DARK HISTORY OF
HOLLYWOOD
A CENTURY OF GREED, CORRUPTION,
AND SCANDAL BEHIND THE MOVIES
KIERON CONNOLLY
This digital edition first published in 2014
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Copyright © 2014 Amber Books Ltd
ISBN: 978-1-78274-176-3
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CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
♦
CHAPTER 1
FOUNDING FATHERS
♦
CHAPTER 2
THE SILENT TWENTIES
♦
CHAPTER 3
THE STUDIO SYSTEM
♦
CHAPTER 4
THE BLACKLIST
♦
CHAPTER 5
THE MOB
♦
CHAPTER 6
SEX
♦
CHAPTER 7
STARS
♦
CHAPTER 8
MODERN HOLLYWOOD
♦
BIBLIOGRAPHY
♦
INDEX
To outsiders, Hollywood can seem like El Dorado, but, as Raymond Chandler wrote about those who have succeeded to the inside, ‘there’s the constant fear of losing all this fairy gold and being the nothing they have really never ceased to be’.
HOLLYWOOD
INTRODUCTION
If Hollywood, with its pepper trees, orange and avocado gardens, bougainvillea vines and warm, sunny climate, had seemed like the Garden of Eden to the first film-makers when they arrived in California in the early 1910s, cinema must have brought the serpent with it.
‘A town with all the personality of a paper cup.’
A century after the founding of Hollywood, we find in the movie studios and mansions a history of greed, corruption and cover-ups, of overdoses, suicides and sexual abuse, of, at the very least, licentiousness and hypocrisy, and, at the worst, murder. For a town where a hundred years ago too much sun probably seemed the greatest harm one could do to oneself, much has changed.
While a heady mix of wealth, power and ambition has always been the oxygen that fuels Tinseltown, the industry doesn’t simply attract pretty people in search of fame, it requires them. And, like a fairytale, the lives of those so blessed can be radically remoulded in chance happenings: Jean Harlow was first seen in a Hollywood car park, while Lana Turner, having slipped out of a high-school typing class, really was discovered in a Sunset Strip ice-cream parlour. When fame arrives like that, especially when such luck is involved, it has to be at least a little unsettling.
Follow the American Dream and Archie Leach can be reinvented as Cary Grant, Thomas Mapother can become Tom Cruise, while hair colour and even faces can be changed to create Marilyn Monroe and Rita Hayworth. Success, however, especially in Tinseltown, can be fickle. Hollywood might not sneer at someone’s origins, but nor does it care what happens once their moment has passed. As an industry town, it is snobbish only about career status. ‘The guest lists of the highly publicized big parties reeked of it,’ wrote English actor David Niven. ‘The successful and established were invited; the struggling and the passé were not.’
And for those who never become successful, it has always been a cruel place. Even in the early years, unemployed actors were known to walk around town in heavy greasepaint, hoping to create the impression that they were working in the Dream Factory.
Orson Welles, in the wheelchair, directing Citizen Kane. Cinema is a peculiar art form: it’s delicate, but mass-produced, artistic but has no sole artist. And for a century Hollywood has been its most successful peddler of dreams to millions of people around the world.
But for those who did make it and did last, it must surely have been wonderful, mustn’t it? Maybe not. ‘There was nothing to recommend this town at all,’ said actress Nina Foch, who began working in movies in the late 1940s. ‘There was nothing cultivated about it anywhere. It was filled with brown bodies and brown minds.’ In fact, while the industry was busy crafting some beautiful movies to charm the world, it seemingly did little else of worth, beyond creating wealth for itself. ‘It was a hotbed of false values,’ wrote David Niven. ‘It harboured an unattractive percentage of small-time crooks and con artists.’
Yet it’s that mix between the creative moment on-screen and the hugely commercial industry around it, between the delicate and the mass-produced, that generates our fascination with Hollywood. A seemingly private lovers’ kiss on camera, filmed in front of a large film crew, can touch audiences in thousands of cinemas around the world.
‘It’s the only manufacturing business,’ wrote screenwriter William Ludwig, ‘where the capital assets go home at 5.30pm.’
Altogether cinema is a peculiar art form. It is artistic, but there’s no sole artist. It’s creative, but it can be immensely expensive. As Orson Welles said: ‘A writer needs a pen, an artist needs a brush, but a film-maker needs an army.’ This creates unusual problems and Hollywood, as, financially, the world’s largest film industry, has the most extreme examples. ‘It’s the only manufacturing business,’ wrote screenwriter William Ludwig, ‘where the capital assets go home at 5.30pm, where they can get drunk, where they can get killed. That can’t happen in an automobile plant; the presses don’t go home, the steel doesn’t get drunk.’
Those assets are, of course, the stars who on-screen look beautiful and heroic, always ready with the right quip and the winning smile, as we laugh and cry with them before their stories are resolved, usually happily. And even though we know they’re only playing a part, we identify with them, fall in love with them a little and perhaps even entertain the thought that we might like to meet them one day. Dark History of Hollywood could just put us off that fantasy. It’s a question of how much we really want to know.
‘People in the East pretend to be interested in how pictures are made,’ F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote about Hollywood. ‘But if you actually tell them anything, you find … they never see the ventriloquist for the doll.’ Beguiled by its glamour, Fitzgerald’s friends had no interest beyond the ‘pretensions, extravagances and vulgarities’ of Tinseltown. There’s nothing wrong with that, and there’s plenty of it in Dark History of Hollywood. But there’s also a fuller story to be told on how Hollywood came to be, how it survived and how it still operates today.
‘We don’t go for strangers in Hollywood… we tell them lies so well rehearsed even we don’t always recall if they’re true.’
Not that it’s always willing to offer us the truth. ‘We don’t go for strangers in Hollywood,’ said Fitzgerald’s narrator in his novel The Last Tycoon, ‘and when we do, we tell them lies so well rehearsed even we don’t always recall if
they’re true.’ In a town rich in and rich from story-tellers, Hollywood fact has to be separated from Hollywood fiction.
Dark History of Hollywood uncovers the true stories of Tinseltown, as it reveals where the power lies, shows how the film industry really works, and, in so doing, exposes the ventriloquist behind the doll.
An audience watching a 3-D film in 1952. The Lumière brothers first projected moving pictures before an audience in 1894, but, years later, Louis Lumière said: ‘Had I been able to foresee what cinema would become, I’d never have invented it’.
Part of the appeal of early silent cinema was that the audience didn’t need to be literate or even be able to speak English. They spoke the universal language of visual images, ‘the Esperanto of the Eye’, as one writer called it.
I
HOLLYWOOD
FOUNDING FATHERS
In 1908, America’s cultural life, including its film-making, was led from New York, and France had the world’s largest film industry. So how was it that by 1919 Hollywood had become not only the centre of film-making in the United States but also the largest force for movies around the world? As well as hard work and good luck, it’s a story that involves bootlegging, theft, piracy, cartels and violence.
‘Cinema has no commercial value. At most, it’ll last a year.’
Cinema wasn’t conceived in Hollywood, but some would argue that it was born in America. In 1896, the cinématographe, invented by Antoine Lumière and his sons Louis and Auguste, was presented in New York. While earlier inventions had been more like slot machines where a single viewer looked through a peep hole, the cinématographe was the first projector to throw light and shadows on a wall and offer moving images to a mass audience. Quickly the cinématographe, which gives us the word ‘cinema’, proved a success around the world – so much so that within a year it had been studied and improved upon by other moving-picture inventors.
But, as the movie business now knows well, where there’s a hit, there’s a writ. No sooner had the Lumières demonstrated their invention than Thomas Edison, inventor of the light bulb, the phonograph and the ticker-tape machine, as well as being a busy litigator, stepped in. Claiming that he’d created a device for viewing moving pictures five years earlier, he went to court, alleging that all other machines were infringing his patent – this despite the more recent inventions being far more sophisticated and the fact that Edison’s machine itself owed a great deal to the earlier work of Étienne Jules Marey. The battle for who owned cinema had begun, and it wasn’t a battle fought only in the courts – Edison’s lawsuit against American Mutoscope (later the Biograph Company) lasted for ten years and even lead to street fights. But while the lawsuits were making their way through the legal process, cameras could be rented, bought or stolen – the bootlegging of equipment and even finished films being common.
SEATS FOR THE FUNERAL
WHEN SAM, HARRY and Albert Warner – the three elder Warner Brothers – opened their first nickelodeon in Pennsylvania in 1905, they used chairs from the funeral parlour next door. If they had a very popular film showing, a funeral service would have to be postponed while they borrowed the chairs. And if the undertaker had a large service, they’d delay the start of their film until the chairs were available.
Harry Warner (centre), with Albert (right) and fourth brother Jack (left) in 1965.
While the lawsuits were making their way through the legal process, cameras could be rented, bought or stolen …
With films proving relatively inexpensive to make, offering returns that could be very high, one early commentator said: ‘All you needed was fifty dollars, a broad and a camera.’ With that, a short, silent vaudeville act could be put on film.
As movies were at first basically a fairground attraction, another observer correctly described the people involved in them as a ‘collection of former carnival men, ex-saloon keepers, medicine men, concessionaires of circus side shows, photographers and peddlers’. Cinema was cheap entertainment aimed not at the well-off but the urban poor, with the result that initially cultured and professional financiers missed out.
Others, however, saw the possibilities. And as cinema became more successful, more permanent homes for screening films sprang up in disused shops and theatres in America’s slum districts. These venues were called ‘nickelodeons’, a clever mix of the cheap and the grand: the cost of admission was a nickel (5 cents), while ‘odeon’ was Ancient Greek for a building where musical performances were held.
Nickel Delirium
The beauty of silent films was that they could be enjoyed by new immigrants without fluent English, the way theatre and even vaudeville could not. And almost everyone was welcome at a nickelodeon. Unlike restaurants, vaudeville or social clubs, no one was barred from a nickelodeon on account of gender or religion, or, with some exceptions, race (although in many US states nickelodeons were segregated). Offering everyone the chance to sit privately but in public, a woman could go to a nickelodeon without an escort and without being the focus of unwanted attention. The most popular genres were comedies and thrillers, and few films lasted more than 25 minutes.
Charles Pathé began in business with a phonograph stall at French fairgrounds, before turning his attention to the mass production of movies. ‘I didn’t invent cinema,’ he said, ‘but I did industrialize it.’
Offering everyone the chance to sit privately but in public, a woman could go to a nickelodeon without an escort.
It’s estimated that by 1907 there were more than 4000 nickelodeons across America, each of them offering 12 shows a day, with 200,000 people a day going to the movies in New York alone. The number doubled on Sundays.
But although nickelodeons were quickly booming across America, it was the French company Pathé that was making the most films. Completing one short film every day by 1908, Pathé was producing silent fantasies, biblical stories and melodramas, and soon opened offices in Bombay, Singapore and Melbourne to supervise their distribution. America wasn’t even the second largest film-producing country – Denmark was, with Copenhagen-based Nordisk large enough to employ 2000 people in an industry that was barely a few years old.
But when Charles Pathé complained that Edison was pirating copies of his films for US release, Edison responded by issuing Pathé with a writ. Trying to hold on to what he perceived as his intellectual copyright over cinema, Edison issued lawsuits alleging that film companies and cinemas not using his equipment were infringing his patent on cameras and projectors. And when legal channels didn’t work swiftly enough, Edison turned heavy, hiring private detectives and thugs to harass his competitors as they were actually filming. Although some rivals quickly set up decoy film crews to occupy the detectives, while the genuine crew worked undisturbed elsewhere, eventually, through channels legal or otherwise, Edison managed to hound many companies out of business.
… when legal channels didn’t work swiftly enough, Edison turned heavy, hiring private detectives and thugs to harass his competitors …
The Arrival of the Moguls
It wasn’t long before the success of cinema began to attract a new generation of entrepreneurs. They weren’t well educated and they weren’t scientists or inventors, like Edison or the Lumières, but they were determined and had a keen eye on the market. They were Jewish immigrants from Europe, who were seeking a better life in North America: Samuel Goldwyn was from Warsaw, Adolph Zukor (one of the founders of Paramount Pictures) and William Fox (whose company merged to form 20th Century Fox) were Hungarian, while Carl Laemmle (of Universal Pictures) was from Germany. All moved to the US as teenagers. Louis B. Mayer (later of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer), who was from Minsk, Belarus, moved to the US as a toddler and three of the four Warner brothers moved from Poland as children. All of them worked their way up in other forms of business: Goldwyn became a master glove salesman, Zukor was in furs, Fox was in the garment trade, Mayer in scrap metal and the Warners struggled through various modest ventures, including a bicycle shop. In Hollyw
ood style, their lives would become rags-to-riches stories. With most of them having done well in their respective businesses, they would succeed in resisting Edison’s attempts to monopolize the new medium.
Risking losing control of the film business to these new, independent nickelodeon entrepreneurs, Edison and his main competitors at American Mutoscope and Biograph Company (AM&B), agreed in 1908 to settle their differences and create a cartel to keep the upstarts out. In this they tried to monopolize the cameras and projectors that made film-making possible. Titled The Motion Picture Patents Company (MPPC), competitors quickly referred to the cartel as ‘The Trust’.
By limiting the number of companies allowed to use its film stock, cameras and projectors, the Trust barred many US and all but two overseas producing companies, one being Pathé. Before the Trust’s measures were put into action, foreign films had made up more than two-thirds of the total number of films released in America, but within a year that figure had halved. The European film industry, which had come to rely on America as its largest export market, was never as powerful again. By limiting foreign imports, the Trust had muscled its way to the top of American cinema.
Thomas Edison tried to dominate movies by controlling the use of his inventions – cameras, projectors and film stock. The more commercially minded understood that the money in cinema was actually in making and distributing films.
Carl Laemmle, the founder of Universal, with his children Rosabelle and Carl Jr Laemmle, whose named is pronounced ‘lemlee’, was known for employing his relatives – as Ogden Nash rhymed: ‘Uncle Carl Laemmle, has a very large faemmle.’
At a time when women in most US states didn’t even have the vote, Pickford was able to choose her co-stars and directors.
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