Natasha

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Natasha Page 57

by Suzanne Finstad


  The day Davern was trying to reach Lana, he blurted out the same confession to Cheryl Quarmyne, a receptionist at the office where Lana worked in 1992. Quarmyne recalls taking a message from an apparently intoxicated Davern, who was desperate to speak to Lana from what sounded like a bar. When Quarmyne told him to phone Lana at home, Davern said, “‘Look, look, look. Let me just tell you what she needs to know’… and then he just started talking.” The skipper’s account to Quarmyne was virtually identical to what he told Lana when he phoned her a few minutes later. “I think his conscience was just bothering him,” observes Quarmyne, “and he just decided to call, just to get it off his chest.”

  According to Rulli, Davern did confess to Lana in 1992: “not the specifics, but in general.” Rulli claims there is still more to that night than Davern revealed even to Lana, describing it as “an incredible, unbelievable story, and people with sense immediately know it’s the only story that makes sense.”

  Davern’s scenario to Lana might tie together the argument between the Wagners that Warren Archer said he heard around eleven P.M., R.J. telling Paul Wintler he had a “fight” with Natalie before she disappeared, the woman heard crying for help and a drunken man “mocking” or arguing with her, the long passage of time before R.J. radioed for help, his odd explanations for her disappearance from the boat.

  In Rulli’s opinion, the police “overlooked everything… it was a really botched investigation.”

  Lana believes Davern’s confession to her. “It makes sense to me. It’s the only thing that makes sense… because otherwise, what the heck was R.J. waiting for?”

  Davern’s tale is clouded by his secretive behavior, tainted by his profit motive and riddled with his own inconsistencies and piecemeal revelations. Nevertheless, Davern is the only witness who has spoken at length, and his media accounts of the evening have never been publicly denied by Wagner.

  Rulli claims she encouraged Davern to tell authorities, “and it’s just something, for his reasons, he would never do. Maybe [out of] fear, loyalty, your whole lifestyle. Your whole life is turned upside down within a few hours, and you’re as drunk as you ever were in your entire life while this is all happening, you’re looking for a leader. And as close as he was to Robert Wagner, he chose Robert Wagner as that leader.”

  Davern’s and Rulli’s credibility is further compromised by a joint appearance they made on a Geraldo Rivera special in 1992 called Now It Can Be Told. Davern balked at telling Rivera how Natalie went overboard, asking to consult with Rulli privately, unaware they were being filmed. As they were being recorded on a hidden camera, Rulli said to Davern, “This needs to be cleared up. We have to say how she got in the water, Den.” Then Rulli changed her mind, telling the skipper, “We put that in the book and we’ll make billions from it.”

  Rulli claims her statement has been misconstrued.

  What really happened on that awful, aberrant night may never be known. In the end, one is left with a sense of overwhelming loss, of tragedy, and of mystery; a feeling that Natalie should not have drowned during that strange, alcoholic, incoherent night on the Splendour, made even more heartbreaking and harrowing by her recurring dream she would die in water that was dark, her deepest fear.

  The second tragedy is that Natalie, who lived to please, who always wanted things to turn out well in the end—a “good soul,” as her friend Redford said in simple eloquence—has been shadowed by the irresolution of the events from a night that was so unlike her.

  As Christopher Walken would say of the movie they had not quite completed together, “Things that are left hanging are difficult.” Natalie’s older sister, Olga, would view her disappearance from the Splendour as a mystery, which it remains. “The guys were all up there getting loaded… who knows what happened?”

  What is important, finally, is to remember Natalie’s life, and the characters she created on-screen—the poignant Austrian waif in Tomorrow Is Forever… precocious Susan in Miracle on 34th Street… tender, luminous Maria in West Side Story… Judy, the sensitive teenager in Rebel Without a Cause… brave, plucky Angie in Love with the Proper Stranger… vulnerable Deanie in Splendor in the Grass—the gifts Natalie gave her fans at the expense of her own identity.

  “Natalie Wood,” her actress alter ego, lives on in the movies. What has been lost is Natasha.

  “Ootra Vechereem Moodreunaya,” as Natalie said at the end of her eulogy for her Fahd. “Now we feel so sad about losing you, as one sometimes feels sad at nightfall. But we will have our morning when our spirits will lift, our sadness will lighten and we will realize we haven’t really lost you, because your uniqueness to us all will always live in our hearts.”

  Spakoynee noch, Natasha.

  Filmography

  1944

  Happy Land (Twentieth Century Fox). Director: Irving Pichel; Producer: Kenneth MacGowan; Screenwriters: Julian Josephson & Kathryn Scola; Novel: MacKinlay Kantor

  1946

  Tomorrow Is Forever (RKO). Director: Irving Pichel; Producer: David Lewis; Screenwriters: Gwen Bristow & Lenore J. Coffee

  The Bride Wore Boots (Paramount). Director: Irving Pichel; Producer: Seton I. Miller; Screenwriter: Dwight Mitchell Wiley

  1947

  Miracle on 34th Street (Twentieth Century Fox). Director: George Seaton; Producer: William Perlberg; Screenwriter: George Seaton

  The Ghost and Mrs. Muir (Twentieth Century Fox). Director: Joseph L. Mankiewicz; Producer: Fred Kohlmar; Screenwriter: Philip Dunne

  Driftwood (Republic). Director: Allan Dwan; Producer: Allan Dwan; Screenwriters: Mary Loos & Richard Sale

  1948

  Scudda Hoo Scudda Hay (Twentieth Century Fox). Director: F. Hugh Herbert; Producer: Walter Morosco; Screenwriter: F. Hugh Herbert

  1949

  Chicken Every Sunday (Twentieth Century Fox). Director: George Seaton; Producer: William Perlberg; Screenwriters: George Seaton & Valentine Davies

  The Green Promise (RKO). Director: William D. Russell; Producers: Glenn McCarthy, Robert Paige; Screenwriter: Monty Collins

  Father Was a Fullback (Twentieth Century Fox). Director: John M. Stahl; Producer: Fred Kohlmar; Screenwriters: Aleen Leslie, Casey Robinson, Mary Loos, Richard Sale

  1950

  No Sad Songs for Me (Columbia). Director: Rudolph Mate; Producer: Buddy Adler; Screenwriter: Howard Koch

  Our Very Own (Goldwyn). Director: David Miller; Producer: Sam Goldwyn; Screenwriter: F. Hugh Herbert

  Jackpot (Twentieth Century Fox). Director: Walter Lang; Producer: Samuel G. Engel; Screenwriters: Phoebe & Henry Ephron

  1951

  Never a Dull Moment (RKO). Director: George Marshall; Producer: Harriet Parsons; Screenwriters: Lou Breslow & Doris Anderson; Novel: Kay Swift

  Dear Brat (Paramount). Director: William Seiter; Producer: Mel Epstein; Screenwriter: Devery Freeman

  The Blue Veil (RKO). Director: Curtis Bernhardt; Producers: Jerry Wald & Norman Krasna; Screenwriter: Norman Corwin

  1952

  Just for You (Paramount). Director: Elliott Nugent; Producer: Pat Duggan; Screenwriter: Robert Carson

  The Rose Bowl Story (Monogram/Republic). Director: William Beaudine; Producers: Richard Heermance & Walter Mirisch; Screenwriter: Charles R. Marion

  The Star (Twentieth Century Fox). Director: Stuart Heisler; Producer: Bert E. Friedlob; Screenwriters: Katherine Albert & Dale Eunson

  1954

  The Silver Chalice (Warner Brothers). Director/Producer: Victor Saville; Screenwriter: Lesser Samuels; Novel: Thomas Costain

  1955

  One Desire (Universal/International). Director: Jerry Hopper; Producer: Ross Hunter; Screenwriters: Lawrence Roman & Robert Blees; Novel: Conrad Richter

  Rebel Without a Cause (Warner Brothers). Director: Nicholas Ray; Producer: David Weisbart; Screenwriter: Stewart Stern, Adapted by Irving Schulman, Story by Nicholas Ray

  1956

  The Searchers (Warner Brothers). Director: John Ford; Executive Producer: Merian C. Cooper; Ass
ociate Producer: Patrick Ford; Screenwriter: Frank S. Nugent; Novel: Alan LeMay

  A Cry in the Night (Warner Brothers). Director: Frank Tuttle; Producer: Alan Ladd; Screenwriter: David Dortort

  The Burning Hills (Warner Brothers). Director: Stuart Heisler; Producer: Richard Whorf; Screenplay: Irving Wallace

  The Girl He Left Behind (Warner Brothers). Director: David Butler; Producer: Frank Rosenberg; Screenwriter: Guy Trosper

  1957

  Bombers B-52 (Warner Brothers). Director: Gordon Douglas; Producer: Richard Whorf; Screenwriter: Irving Wallace; Story: Sam Rolfe

  1958

  Marjorie Morningstar (Warner Brothers). Director: Irving Rapper; Producer: Milton Sperling; Screenwriter: Everett Freeman; Novel: Herman Wouk

  Kings Go Forth (United Artists). Director: Delmer Daves; Producer: Frank Ross; Screenwriter: Merle Miller

  1960

  Cash McCall (Warner Brothers). Director: Joseph Pevney; Producer: Henry Blanke; Screenwriters: Lenore Coffee & Marion Hargrove

  All the Fine Young Cannibals (MGM). Director: Michael Anderson; Producer: Pandro S. Berman; Screenwriter: Robert Thom; Story: Rosamond Marshall

  1961

  Splendor in the Grass (Warner Brothers). Director: Elia Kazan; Producer: Elia Kazan; Screenwriter: William Inge

  West Side Story (United Artists). Codirectors: Robert Wise & Jerome Robbins; Producer: Robert Wise; Associate Producer: Saul Chaplin; Screenwriter: Ernest Lehman; Book: Arthur Laurents

  1962

  Gypsy (Warner Brothers). Director: Mervyn LeRoy; Producer: Mervyn LeRoy; Screenwriter: Leonard Spigelgass

  1963

  Love with the Proper Stranger (Paramount). Director: Robert Mulligan; Producer: Alan J. Pakula; Screenwriter: Arnold Schulman

  1964

  Sex and the Single Girl (Warner Brothers). Director: Richard Quine; Producer: William T. Orr; Screenwriters: Joseph Heller & David R. Schwartz; Story: Joseph Hoffman; Book: Helen Gurley Brown

  1965

  The Great Race (Warner Brothers). Director: Blake Edwards; Producer: Martin Jurow; Screenwriter: Arthur Ross

  1966

  Inside Daisy Clover (Warner Brothers). Director: Robert Mulligan; Producer: Alan J. Pakula; Screenwriter: Gavin Lambert

  This Property Is Condemned (Paramount). Director: Sydney Pollack; Producers: Ray Stark, John Houseman; Screenwriters: Francis Ford Coppola, Fred Coe & Edith Sommer; Play: Tennessee Williams

  Penelope (MGM). Director: Arthur Hiller; Producer: Arthur Loew, Jr.; Screenwriter: George Wells; Novel: E. V. Cunningham

  1969

  Bob and Carol and Ted and Alice (Columbia). Director: Paul Mazursky; Executive Producer: Michael J. Frankovich; Producer: Larry Tucker; Screenwriters: Paul Mazursky & Larry Tucker

  1972

  The Candidate (Warner Brothers)-cameo as Natalie Wood. Director: Michael Ritchie; Producer: Walter Coblenz; Screenwriter: Jeremy Larner

  1975

  Peeper (Twentieth Century Fox). Director: Peter Hyams; Producers: Robert Chartoff & Irwin Winkler; Screenwriter: W. D. Richter; Novel: Keith Laumer

  1979

  Meteor (Universal/International). Director: Ronald Neame; Producers: Arnold Orgolini & Theodore Parvin; Screenwriters: Stanley Mann & Edmund H. North; Story: Edmund H. North

  1980

  The Last Married Couple in America (Universal). Director: Gilbert Cates; Producers: Edward S. Feldman & John Herman Shaner; Screenwriter: John Herman Shaner

  1982

  Brainstorm (MGM). Director/Producer: Douglas Trumbull; Executive Producer: Joel L. Freeman; Producer: John Foreman; Screenwriters: Robert Stitzel & Philip Frank Messina

  Television Appearances

  1952

  Playmates, NBC, Schaefer Century Theater

  Quite a Viking, NN, Hollywood Playhouse

  1953

  Pride of the Family, ABC series

  1954

  Pride of the Family, ABC series

  “Return of the Dead,” CBS, Public Defender

  The Plot Against Mrs. Pomeroy, NN, Studio ’57

  I Am a Fool, CBS, General Electric Theater

  Alice in Wonderland

  Opening Night

  Somebody I Know

  Life with Luigi

  1955

  The Wild Bunch, CBS, Four Star Playhouse

  Too Old for Dolls, NBC, Ford Theater

  The Old Triangle, NN, Mayor of the Town

  Heidi, NBC

  Feathertop, CBS, General Electric Theater

  Miracle at Potter’s Farm, CBS, Studio One

  The Wedding Gift, ABC, King’s Row Theater

  1956

  The Deadly Riddle, ABC, Warner Brothers

  Perry Como Show, guest appearance

  Carnival, NBC, Kaiser Aluminum Hour

  House Party with Art Linkletter

  Ed Sullivan, CBS, Modern Screen Awards

  1957

  Girl on a Subway, ABC, Conflict

  The Bob Hope Show (Special), NBC, guest appearance

  1958

  The Bob Hope Show (Special), NBC, guest appearance

  Sinatra Show, ABC, guest appearance

  1959

  The Bob Hope Show (Special), NBC, guest appearance

  1960

  Jack Benny Show, CBS, guest appearance with Robert Wagner

  1973

  The Affair (telefilm), ABC

  1975

  “The Cruise Ship Murders,” CBS, Switch, guest appearance

  1976

  Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (special telefilm), NBC

  1977

  A Salute to Bette Davis, CBS

  1978

  Stars Salute Israel at 80, ABC

  1979

  From Here to Eternity (miniseries), NBC

  The Cracker Factory (telefilm), ABC

  Hart to Hart (pilot), ABC (cameo as Natasha Gurdin)

  Treasures of the Hermitage (special), NBC

  1980

  The Memory of Eva Ryker (telefilm), CBS

  Notes

  [SF=Suzanne Finstad]

  ACT ONE

  CHAPTER 1

  NATALIE’S REAL NAME: Birth certificate #4866, County of San Francisco

  MARIA WAS COLORFUL: Lois Tenney to SF, 6/13/99; Constantine Liuzunie et al. to SF, 7/10/99; Shirley Moore Mann to SF, 2/2/00; Phyllis Quinn to SF, 4/28/99; Randal Malone to SF, 1/25/00

  DEVIOUS: Scott Marlowe to SF, 6/8/99; Maryann Marinkovich Brooks to SF, 11/4/99

  PATHOLOGICAL LIAR: Lana Wood to SF, 8/19/99 & 8/24/99

  OBSESSED W/NATALIE: Phyllis Quinn to SF; Lana Wood to SF; Shirley Mann to SF; etc.

  NOT SURE WHERE BORN: Olga Viripaeff to SF, 7/11/99; Phyllis Quinn to SF

  BORN BARNAUL: Olga Viripaeff to SF, 5/7/99; Kalia’s birth certificate; ship’s log

  BORN TOMSK: Maria Gurdin to Sue Russell, 1/10/87, for Star Mothers, Georgia Holt and Phyllis Quinn with Sue Russell, Simon and Schuster, 1988; Natalie: A Memoir by Her Sister, Lana Wood and Jake Enterprises Ltd., G.P. Putnam’s Sons, 1984

  PALATIAL ESTATE: Shirley Mann to SF; Olga Viripaeff to SF; Randal Malone to SF, 1/25/00

  YOUNG ACTOR: Randal Malone to SF

  MARIA’S GENEALOGY: Constantine Liuzunie to SF; Maria Gurdin to Phyllis Quinn; etc.

  “CLOSE RELATIONS” TO: Maria Gurdin to Sue Russell, 1/10/87, for Star Mothers

  BORN MARIA KULEVA: Constantine Liuzunie to SF; Marriage and death certificates of Maria Gurdin

  SOMEONE A COUNTESS: Constantine Liuzunie to SF

  RUSSIAN SCHOLAR: Professor Stefan Frank, UCLA Russian History Department, to SF, 2/8/00

  PARENTS TOOK HER TO CHINA: Robert Hyatt to SF, 5/10/99

  KNEW HOW TO SPEAK FRENCH: Olga Viripaeff to SF, 5/7/99

  KALIA COULDN’T: Constantine Liuzunie to SF

  NAT TRIBUTE: A Tribute to a Very Special Lady, KCOP-TV, written and directed by Gary Davis, produced by Peter Schlesinger and Harry Kooperstein

  FOUND ON HILLSIDE: Lana Wood to SF, 8/19/99

  MARIA LAUGHE
D: Shirley Mann to SF

  HOGWASH: Constantine Liuzunie to SF

  LANA DIDN’T BELIEVE: Lana Wood to SF, 8/19/99

  BORN IN DACHA: Olga Viripaeff to SF, 5/7/99

  FAMILY PHOTO: Olga Viripaeff to SF, 5/7/99; Phyllis Quinn to SF; Constantine Liuzunie to SF

  TWINS: Maria Gurdin to Sue Russell for Star Mothers

  SHE BELIEVED IT: Randal Malone to SF

  WEIGHED 2 POUNDS: Phyllis Quinn to SF; Maria Gurdin to Sue Russell, 1/10/87

  EYES LIKE FATHER’S: Maria Gurdin to Sue Russell, 1/10/87

  GRAY-BLUE: Olga Viripaeff to SF, 5/7/99

  BLACK AND BEADY: Sue Russell to SF, 4/30/99

  SWORE/JEWELRY: Olga Viripaeff to SF, 5/7/99

  KEPT BOOKS, WORSHIPPED: Maria Gurdin to Phyllis Quinn, 11/85

  KALIA SUPPORTED: Constantine and George Liuzunie et al. to SF

  FOOTNOTE: RUSSIAN SCHOLAR: Professor Stefan Frank to SF

  TOWN NAMED: Maria Gurdin to Sue Russell, 1/10/87

  ARRANGED MARRIAGE: Olga Viripaeff to SF, 5/7/99

  DIDN’T COOK: Constantine Liuzunie to SF

  FAMILY HISTORY: Olga Viripaeff to SF, 5/7/99; Constantine Liuzunie to SF; Maria Gurdin to Phyllis Quinn

  SCHOLAR: Professor Frank to SF

  PROMISE: Olga Viripaeff to SF, 5/7/99

  DEMENTED: Nina Arrabit to SF, 1/27/00

  QIQIHAR ANGELS: Olga Viripaeff to SF, 5/7/99; Maria Gurdin to Phyllis Quinn; Shirley Mann to SF

  HARBIN LIKE RUSSIA, “NICE” STREET: Professor Olga Yokoyama to SF

  YOUNG BOYS, GREAT DANCER: Randal Malone to SF

  CHURCH TO EYE BOYS: Maria Gurdin to Phyllis Quinn

  BALLET: Olga Viripaeff to SF, 5/7/99; Maria Gurdin to Phyllis Quinn

  LOOKING IN MIRROR: Olga Viripaeff to SF, 5/7/99

 

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