With Crothers as her mentor, and Estelle and Jobyna as her guardian aunts, that summer Tallulah was being steered towards what she believed was her true destiny. As she wrote confidently to her grandfather, ‘I am going to make good with a bang! Wait and see. Then you will be proud of your bad little girl with her bad little temper.’32 For a few thrilling performances, while Constance Binney was taking weekend breaks, Tallulah was onstage as the play’s heroine, Penelope Penn. And although her contract with the play was terminated by a near comic farrago of events, including an actors’ strike and Tallulah being stricken with a severe case of appendicitis, it effected a crucial change in her fortunes. She was offered a second play, Footloose, in which her portrayal of a young woman victimized by a predatory older man earned recognition from the New York Times for ‘her considerable power’ and ‘real skill’.33 And in early 1921, Rachel Crothers offered her the lead in her next play, Nice People.
Tallulah’s character was Hallie Livingstone, a beautiful, independent, wise-cracking flirt. A few months earlier The Flapper had done extraordinary business at cinemas across America, with Olive Thomas (the girl Tallulah had longed to emulate) starring as a new kind of heroine, with short skirts, a cigarette habit and a smart, independent attitude. Hallie was the same breed of heroine. Her dialogue was studded with careless, colourful slang: everything was ‘divine’, ‘dahling’, ‘mad’ and ‘the cat’s pyjamas’. She was fashionably treacherous and fashionably blasé about sex, commenting coolly to her friend Teddy, ‘I adore a man who is absolutely mad about me and yet who controls himself in that perfectly marvelous way.’34
Hallie was, above all, an ideal role for Tallulah. The deep, throaty catch in her voice, heightened by the smoking of which Will despaired, was perfectly modulated to deliver every sexual irony and innuendo in the lines that Crothers had written for her. During the twenty weeks in which the play ran at the Klaw Theatre, Nice People not only earned her praise as a fine comic actor, but in the feisty character of Hallie, she had found the mould for her own offstage image.*
When Tallulah first arrived at the Algonquin she’d noted the tough, abrasive style of New York conversation. She herself had been raised never to cuss or talk dirty: yet these glamorous writers and actors made a point of using obscenities and working men’s slang to give an edge to their jokes and observations. Later she observed that one of the most skilled in this idiom was the journalist Dorothy Parker. Her sly, skewering banter and provocative cynicism were her defence in a male-dominated profession and also her selling point. What Parker said at lunch at the Round Table was usually being repeated at New York parties by the evening.
Tallulah wasn’t as clever as Parker, but she noted the publicity generated by the writer’s repartee. Half consciously, half intuitively she began to step up her own natural exhibitionism, adding material from her stage roles to build a repertory of outrageous stunts and jokes. She could, she discovered, create a gratifying stir by launching into a string of cartwheels down a sidewalk or in the middle of a crowded room, displaying a flash of silk camiknicker, or occasionally her naked bottom. The spinning craziness felt euphoric – the frisson of being a child in a grownup place – but more importantly it made people notice and remember her. She even developed her own signature wise-cracks. Her affair with Eva had attracted mildly scandalous comment, with the magazine Broadway Brevities alluding to Tallulah’s ‘close friendships’ with several women.* It was now that Tallulah began introducing herself at parties with the line, ‘I’m a lesbian. What do you do?’35
It was possibly a genuine mistake that inspired another of her trademark quips. She’d been taken to a performance of Maeterlinck’s The Burgomaster of Stilemonde by Alexander Woollcott, theatre critic of the New York Times. When asked for her opinion, fearful that she hadn’t fully understood the play, Tallulah replied, ‘There is less in this than meets the eye.’ Almost certainly she had meant to say, ‘There is more to this,’ but Woollcott had pounced on the line and quoted it, with relish, in his column.36
As a result, Tallulah found herself hailed as one of the wits of Manhattan, and she worked hard to make sure the reputation stuck. In private, she could still be assailed by childish terrors and weep in her dressing room from stage fright, but in public she could launch herself into a room with a stream of slick, rude and seemingly spontaneous one-liners: ‘I’m as pure as the driven slush,’ she would remark, tossing back her hair whilst taking a calculated drag on her cigarette. ‘I don’t give a fuck what people say about me so long as they say something.’37
The chemistry between Tallulah’s offstage image and her performance as Hallie also attracted her first significant fans. There was a faction of American theatregoers, the gallery girls, who made cults out of their favourite actresses, returning night after night to watch them perform, greeting their entrance with hysterical applause. They were a shifting, amorphous group, many of them secretaries or schoolteachers who had travelled to the city in search of work. Often the theatre was their only refuge from the loneliness of a studio apartment or an anonymous boarding house.
Many of these women latched onto Tallulah in Nice People, and their numbers grew through the succession of – mostly short-lived – roles that followed. By 1922, when she appeared in Martin Brown’s racy comedy, The Exciters, she had acquired a large and fanatical group of admirers. Tallulah played Rufus Rand, a thrill-seeking socialite with a gun tucked into her garter belt. And although Alan Dale in The American would compliment her on the performance of her career – ‘charming … beautifully dictioned [with] a fine sense of comedy’ – he complained that the gallery girls were in danger of wrecking it, screaming and applauding so loudly that some of her lines were inaudible.38
It was, Dale wrote, a real case of ‘save me from my friends’. But Tallulah didn’t want to be saved. Her new fans were mostly girls of her own age, and she began to invite some of them backstage to her dressing room, where she liked to chatter about the details of their lives and love affairs. She was moved by the little tributes they brought, posies of flowers or chocolates, and by the constancy of their devotion. One young woman, too poor to afford an adequate winter wardrobe, left with Tallulah’s own coat around her shoulders.
In their company Tallulah was momentarily able to drop her guard. She was slowly becoming ‘somebody’ in New York, acquiring numerous acquaintances and admirers, but she had made few close friendships, and her family, on whose background love and support she had always counted, were beginning to fall away. In March 1920 her beloved grandfather had died from a severe case of the flu, and Tallulah had reacted badly to the loss. He was the person who had most believed in her, who saw her most clearly. And while the death of Louise the following year caused her much less sorrow, it badly affected her grandmother, whose own health subsequently declined, until she died in May 1922.
There was Will, of course, but even though he had become a more conscientious father, writing regularly and occasionally visiting, Tallulah felt his interest was primarily in her professional success and she grew distant with him. In June 1920 he wrote reproachfully, ‘You know that I am willing to assist you to the very limit of my ability but what I resent is that you do not take me into your confidence, and really treat me like I was an outsider.’39
Eugenia was now the family member to whom Tallulah was closest. In 1921 she had come to live in New York, with her new husband Morton Hoyt, and had dramatically discarded her former role as the good older sister. Morton was a drinker and a time waster, a blot on the reputation of his late father, who had been the US Solicitor General, and lacking the talent of his literary sister, the poet Elinor Wylie. When he had eloped with Eugenia the year before, the Bankheads had succeeded in getting the marriage annulled. But the couple had simply remarried as soon as they were able and had taken an apartment together in Manhattan, on Central Park South.
Already their marriage was careening towards disaster. Infected by Morton’s dissolute habits, Eugenia was running wil
d, and the two of them were briefly, adulterously, tangled up in the marriage of Tallulah’s friend from Montgomery, Zelda Sayre, now married to the novelist Scott Fitzgerald. While Tallulah enjoyed the spectacle of Eugenia’s adventures, her older sister was hardly a dependable confidante or advisor, and she was no substitute for the steadying voice of their grandparents. She also did nothing to caution Tallulah when she had embarked on her first serious love affair, with a very damaged and dangerous man.
In the summer of 1921 Tallulah had moved into a shared apartment with a new friend, Beth Martin. Among Beth’s extensive New York circle was a group of sophisticated, cultured Englishmen, whom she invited to the flat for an impromptu party one night. One of them, Napier George Henry Alington, arrived in his pyjamas, with an overcoat bundled over the top and a bottle of bootleg gin in his pocket.
Tallulah couldn’t help but be impressed that Naps was an actual aristocrat – the 3rd Baron Alington, whose family owned large tracts of England. He was more finely bred than any American she had met, with his bone-china accent, willowy height and languid wit. And while his appearance wasn’t conventionally handsome – the dark smudges under his eyes and the pallor of his skin both symptomatic of his tubercular condition – there was a sense of exquisite contradiction about him that she found hypnotic.
Refined and witty as Naps appeared, he could also be as coarse as a navvy, with thick, sensuous lips that signalled his much-vaunted sexual appetite. His tastes ran to men and women equally, and during the short time he’d been in New York (ostensibly to study the American banking system) he’d acquired a scandalous reputation: turning up at the opera with two drunken soldiers in tow, and seducing a footman at the home of Mrs Cornelius Vanderbilt where he was staying. At their first meeting Tallulah resisted his efforts to seduce her, but within a short while she had not only yielded to him, but had fully deluded herself that the careless offer he made to marry her one day was a genuine promise for their future.
She was working hard that autumn, playing the lead in Everyday, another play that Rachel Crothers had written especially for her. Whenever she was free, however, Tallulah dedicated herself to her new lover. They careened around the high spots of New York, dancing at Reisenweber’s Café and brunching at the Brevoort Hotel on lower 5th Avenue. In bed, Talullah found Naps an alarming, exciting advance on her sexual education. Later she would boast crudely that he was ‘big where it mattered’, but there was also a streak of cruelty in his lovemaking. In contrast to gentle Eva, Naps liked to draw a little blood in bed, to bruise and be bruised in return.
In the face of that cruelty, so unpredictably mixed with tenderness and courtesy, Tallulah was helpless. Naps kept her in such a state of keyed-up uncertainty that she was never sure which version of him she would see. The man who seemed to know her every weakness and could needle her maliciously for an entire evening, or the man who would gallantly bring her presents and whisk her off dancing. Often she didn’t know if she would see Naps at all, as he was capable of disappearing from her life for days at a time without a word of explanation.
This was a pattern familiar from Tallulah’s childhood, when she had craved her father’s attention but so often found him absent. Tallulah made herself laugh at Naps’s unreliability; she busied herself with work and schooled herself to live from one moment to the next. But she had no way of defending herself when he abruptly announced his intention to return to England, offering no suggestion of when or how they might ever meet again.
All at once the fun was draining out of Tallulah’s life. Audiences for Everyday were dwindling, despite her excellent reviews,* and the play, was about to be shut down. It was at around this time that her grandmother died, and as Tallulah mooned around New York, grieving for her grandmother and missing Naps, she was more than ready to jump at an offer that promised her a completely fresh start.
That autumn she had been introduced to the British producer and impresario Charles Cochran. He was in New York to scout for talent and Tallulah had impressed him as exactly the kind of bright, modern star that would appeal to English audiences. He didn’t have a vehicle for her immediately, but in December he wired Tallulah about a play that was opening in London early the following year. It was written by the actor Gerald du Maurier, in collaboration with Diana Manners’s friend Viola Tree, and its lead character was a lively North American dancer, for whom Cochran considered she would be ideal.
No actual promises were made, but Tallulah was determined she must go. Du Maurier was one of the great names of British theatre, she regarded ‘a summons’ from him to be a ‘bugle call from Olympus’.40 Even though a succession of urgently corrective telegrams came from Cochran, indicating that the part might no longer be available, and that she should wait in New York, Tallulah refused to pay them any regard. Recently she had been with some friends to a fashionable astrologer, Evangeline Adams, and had been told that in order to achieve fame and fortune she would have to cross the ocean. It was a standard fortune-teller’s line, but Tallulah regarded it as a prophecy. Whatever Cochran was advising, she was willing to believe that fate was directing her to London.
She was encouraged in her belief by Estelle, who was not only looking forward to a reprieve from Tallulah’s chaotic life, but was genuinely convinced that the move would be good for her. Tallulah had made a decent career for herself in New York, but she hadn’t yet broken through to stardom. In London she would be a novelty, and even if du Maurier’s play was no longer an option, Cochran would surely find her something else. The only drawback to the plan was money. Tallulah had saved nothing, and Will could offer her little, given the expensive divorce Eugenia was trying to obtain from Morton Hoyt.* Putting on her best dress and her most persuasive manner, Tallulah spent an evening with an old political friend of her grandfather’s, a General T. Coleman de Pont, and somehow managed to persuade him to part with the price of a crossing as a tribute to John Bankhead’s faith in her.
On the evening of 6 January 1923, Tallulah boarded the SS Majestic. Standing on the pier was a crowd of tearful fans, dressed in their best flapper frocks. Her own friends were fewer in number, but Estelle was there, and typically it was she who noticed that Tallulah had no warm coat for London, slipping her own mink over her shoulders as a parting gift. Tallulah was not yet twenty-one and had never left America before; the following day, the New York Herald would report that ‘her plans concerning just what she will do in London are rather indefinite’ and Will would write stoically to his sister Marie, ‘If her expectations do not materialize, she will at least have had the sight of England.’41 As for Tallulah, beneath her bravado she was utterly terrified. ‘I thought I was going to Mars,’ she later claimed. ‘I was scared to death.’42
Chapter Five
ZELDA
At the peak of Tallulah’s success in Nice People in 1921, she’d been visited in her dressing room by her childhood friend Zelda Sayre. Tallulah had an exact recall of Zelda as the prettiest girl in town, and of herself as the awkward outsider, but now, as the two of them kissed and exchanged gossip, she preened a little over the change in their situation. A Broadway actress with her name over a theatre, she could claim an audience far bigger than Zelda’s Montgomery beaux.
However, Zelda’s life had also been transformed since she’d arrived in New York the previous year. Her husband, Scott, had become the city’s most talked-about novelist, and as his wife she’d become one of its most talked-about women. Stories were told of her diving fully clothed into the fountain in Union Square, and receiving guests while naked in the bath. She was said to be at the wildest parties, drinking, flirting and throwing attitudes. And to all these antics she brought the stamp of her looks. At first glance she might seem merely pretty, with a honey-coloured sheen to her bobbed hair and a candy-box curve to her mouth, but what made people look twice was the wide flare of her cheekbones and the unexpected darkness behind her grey-blue eyes.
To one of her admirers,* she had the quality of ‘a barbarian prince
ss’;1 and Scott, with his Brooks Brothers elegance and wavy blond hair, was her collegiate prince. Dorothy Parker said the two of them looked ‘as though they had stepped out of the sun’; to the writer Edmund Wilson they possessed a combination of ‘spontaneity, charm and good looks’ that amounted to ‘genius’.2 After a night in the Fitzgeralds’ company it might be hard to remember exactly what had been so original about their conversation, so electrifying about Zelda’s dancing, so funny about Scott’s drunken clowning, but people felt they had been at the centre of things.
Their celebrity had been launched by Scott’s first novel, This Side of Paradise, which had been published in March 1920. Advertised as ‘A Novel About Flappers, Written For Philosophers’, it had been heralded as the voice of post-war American youth, and had sold three thousand copies in just three days.* The fact that its hero and heroine had been so evidently based on Scott and Zelda, and that their own lives threaded through its pages, enhanced their status as the couple of the moment. ‘They didn’t make the Twenties,’ the actress Lilian Gish later recalled, ‘they were the Twenties.’3
Scott’s themes were those of his generation. His hero Amory Blaine was an alumnus of Princeton, a war veteran and a romantic, whose discourses on the bankrupt ideals of his parents’ era resonated with the novel’s readers. America had only engaged in the war for eighteen months, but parts of the nation had nonetheless borne the scars. Many men had been killed and many had witnessed degradation and suffering on just as appalling a scale as their European peers.
Yet more interesting still to readers were the details of how Amory and his student friends lived their daily lives. This Side of Paradise was one of the first ‘university’ novels in American fiction. It was a curiosity, for many, to discover what these young men did, what they read, and especially the ways in which they conducted their love affairs. The kisses and intimate conversations that Scott described were hardly daring – nothing like the earnest sexual epiphanies evoked by D.H. Lawrence on the other side of the Atlantic – yet the specificity of small physical facts, the sleeveless jerseys that Amory referred to as ‘petting shirts’, and the worldliness of the novel’s tone gave it a compelling, contemporary authority. Amory’s assessment ‘that any popular girl he met before eight he might possibly kiss before midnight’ seemed astoundingly knowing to Scott’s younger readers, many of whom seized on This Side of Paradise as a dating manual.4
Flappers: Six Women of a Dangerous Generation Page 15