Los Angeles Times

Guilty pleasures of summer

Hollywood memoirs by Bette Davis and Colleen Moore provide bold stories — and a window into L.A.

- By Carolyn Kellogg carolyn.kellogg@latimes.com Twitter: @paperhaus

A friend and I were standing on a corner waiting for the light to change, talking about the FX series “Feud.” “Isn’t it great,” he said, “how much it winds up on Joan Crawford’s side?” Yes, but no, I started to reply, but before I could we crossed and the conversati­on turned away. I wondered if what we saw in the show was a kind of Rorschach test. Who’s the hero: Joan Crawford or Bette Davis?

Being Team Davis, when I stumbled across a paperback of her memoir, “The Lonely Life,” I bought it, brought it home and promptly started reading. As The Times’ book editor, you might expect me to be reading “Plutarch’s Lives” in my spare time — but Hollywood lives are far more interestin­g.

You don’t have Los Angeles history without Hollywood history. The entertainm­ent industry found a new home here led in part by theater business rascals slyly getting as far as they could from Thomas Edison in New Jersey, who was trying to enforce his motion picture patents. In Los Angeles, they found a safe distance, lovely weather and light that was particular­ly suited to the new medium. You may know all that: It’s part of the many terrific, straightfo­rward, deeply researched histories and biographie­s I’ve read.

Memoir is another matter. Idiosyncra­tic and biased, obfuscator­y and boastful, even unctuous and vain, the Hollywood memoir is not going to portray the past in a clear light. But like Sriracha on the table, it’s going to bring the heat and make the meal better. So much better.

Davis’ career was at its nadir when “The Lonely Life” was published in 1962. That fall, the twotime Oscar winner shocked Hollywood by taking out a want ad in the trades soliciting acting work. A few weeks hence and “Whatever Happened to Baby Jane?” would open, making her once again a critical and box office favorite. But this was the dark before that dawn: “The Lonely Life” was written at the close of 10 “black years,” as Davis called them, at the end of her fourth marriage, living in all but exile from Hollywood — written, in other words, when she had nothing to lose.

In the book, Davis shines when telling the story of her youth, of her single mother’s rule-bending efforts to make a home for her two daughters; when she outlines her own fixation and determinat­ion to be an actress, something her mother obsessivel­y supported; and when she takes others to task. Her targets include the brothers Warner, method actors and Hollywood men.

Davis later maintained that the title “The Lonely Life” was meant to refer to theatrical actors in general, not her personally. You might believe her. She was married four times and was exasperate­d by her romantic prospects and her husbands (particular­ly the bandleader, the admirer and the actor) who, when eclipsed by her profession­ally, felt emasculate­d and betrayed her. And she always eclipsed them.

Davis won a lead actress Oscar in 1936 for “Dangerous” and in 1939 for “Jezebel,” and while she was nominated eight additional times, those two titles alone give a fairly accurate sense of her screen persona. As an actress, she excelled at strong roles, although she wasn’t always given them at her home studio, Warner Bros., with which she had headline-grabbing contract disputes. In the book, she wisely brushes past the legal details, instead recounting falling in and out of favor, feeling slights and making demands.

It’s fascinatin­g to read her puzzling through and defending her choices — her work always came first — particular­ly because she had no Hollywood model to follow. The movie industry had gone through a major sea change just before her arrival, shifting from silent film to sound. That opened the doors to actors trained in theater, like Davis, while most of the silent cohort, whose dramatic style was considered passé packed up and went home.

That’s what happened to Colleen Moore. She was known as the original film flapper and was the top box-office draw in 1926; eight years later, her final film was released. When she’s remembered now (if not confused with imitators Clara Bow or Louise Brooks), it’s for her bob haircut and electric smile. She didn’t bother writing a memoir until 1968; “Silent Star” is now out of print.

I found a copy last month at an estate sale in a rambling, oncegrand house destined to be torn down. Among the medical books and photograph­y manuals was a hardcover edition of “Silent Star,” and I saw it was signed. Not by Moore, though. “To Lilliam,” it read, to the woman who’d lived there. “In memory of the days on So. St. Andrews when you ‘were’ Billie Dove and I was Jean Harlow.” That — the friendship with its silver screen echo — was what lured me in.

When I got home, I plowed through Moore’s book. Lightheart­ed and anecdotal, she recalls her Hollywood days with clarity but seems, with the distance of the intervenin­g decades, to no longer be in their thrall. She begins swiftly dispensing with the Hollywood myth that she’d been discovered by D.W. Griffith — her contract was a payoff for a debt owed her uncle, she writes, joking that even the press man who cooked up the lie eventually came to believe it.

She was just one of a bevvy of hopeful starlets, making her first film in 1917 and struggling to match Mary Pickford’s innocent longhaired beauty. After years of intermitte­nt, moderate success, she read the flapper novel “Flaming Youth” and begged for the part in the film. Her mother bobbed her hair to prove to the studio that Moore was right for the part. Her look was revolution­ary on-screen — legend has it that audiences gasped — and her energetic, modern persona was that of the new generation. The film rocketed her to stardom.

The work was a whirlwind. Her marriage to a Hollywood filmmaker who was a desperate alcoholic was rocky. Between the personal anecdotes, Moore (or a less interestin­g ghostwrite­r) shares stories of the silent era — others’ love affairs and heartbreak, the Fatty Arbuckle scandal, the murder of William Desmond Taylor. Moore doesn’t detail her departure from Hollywood (after a few years, she found a happy life with a Chicago businessma­n) but instead focuses on an unusual side project that absorbed her during her transition to her new life.

She called it the Fairy Castle; it was a massive, exquisitel­y constructe­d dollhouse that she took on a national tour to raise money for charity. There is, yes, too much ink spilled over the real jewels in it, the craftsmen who created it and so on, but without all that folderol she wouldn’t have gotten to its library. It contained an autograph book the size of a postage stamp actually signed by Orville Wright, Henry Ford, U.S. presidents and Albert Einstein. And also tiny books with original handwritte­n stories by 20th century greats, including Sinclair Lewis, John Steinbeck, Edna Ferber and Willa Cather.

In the miniature copy of “This Side of Paradise,” F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote, “I was the spark that lit up Flaming Youth, Colleen Moore was the torch. What little things we are to have caused all that trouble. My author’s name is F. Scott Fitzgerald.”

I was surprised to see Fitzgerald pop up in the middle of a memoir by a silent film actress and delighted to see a playfulnes­s that was lacking in his later life. So perhaps I could say that I’m reading for work. That this was bookish after all.

But not really. My guilty reading pleasures this summer are Hollywood stories. I love the strange window they provide into our city; the industry that created it; and the trials of women who were determined to create their own destinies when there was no path in sight.

These two books are by no means comprehens­ive. I could, and I have, created coherent lists of early Angeleno entertaine­r autobiogra­phies.

But this summer, I’m reading the serendipit­ous books on the shelf for their un-indexed surprises. And I’m imaging Fitzgerald poised with a fountain pen over a book not even an inch tall, figuring out what to write to the dynamic actress that he felt in cahoots with, as if they’d turned the world upside-down. Picturing Davis with her unsatisfie­d ego pounding in her chest, putting it all down on paper, thinking no one would ever care for her again, just before they did.

It’s every writer’s project: connecting with an invisible thread. Reaching a reader who cares. Telling the truth, but on a slant, in the light particular­ly suited to our city, Los Angeles.

 ?? Associated Press ?? BETTE DAVIS plots her next move in 1937. Although she was married four times, she titled her 1962 memoir “The Lonely Life.”
Associated Press BETTE DAVIS plots her next move in 1937. Although she was married four times, she titled her 1962 memoir “The Lonely Life.”

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