"It's hard work, and irregular work, uncertain as to money return,
|
||
|
usually getting you nowhere except a certain standing as a dependable extra.
|
||
|
I've seen many a one start with a flourish in the morning and quit for good
|
||
|
the first night, especially when the company goes into the country on
|
||
|
location. At such times the discipline of the big studios is so strict that
|
||
|
all the extras have to sit in their rubberneck wagons until called. They may
|
||
|
sit there all day in the cold and rain. There are interminable, wearisome
|
||
|
waits.
|
||
|
"And the worst of it for the screen struck youngsters is that they may
|
||
|
never catch even a glimpse, except at a distance, of the worshiped stars.
|
||
|
Often the stars do not figure in the mob stuff at all; they may be miles away
|
||
|
while the sequence is being shot. And at the studios the extras can't wander
|
||
|
whither they wish; they are herded in one place, and no stars are in that
|
||
|
place.
|
||
|
"Yes, it's a tough life, but don't let me discourage you. A few girls
|
||
|
have come up through it, but remember, only a few. Once in a while I hear of
|
||
|
one who is sensible enough to go back home and marry the proprietor of the
|
||
|
Elite Garage, but a great many of those who are crowded out are too proud to
|
||
|
go, or haven't money enough. Hence the lovely ladies you see gracing the
|
||
|
cafeterias and department stores of Los Angeles.
|
||
|
"A few girls with baby doll faces and nothing else have been starred, but
|
||
|
if you look over the list seriously you will find that the majority possess
|
||
|
not only that rarity, a complexion that photographs well, but a personality,
|
||
|
an almost indefinable ability to register changing moods without conscious
|
||
|
effort, to feel what they're playing and make the spectator feel it. In my
|
||
|
opinion the baby doll phase is passing, and more and more the screen is
|
||
|
demanding real actors and actresses."
|
||
|
Our small town belle has a sudden thought as the wise man of Hollywood
|
||
|
ends his disquisition.
|
||
|
"What," she says, "happened to Travesta Turbine, the girl who won the
|
||
|
prize in that beauty contest and got a starring engagement for five weeks at
|
||
|
$600 a week?"
|
||
|
"They paid her the money all right," the friendly cynic makes reply. "As
|
||
|
for the rest, she had no more brains than a snail. They made a few long shots
|
||
|
of her and then doubled her with a woman who can act. They told Travesta she
|
||
|
could hang around and get a movie education if she wanted to. She did for a
|
||
|
while, but as nobody paid any attention to her she gathered up her $3,000 and
|
||
|
left Hollywood to worry along as best it could. It was just an advertising
|
||
|
stunt for the studio and the paper that ran the contest. Few studios do it."
|
||
|
The small town belle is not discouraged--yet. As the telephone never
|
||
|
rings, she takes to making the rounds of the studios every day. She finds them
|
||
|
cheerful enough. She wonders sometimes if it wouldn't be better for her if
|
||
|
they were harsher.
|
||
|
"Can't use you just now, but come again," the assistant casting director
|
||
|
says. He really means it, after a fashion, for the girl is not hopeless: she
|
||
|
dresses well; her obdurate parents have relented to the extent of sending her
|
||
|
money, realizing that it will take some time to effect a cure and that the
|
||
|
climate of California, though salubrious, is not nutritious.
|
||
|
She is inspired by the few instances she hears of quick success in the
|
||
|
midst of failure or plodding. A friend at the Studio Club tells her of Zasu
|
||
|
Pitts. Mrs. Pitts brought her daughter to the Studio Club from Santa Cruz. She
|
||
|
was a timid country, small town girl, without training or obvious ability. She
|
||
|
registered as an extra. Very soon fortune placed her in Mary Pickford's
|
||
|
company, filming "The Poor Little Rich Girl." She developed personality.
|
||
|
Directors gave her small parts and she acquitted herself well, never ceasing
|
||
|
meanwhile to study the difficult technique. In less than three years she was a
|
||
|
star. That was a very rapid ascent.
|
||
|
Then our small town girl hears the story of Lois Lee, another graduate of
|
||
|
the Studio Club. A magazine beauty contest lifted her from obscurity, but it
|
||
|
happened that Lois Lee, unlike most of the prodigies thus discovered, had
|
||
|
common sense as well as beauty. As the prize winner she played a "lead"
|
||
|
without experience. When the picture was finished she astonished the director
|
||
|
by insisting on tossing away whatever prestige this might have given her and
|
||
|
beginning at the bottom as an extra. She had brains enough to see that she
|
||
|
didn't known anything about actor and humility enough to be willing to do mob
|
||
|
scenes in order to learn. She worked up through and is now playing leads
|
||
|
again.
|
||
|
Another Studio Club girl quit a first class stenographic job at $35 a
|
||
|
week for the lure of the movies. She was pretty, a good dancer, "mad about
|
||
|
acting," a girl from whom the uninitiated would expect rapid progress. She
|
||
|
went to work as an extra and also did small bits. The very first week she was
|
||
|
busy every day and made $60. She chanced to be exactly the type a director had
|
||
|
been looking for a certain sequence of scenes. But her prosperity ended with
|
||
|
the sequence.
|
||
|
During the next three weeks she earned nothing. She kept an exact
|
||
|
account. In three months she received $140. That was just what she had earned
|
||
|
in one month as a stenographer. She discovered that she was not an actress and
|
||
|
that the pictures requiring a girl of her type were few and far between. She
|
||
|
returned to her pothooks and typewriter and lived happily ever after.
|
||
|
Her brief experience had taught her much. She had learned that the open
|
||
|
field for extras is not as open as it appeared to be; that casting directors
|
||
|
are in the habit of choosing again and again persons whom they know and are
|
||
|
used to; that in most of the studios, as is entirely natural, the relatives of
|
||
|
employees have the first call, provided they meet the requirements; that many
|
||
|
studios have their own small salaried "stock" actors, who play most of the
|
||
|
bits; that if an extra woman has not a specially interesting personality she
|
||
|
may go ten weeks without earning a single dollar; that the chance of any one
|
||
|
in a mob scene catching the director's eye is slim; that the average picture
|
||
|
has only eight or ten acting parts at the most and the average extra has no
|
||
|
more chance of ever getting a part in Hollywood than he has of taking Caruso's
|
||
|
place at the Metropolitan.
|
||
|
And how fares amid this disillusionment the day dreaming middle Western
|
||
|
belle who went to Hollywood to improve the movies? I do not know. Hers is
|
||
|
merely a typical case, set forth from what I learned of many cases. The
|
||
|
chances of her name ever appearing in electric lights are at least 99 to 1
|
||
|
against her. She may keep on and settle down as an extra, averaging perhaps
|
||
|
$25 a week. She may swallow her pride and go home. She may join the
|
||
|
innumerable company of picture failures with picture faces crowding one
|
||
|
another for jobs in the stores and shops of California. Or she may disappear
|
||
|
altogether from her accustomed walks. Some of the girls "who look like Mary
|
||
|
Pickford" do that, too.
|
||
|
"One of the most distressing facts," said Miss Hunter, the finely poised
|
||
|
director of the Studio Club, "is that so many of the girls who come here have
|
||
|
parents or brothers and sisters to support. They expect to earn large salaries
|
||
|
quickly and you can imagine the worry when they find that perhaps they can't
|
||
|
earn anything at all. If they fail it is sometimes because they want the home
|
||
|
folks to think they had made good here, sometimes because it helps them to
|
||
|
make good."
|
||
|
Having heard that a good many movie girls had had experiences with evil
|
||
|
directors I asked Miss Hunter what conclusion she had come to on this point.
|
||
|
"Before I came to Hollywood," she said, "I worked among girls in large
|
||
|
cities. I have found less viciousness here than elsewhere. Some of the men in
|
||
|
the motion picture industry do present a problem, but not more so than some of
|
||
|
the men in department stores or factories. I know of men here who have worked
|
||
|
themselves into places of power in studios and who use that power to block the
|
||
|
progress of girls who are not complaisant. I know of girls who have revolted
|
||
|
and have left Hollywood for this reason. But these instances are exceptional.
|
||
|
"I could name many girls of my acquaintance who have reached the top
|
||
|
without ever having heard a disagreeable proposal. It ought to be noted that
|
||
|
William Desmond Taylor, the director who was murdered, had a fine reputation
|
||
|
among the girls. He was quiet, courteous, patient. He did not fool the girls
|
||
|
with careless flattery, as some directors do, but if a girl was able to see
|
||
|
him personally he gave sensible encouragement if he thought it deserved. I
|
||
|
have talked with many girls and never heard one of them say a word against
|
||
|
him."
|
||
|
I put the same question to John H. Pelletier, director of the Morals
|
||
|
Efficiency Association of Southern California, which functions like the
|
||
|
Committee of Fourteen in New York in reporting vice.
|
||
|
"Only a small percentage of girls who go to the studios meet
|
||
|
objectionable treatment," he said. "Personally I know of only once instance.
|
||
|
The morally irresponsible director is a marked man. Also marked is the type of
|
||
|
woman who is willing to oblige a director in any way in order to break into
|
||
|
the movies. The producers are more careful than they used to be in keeping out
|
||
|
directors and women of these types. But you could render a service by
|
||
|
publishing this warning to mothers. This city is no place for a girl to come
|
||
|
to without money or without relatives or friends here any more than is New
|
||
|
York."
|
||
|
Another expert view: "Don't forget that the pictures have attracted here
|
||
|
half baked girls and boys from everywhere. The worst menace is not the
|
||
|
director or the girl or the camera roughneck or any of the others you've heard
|
||
|
about, but the aristocratic, ne'er do well gambling and mashing sons of rich
|
||
|
Eastern men, who have come out here with the idea that this is the devil's
|
||
|
playground."
|
||
|
"What is your advice to girls?" I asked Miss Hunter.
|
||
|
"Stay at home," she said. "If you have come to Hollywood, go home unless
|
||
|
it is proved that you have unusual charm and individuality and enough money to
|
||
|
keep you going for at least a year. As a matter of fact, two years is
|
||
|
necessary for a fair trial. Remember that stars are not made in a day or a
|
||
|
month or two. Remember that there is a great and tediously acquired technique
|
||
|
behind the motion pictures. Remember that there are success and happiness for
|
||
|
few, failure and dismay for many."
|
||
|
This good counsel may discourage a few of the butterflies who might
|
||
|
otherwise join in the foolish chase around the pepper trees of Hollywood. But
|
||
|
until the movies lose their glamour there will undoubtedly continue to be
|
||
|
girls like the one who recently ran away from home to be near the studios.
|
||
|
She had fallen in love with a lofty hero of the screen whose specialty is
|
||
|
rescuing forlorn maidens and carrying them off in a rakish roadster over
|
||
|
winding, perilous mountain trails. Her ambition point not toward art but
|
||
|
toward the hero. [2]
|
||
|
Barred from the studios, she climbed ten foot fences to get at him.
|
||
|
Driving home at night, he found her hiding in his car. When he walked in his
|
||
|
garden, she materialized from vines and shrubbery. As this actor has a wife
|
||
|
and children and is a mild and prosaic citizen when not skyhooting before the
|
||
|
camera, the attentions of the runaway girl from the East embarrassed him not a
|
||
|
little. He sent for her parents and had her taken home, but at last report she
|
||
|
was planning another sortie and the star was about to retreat to Honolulu.
|
||
|
Rupert Hughes, who returned to Hollywood while was there, says most of
|
||
|
the gossip about the movie people and their customs is poppycock.
|
||
|
"I've been on the lot two years," he assured me, "and never have even
|
||
|
seen a woman kissed, except as called for by the script. I have never seen a
|
||
|
drunken man, have never seen any soliciting in the streets. Hollywood is just
|
||
|
as clean as any theological seminary, and any other statement befouls the man
|
||
|
who makes it. I have had jobs to offer, careers to make. No woman has as much
|
||
|
as hinted to me that she was willing to grant favors to get along. These
|
||
|
matters aside, let the public keep in mind the words of Ian MacLaren: 'Be
|
||
|
pitiful, because everybody's having a hard fight.' "
|
||
|
To this may be added the observation of one who has watched Hollywood
|
||
|
from its romper days and sees it now adolescent but growing up:
|
||
|
"Bad has been mixed with the good here and a man is a fool to deny it.
|
||
|
But the big question is, Who is molding the movies, the rotten producer, the
|
||
|
rotten director, the rotten actor? Or is it the decent people with an adequate
|
||
|
set of ideals which they don't bother to say much about? To me it is the
|
||
|
latter. To me the movies are not the Arbuckles, but the Fairbankses, the Mary
|
||
|
Pickfords, the Bill Harts, the Charley Rays, the Conrad Nagels, the Will
|
||
|
Rogerses, the Harold Lloyds--scores of others, the finest in the world,
|
||
|
setting an example of good acting and good citizenship.
|
||
|
|
||
|
PART IV [Brief Tour of Some Hollywood Studios]
|
||
|
|
||
|
We rode from beauteous Hollywood down to the flats toward the ocean,
|
||
|
where derricks against the skyline betrayed the oil wells of Culver City. The
|
||
|
car stopped beside a low cottage. Outside the cottage, with her back to us,
|
||
|
stood a crookback witch peering into a hand mirror propped on a window sill
|
||
|
while she applied dabs of fresh putty to an already terrifying nose and chin.
|
||
|
Our guide said, "This is Mark Jones. Mr. Jones, I'd like you to meet this
|
||
|
man from New York who has come here to write up the movies." The witch,
|
||
|
turning and grinning with every snaggle tooth, extended a hand. "Fine weather
|
||
|
we're having," she said, and Mark Jones, kindliest of men, blackest of motion
|
||
|
picture villains, returned to his mirror and make-up box.
|
||
|
The guide took us around the corner of the cottage and we came to another
|
||
|
one which had a front stoop. By the stoop crouched a Confederate soldier. He
|
||
|
wore a gray uniform with "C.S.A." on the belt, forage cap, sword, square bowed
|
||
|
spectacles and short side whiskers. The witch went over and joined him. The
|
||
|
Confederate groveled in the sand at her feet, then suddenly leaped up, grasped
|
||
|
the sword hilt and marched off very fine and resolute. Then he went back and
|
||
|
did it again. He said something to the witch and she leered and clawed in the
|
||
|
air with wheedling fingers twisting in front of his face. But he waved her
|
||
|
aside and, disregarding her mumbled curses, strode away. He strode maybe eight
|
||
|
feet, then stopped and said to a youth waiting at the camera, "All right, let
|
||
|
'er go." All the action was repeated while the camera man cranked. Then the
|
||
|
soldier came forward smiling to meet our guide.
|
||
|
"Harold," said the guide, "you better shake hands with this man. He's
|
||
|
come from New York to write up the movies."
|
||
|
"Good heavens!" cried Harold Lloyd, for the "Secesh" was none other, "are
|
||
|
we as bad as that?"
|
||
|
He proved to be boyish, unaffected, likable. He led forth his leading
|
||
|
woman, Mildred Davis, a blue eyed, yellow haired, fragile looking girl. She
|
||
|
wished it to be understood that she was indignant over the published stories
|
||
|
about Hollywood and that lots of girls in the movies were just like those she
|
||
|
had known at finishing school in Philadelphia. She dropped a curtsey and said
|
||
|
precisely, "I am very glad to have met you," before going back to the
|
||
|
automobile which was to take them back into the hills for other scenes of the
|
||
|
new Lloyd comedy. Mr. Lloyd paused to explain that the fragment we had just
|
||
|
scene was part of a sequence in which he plays his own grandfather. He had
|
||
|
never word a disguise before.
|
||
|
"How long does it take you to make a comedy?" we asked him.
|
||
|
"Well, we've been five months and a half on this one, but it's nearly
|
||
|
finished."
|
||
|
"Why so long," we said, knowing that many pictures are completed in a few
|
||
|
weeks.
|
||
|
"I don't know, unless it is that you've got to take a lot of pains to
|
||
|
make people laugh." The lad, excusing himself and holding the sword against
|
||
|
his leg to stop its gyrations, ran off to join Miss Davis. Our guide sprinted
|
||
|
us around the second cottage, where we came to a sign "Central Hotel" swinging
|
||
|
from a two story shack. A big man in a blue shirt and overalls was rehearsing
|
||
|
a recumbent burro. The burro was supposed to scramble to its feet when the big
|
||
|
man, standing a few feet in front, snapped his fingers. In its own good time
|
||
|
it did so.
|
||
|
"All right, Sammy, get aboard," called out another man, who by every
|
||
|
token of riding breeches and leather puttees should have been a movie
|
||
|
director, which indeed he was. A little negro boy with half his galluses
|
||
|
missing shot up from nowhere, mounted the burro, dug his bare knees into his
|
||
|
ribs and pounded the beast with his fists. The boy was Sunshine Sammy. If you
|
||
|
saw "Penrod" you remember him. In the new picture it will appear that it was
|
||
|
Sammy's frantic goading that stirred the burro from its siesta in front of the
|
||
|
Central Hotel, but we are here to swear that it was the snapping and clucking
|
||
|
of that trainer out in front beyond the range of the camera.
|
||
|
Sammy then sauntered over to a neighboring log pile and sat down beside a
|
||
|
young negro woman. She is his tutor--a graduate of the University of Texas.
|
||
|
The law compels each studio to provide schooling for its actors not yet 16
|
||
|
years of age. Sunshine Sammy snatches his education in large bites between
|
||
|
camera shots. On this day the textbook was "Work and Play With Language." The
|
||
|
teacher showed him a picture and he had to write a story about it. When we
|
||
|
left Sammy he was bent over his copy book and had written as far as "Once
|
||
|
there were two goats lived on opposite sides of the stream."
|
||
|
Studios of the Hollywood district vary widely in appearance. Some sprawl
|
||
|
like lumber yards and are about as tidy. Others would satisfy the most
|
||
|
exacting architect or housewife. The Hal E. Roach Studios, where Harold Lloyd,
|
||
|
Sunshine Sammy and others make their comedies, are of the informal type. The
|
||
|
Goldwyn Studios, which we next visited, are a great white city of forty-two
|
||
|
buildings, eighteen of which are permanent steel and concrete or stucco. These
|
||
|
with the temporary "sets" are scattered over fifty acres of ground.
|
||
|
The talisman that got us past the gatekeeper was the name of Joe A.
|
||
|
Jackson, publicity chief, whom we had known in New York as a newspaper man.
|
||
|
The master of the gate phoned Mr. Jackson and suddenly became human and
|
||
|
opening the barrier told us where to find him. We passed through the
|
||
|
administration building into the "lot." In the scene opening before us were
|
||
|
well kept lawns and tropical foliage--ten acres of lawn and garden, the
|
||
|
dutiful Joe told us--many little parks set down between and surrounding four
|
||
|
great glass roofed, glass walled stages where interior scenes are made. We
|
||
|
inspected a workshop as big as New York's City Hall, where movie scenery is
|
||
|
made; a huge property room where 15,000 objects ranging from thrones of
|
||
|
emperors to pine needles are neatly classified and tagged; a wardrobe room
|
||
|
from among whose 5,000 costumes can instantly be summoned the appareling of
|
||
|
King Menelik's army, the hordes of Ghengis Khan, a harem, a whaling expedition
|
||
|
or a bull fight; a laboratory with aproned girl alchemists transforming raw
|
||
|
yellow film into the magic ribbon of the projectoscope and with gigantic
|
||
|
wooden drums on which the finished ribbon was being dried, revolving in heated
|
||
|
atmosphere.
|
||
|
But I have no intention of wearying the reader with a detailed
|
||
|
description of the complex organism which is the modern picture making plant.
|
||
|
Joe Jackson and I walked around the property room and a glassed in stage that
|
||
|
would house a Zeppelin and found ourselves standing in front of the Town Hall
|
||
|
and flagpole and looking past Anders feed store, down a village street toward
|
||
|
comfortable looking cottages behind fine shade trees. I liked especially an
|
||
|
old brown house set back from the street with a geranium bordered walk leading
|
||
|
to the porch.
|
||
|
"It's interesting on the inside, too," said Joe. "Let's go in." We
|
||
|
stepped firmly up to the porch, opened the front door and were confronted by--
|
||
|
nothing. That is, there were timbers propping up the walls of the house;
|
||
|
otherwise merely a stubbily open space. The house was a carefully built and
|
||
|
painted shell. The two large trees that give it shade--sycamores, I think--had
|
||
|
been brought from miles away. The geraniums were in buried pots. The lawn was
|
||
|
transplanted sod. The brown house was a set built in a few hours for Rupert
|
||
|
Hughes' play, "The Old Nest." The village of which it was part had been
|
||
|
peopled for a day. Grass was now growing in the streets. The studio spaces of
|
||
|
California are filled with deserted villages. It surprised me that they were
|
||
|
allowed to stand after their mission was accomplished, but I was told that
|
||
|
with a little change here and there most of them can be used again and again
|
||
|
for other pictures.
|
||
|
Beyond this melancholy Main Street we came upon a high arched wall and a
|
||
|
turret with a window and balcony. It was here that Will Rogers doubled for
|
||
|
Romeo. He jumped backward from the balcony to a landing net, then from the
|
||
|
landing net to the ground. With the film reversed and the landing net cut out
|
||
|
he seemed in the picture to spring from the ground to the balcony to greet his
|
||
|
Juliet.
|
||
|
Next we traversed a street in Peking constructed for Gouverneur Morris'
|
||
|
photoplay, "A Tale of Two Worlds." For Boxer rebels several hundred Los
|
||
|
Angeles Chinese were hired at $7.50 a day--the high cost of Chinese being one
|
||
|
of the reasons why it takes so much money to make a movie spectacle. Nearby
|
||
|
was a Mississippi River town, created for "The Sin Flood." A stroll along the
|
||
|
levee brought us to the Five Points of New York as that spot appeared in 1869,
|
||
|
reconstructed with the help of old prints for the Gertrude Atherton picture,
|
||
|
"Don't Neglect Your Wife." Its crazy groggeries, drunken lampposts and rounded
|
||
|
cobbles were all made on the lot.
|
||
|
Thence we passed into a street of New York's East Side, which even the
|
||
|
Hon. Louis Zeltner would O.K. The Yiddish shop signs were authenticated by a
|
||
|
rabbi from Los Angeles. This street was utilized in "Hungry Hearts." There are
|
||
|
twenty or thirty acres of these strangely neighboring communities--all the
|
||
|
world and its fantasies in Goldwyn's back yard. They are much more fascinating
|
||
|
to the stranger than Coney Island, the only trouble being that the stranger
|
||
|
can't get in any more than he can get behind the scenes in a theater.
|
||
|
A glance into the casting office completed our visit to the Goldwyn
|
||
|
establishment. There they let us look into filing cabinets where 10,000 men,
|
||
|
women and children are card indexed, each with a photograph of the subject in
|
||
|
his most alluring pose. These are the persons registered form employment in
|
||
|
the pictures as players of parts, bit people or extras.
|
||
|
The next stop on the grand tour was Charley Chaplin's studio in
|
||
|
Hollywood. On the way we passed several others, including the massive colonial
|
||
|
mansion of Thomas H. Ince and the steep roofed, many colored, many angled,
|
||
|
moated old mill of Irving Willat. This curious structure is said to be the
|
||
|
House that Jack Built. If so Jack as an artist has never had the credit he
|
||
|
deserves.
|
||
|
But what shall we say of Chaplin, who perpetrates his comedies in one of
|
||
|
the beauty spots of Hollywood? You ride along Sunset Boulevard and come to a
|
||
|
box hedge behind which are tall evergreens and palms screening a large white
|
||
|
house of Colonial design. The fattest of oranges on the greenest of trees
|
||
|
shine at you over the hedge. Among them a big cherry tree is in full bloom.
|
||
|
Charley Chaplin does not live in the house, but his brother Syd does. It came
|
||
|
with the estate, a whole block which Chaplin bought for $38,000, house and
|
||
|
all, a few years ago, and is now worth $150,000. Residents of that part of
|
||
|
Hollywood shrieked when they found that Chaplin had got the place and was
|
||
|
going to build a studio. They protested on aesthetic, material and all other
|
||
|
grounds. But within fifteen days after the completion of the studio the value
|
||
|
of abutting property jumped from 100 to 200 per cent, and the wailing died
|
||
|
away. Chaplin had fooled them by erecting for his administration offices--the
|
||
|
part of the studio which the public sees--a row of brick or stucco cottages
|
||
|
which would do credit to an English cathedral town.
|
||
|
Penetrating one of these English cottages we came to the Chaplin "lot"
|
||
|
and saw the steel and glass stage where the great pantomimist concocts his
|
||
|
foolery. Just one company uses it--Chaplin's. There are two one storied rows
|
||
|
of dressing rooms, one for men, the other for women. The dressing room of Edna
|
||
|
Purviance, the Chaplin leading woman, who is to be starred independently, is a
|
||
|
little larger than the others. Between these two buildings is a deep swimming
|
||
|
pool which serves for all sorts of aquatic mishaps. Drained it enabled Chaplin
|
||
|
to do his trench fighting in "Shoulder Arms." We inspected his riding horse,
|
||
|
Florrie, and learned from the contents of his garage that he has only two
|
||
|
cars, a limousine and a touring car, with only one chauffeur. His property
|
||
|
room is a museum of every relic known to the slapstick art, including a wall
|
||
|
motto, "Love Thy Neighbor." His private room is a comfortable study. An alcove
|
||
|
opening from it is his dressing room. On a costumer in the alcove hang the
|
||
|
celebrated Chaplin habiliments, including three bowler hats. Reverently we
|
||
|
examined the hats. Each of them had been bashed in my many a stuffed club and
|
||
|
falling wall and the tears neatly sewed up again with surgical precision so
|
||
|
that now the crowns were criss crossed with honorable scars. The size is 7
|
||
|
1/8. Also in the alcove is a dressing table with three mirrors, and on the
|
||
|
table I hastily noted a button hook, a shoe horn, a pair of scissors, a comb,
|
||
|
grease paints and a box of cornstarch. The furniture in the big outer room
|
||
|
includes a large leather covered davenport and chairs, a flat mahogany desk,
|
||
|
bare of papers as an industrial captain's should be, and a small shelf of
|
||
|
books. On the shelf were copies of "Punch" and "Le Rire," a collection of
|
||
|
poems, "Behold the Man"; "Shakespeare in London," "La Vie des Lettres" and
|
||
|
"Through the Russian Revolution," by Albert Rhys Williams. These samples
|
||
|
attested the truth of what I had heard about the range of Chaplin's reading.
|
||
|
In a cement walk outside the stage those toeing out footsteps have been
|
||
|
preserved for the puzzlement of future zoologists. On the day of the
|
||
|
cornerstone laying Chaplin pranced the length of the walk, which was still
|
||
|
soft, and wrote his name in the soft concrete block, with the date,
|
||
|
January 21, 1918.
|
||
|
Continuing our drive through Hollywood we came next to the studios of the
|
||
|
Famous Players-Lasky Company. It covered two blocks near the center of town,
|
||
|
one of the offices, stages, and other permanent buildings, one for the outdoor
|
||
|
sets. Both are fringed with graceful pepper trees. Here the sealed door opened
|
||
|
with the pressure of a button because a good friend left the password at the
|
||
|
gate. It is so hard to get by this gate that the visitor shoots through in a
|
||
|
hurry for fear some mistake has been made. He finds himself in a hard packed
|
||
|
sanded street flanked on one side by the low office buildings, on the other by
|
||
|
three or four monster stages of the now familiar sort, a blending of warehouse
|
||
|
and conservatory. My friend took me into one of the stages. It was a vast
|
||
|
place. We threaded our way among darkened sets until, rounding one of them, we
|
||
|
came upon a patch of brilliant light. Moving closer we saw that the rays of
|
||
|
the lights, fifteen of them I should say, trained from an upper level as well
|
||
|
as the floor, converged at a spot where stood a stalwart young man in khaki
|
||
|
breeches and cobalt blue, open throated shirt. He was in the act of defying a
|
||
|
fat, epauletted, much medaled Latin American generalissimo. A director whom I
|
||
|
couldn't see called "All ready." Epaulettes turned his head to blow out a
|
||
|
lungful of cigarette smoke and then, while the handsome Gringo regarded him
|
||
|
tensely, the camera began grinding. Around the room in which this episode was
|
||
|
being filmed were scattered other Latins--ragged peons with conical straw hats
|
||
|
and haughty lieutenants of the big chief. I knew nothing more except that they
|
||
|
were doing "The Dictator" and the hero with the blue shirt was Wallace Reid.
|
||
|
The director, James Cruze, was getting whatever effects he wanted by speaking
|
||
|
softly. Where is the lair of the cursing, slave driving director? I saw none
|
||
|
of his kind anywhere in Hollywood.
|
||
|
Through another cavernous stage, labyrinth of sets, past the tank where
|
||
|
sank the Lusitania in Mary Pickford's "Little American," we walked until we
|
||
|
struck another circle of light. This time we looked into the living room of a
|
||
|
South African farmhouse. A young man sat at a table, covered with red damsk,
|
||
|
playing cards with a blond who was fair to behold. You could tell by the way
|
||
|
she pretended to steady the cards while listening for a sound of approaching
|
||
|
hoofbeats that she was using the card game as a ruse to hold the young man
|
||
|
until a rescuer came galloping up. The players were Dorothy Dalton and Milton
|
||
|
Sills. This ended their day's work. Sills chatted a moment with the director,
|
||
|
George Melford, and left the stage with a blue book under his arm. "Looking
|
||
|
for orgies, I suppose," he said, passing us. "My personal hobby is decadent
|
||
|
literature. Look at it." The book was Robinson's "English Flower Gardens."
|
||
|
Another set on the Lasky lot proved to be a boudoir. A beautiful young
|
||
|
woman with loosed blonde hair cascading over a negligee house gown stood with
|
||
|
her back to the wall. This was Agnes Ayres. The faultless face and form of the
|
||
|
young man whom she held captive while registering anguish was that of Conrad
|
||
|
Nagel.
|
||
|
From Lasky's we went over to the United Studios, one of the largest in
|
||
|
Hollywood. Outwardly it might be a gardener's lodge on a fine estate. Inwardly
|
||
|
it has real gardens and four streets bordered with cottages which are used as
|
||
|
settings as well as for office and dressing rooms. One of these, a red roofed
|
||
|
cottage, housed Mary Pickford and her staff while "Little Lord Fauntleroy" was
|
||
|
being made. She and her husband have their own studio now. We entered a stage
|
||
|
which is 300 feet long and 160 feet wide. We passed a gorgeous throne room and
|
||
|
the interior of the British House of Commons and stopped at a bower where Guy
|
||
|
Bates Post was at work on one of the difficult double exposure scenes of "The
|
||
|
Masquerader." Post, in evening dress, was standing at a door of the bower and
|
||
|
gazing anxiously into the night. And out of the night the camera was shooting
|
||
|
him, through the door.
|
||
|
Richard Walton Tully, adapter of Temple Thurston's novel for stage use,
|
||
|
was there in the capacity of supervisor. The director, James Young, was
|
||
|
somewhere about. But the man who really directs the action for double exposure
|
||
|
is the camera man. There is a chalk line on the floor which the actor must not
|
||
|
pass with foot or gesture. The camera man, looking into his finder, is the
|
||
|
only man who can tell when this line is threatened. This camera man, while he
|
||
|
cranked, was saying: "A little closer, Mr. Post--a couple of inches yet--look
|
||
|
out--you've reached the limit--step back a little, Mr. Post--now all right--
|
||
|
show yourself more front behind the door--that's good." And Post was obeying
|
||
|
too.
|
||
|
"How much now?" Tully inquired.
|
||
|
"Fifty feet," said the camera man.
|
||
|
"Enough." The cranking stopped. Only five feet of film were needed for
|
||
|
this little scene. The five feet that show the actor with the expression and
|
||
|
attitude best expressing the emotion of the moment will be cut out and used,
|
||
|
the remaining forty-five discarded.
|
||
|
Our studio tour ended with a visit to Universal City, several miles north
|
||
|
of Hollywood, in San Fernando Valley, reached by way of a deep and fragrant
|
||
|
canyon, Cahuenga Pass. Here is the world's largest motion picture expanse.
|
||
|
There is no city in the ordinary sense, nothing but the Universal plant, but
|
||
|
its completeness makes it a film metropolis. To the original 250 acres have
|
||
|
recently been added 350 more. Among its accessories are a menagerie and a
|
||
|
ranch with a full complement of cowboys and Mexicans and bronchos, not to
|
||
|
mention mesquite and chaparral.
|
||
|
In the course of time a sojourn in the studio country dulls one's
|
||
|
appreciation of marvels, but something came into our vision as we approached
|
||
|
Universal City that proved we were not yet jaded. On the crest of a lofty
|
||
|
hill, across the tops of the while buildings in the valley, we saw a full
|
||
|
rigged, three masted ship. On that hilltop "Robinson Crusoe" is being filmed.
|
||
|
The reason was plain enough when given. It is cheaper to build a ship on a
|
||
|
hill near the studio than it is to go down to San Pedro and buy or rent one.
|
||
|
And on the hill the camera, shooting always at a background of sky, attains
|
||
|
the desired effect as of an illimitable ocean. Opposite the entrance to
|
||
|
Universal City is a perfect reproduction of a section of waterfront and pier
|
||
|
as seen from the street of a seaport, with yellow funnels rising from a dummy
|
||
|
steamship aboard which countless anxious couples have eloped to Buenos Aires
|
||
|
and Singapore. Just inside the main gate stands a trolley car labeled "Monte
|
||
|
Carlo" in front and "Battery Park" behind. Such are the wonders of movieland.
|
||
|
|
||
|
*****************************************************************************
|
||
|
NEXT ISSUE:
|
||
|
March 1926: Cyclone around Keyes
|
||
|
The Truth About Hollywood:
|
||
|
PART V [How Much Do the Stars Earn?]
|
||
|
*****************************************************************************
|
||
|
NOTES:
|
||
|
[1]Wallace Reid
|
||
|
[2]Wallace Reid
|
||
|
*****************************************************************************
|
||
|
For more information about Taylor, see
|
||
|
WILLIAM DESMOND TAYLOR: A DOSSIER (Scarecrow Press, 1991)
|
||
|
Back issues of Taylorology are available via Gopher or FTP at
|
||
|
etext.archive.umich.edu
|
||
|
in the directory pub/Zines/Taylorology
|
||
|
*****************************************************************************
|