Recently, the
New Yorker ran a long, glowing piece on
My Hollywood, When Both of Us Were Young.
It is a little known memoir by a largely forgotten film star, Patsy
Ruth Miller (1904 - 1995). Today, she is best known as the actress who
played Esmeralda in
The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1923), opposite Lon Chaney.
The occasion for
Richard Brody's New Yorker piece was "
It Girls, Flappers, Jazz Babies & Vamps,"
a two week, three dozen plus film series at the Film Forum in New York
City. (The series continues through March 28.) Among the films being
shown is Ernst Lubitsch's delightful 1926 comedy
So This Is Paris, which stars Miller as the wife of a husband on the prowl.
Curious,
Brody read up on the actress and came across her memoir, issued by a
small publisher in 1988, more than a half-century after the actress'
career came to an end. Brody was impressed. He compared the book to
Louise Brooks' classic
Lulu in Hollywood, adding "If Brooks
writes like Fitzgerald, documenting tragedy beneath the glamour that
both charmed and repelled her, Miller is more like a Dreiser of
anecdotes, endowed as she was with a seeming total recall, a
photographic and phonographic memory that vigorously and artlessly
conjures an era and its conflicts through the accretion of surprising
details and precise, incisive observations." As praise goes, that's
pretty good.
Miller's
My Hollywood
is still in print, and today is available through BearManor Media. If
you are not familiar with BearManor, they are a small press publisher
specializing in popular culture and books on film, radio and television.
Film International has called them an "independent maverick
publishing house," while Leonard Maltin has noted their "impressive
series of books for film, radio and TV aficionados." Since 2001,
BearManor has done a commendable job issuing books on all manner of
subjects. They, along with other specialty houses like McFarland and a
handful of university presses, are helping fill-out the shelves of film
history.
One newly released BearManor title worth checking out is
Una Merkel: The Actress with Sassy Wit and Southern Charm,
by Larry Sean Kinder. It's the first full-length biography of this
quirky character actress who often played wisecracking best friends,
harebrained ingénues, and cantankerous matrons.
Once
hailed by D. W. Griffith as "the greatest natural actress now in
pictures," Merkel (1903 - 1986) was something rare in Hollywood.
According to her biographer, she was humble, self-effacing, and almost
egoless, confessing not only to insecurities, but an inferiority complex
as well. Never aspiring to stardom, Merkel was more interested in good
parts, which meant supporting roles to some of the biggest names of her
day. Memorably, Merkel got into a cat-fight with Marlene Dietrich in
Destry Rides Again
(1939), and over the years supported such major stars as W.C. Fields,
Harold Lloyd, Jean Harlow, Carole Lombard, Clark Gable, Jimmy Stewart,
Spencer Tracy and others.
Merkel's film career went into decline
in the 1940s, but she would make a comeback as a middle-aged woman
playing mothers and maiden aunts. She was Debbie Reynolds's mother in
The Mating Game (1959), and was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress in
Summer and Smoke (1961), based on the Tennessee Williams play. Her final film role was opposite Elvis Presley in
Spinout (1966).
Merkal
was able to parlay supporting roles.into a noteworthy career that
lasted more than forty years; she garnered acclaim not only in film, but
also in theater, television, and radio. On stage, one early success
came in 1927 in
Coquette, which starred Helen Hayes. Later, Merkal won a Tony Award in 1956 for her role on Broadway in
The Ponder Heart.
Una Merkel: The Actress with Sassy Wit and Southern Charm
is a detailed look at the career of a memorable performer, an actress
with the special distinction of having played Sam Spade's secretary in
the original 1931 version of
The Maltese Falcon. For these and many other reasons, Kinder's book is a fun read.
Along with indie presses like BearManor, self-published authors are also making noteworthy contributions to film history. Admittedly, some of their books are crap, but some have merit.
One of the better titles is another first-ever book on a significant early Hollywood actress,
Helen Twelvetrees, Perfect Ingenue,
by Cliff Aliperti. This Long Island writer and classic film buff runs a
few different nostalgia websites about old Hollywood and vintage
collectibles, including
Immortal Ephemera, a site about unheralded films and film stars of the 1930s. (Aliperti also runs a swell sight on that likeable pre-Code cad,
Warren William.)
In
her heyday, Helen Twelvetrees (1908 - 1958) was a leading lady to male
stars like John Barrymore, Spencer Tracy, and Maurice Chevalier. Her
other early co-stars included Clark Gable, Joan Blondell, and John
Wayne. Twelvetrees rose to fame in
Her Man (1930). This film
set the course of her screen career, and she was subsequently cast in a
series of roles portraying suffering women fighting for the wrong men.
Twelvetrees' ten-years in Hollywood were highlighted by starring roles
in a string of pre-Code melodramas.
According to Aliperti,
Twelvetrees was an "unexpectedly modern woman." Her independent attitude
led to whispers of temperament, and that along with typecasting, studio
realignment and a changing industry led to a loss in momentum in the
actress' career. Twelvetrees made a film in Australia in 1936 before
closing out her career in Hollywood in 1939. The faded star then left
films for the stage.
Helen Twelvetrees, Perfect Ingenue
is one-half biography, one-half critical study of Twelvetrees'
thirty-two motion picture, some of them good, some bad, a few lost.
Aliperti's book is recommended.
Another self-published book deserving mention is
Sally Phipps: Silent Film Star by Robert L. Harned. The author is a professional research librarian based in New York City, and the son of his subject.
Before
you roll your eyes, know that this scrapbook style work is more than
just a vanity project or book by a child about their parent. It's a
labor of love, to be sure. But it's also the first book on its subject,
and an enjoyable read ripe with appealing anecdotes and images.
Sally
Phipps (1911 - 1978) was a dish, one of the cutest stars of the silent
era. More than just putting his mother on display, Harned sketches her
fascinating story-of her upbringing in the San Francisco Bay Area (her
parents knew Jack London) and start in films as the toddler in
Broncho Billy and The Baby
(1914). That film was shot at the Essanay Studio in nearby Niles,
California, where this three-year old veteran of beautiful baby contests
once sat on Charlie Chaplin's lap.
Discovered by director Frank
Borzage and signed to a contract by Sol Wurtzel, Phipps worked for Fox
Studios, appearing in some 20 short and feature films. There was
Bertha, the Sewing Machine Girl (1926),
Love Makes 'Em Wild (1927), and
The Cradle Snatchers (1927), as well as a uncredited bit in F.W. Murnau's Academy Award winning
Sunrise
(1927). Also that year, Phipps was selected as one of 13 Wampas Baby
Stars, starlets considered destined for future success. A few more films
followed, including
Why Sailors Go Wrong (1928).
After a
contract with Howard Hughes failed to materialize, Phipps headed to New
York. Her named popped up in the gossip columns, she appeared in a
Broadway show, made a Vitaphone comedy short, and married and divorced
one of the Gimbel department store moguls. Ever restless, she eventually
left for India. Back in the United States, there was another marriage,
two children (one of whom is the author), a stay in Hawaii, and ever
changing fortunes. In 1938, during the depths of the Depression,
columnist Earl Wilson wrote that Phipps was working for the Federal
Theatre Project: he headlined his article "Wampas Ex-Baby Lives On WPA
$23 - And Likes It."
About old film stars, someone once said "they had faces then." As it turns out, they also had stories to be told.