by Karen Karbo
To be female and be thin-skinned means you react, sometimes strongly, to things you don’t like, choosing to voice your opinions instead of swallowing them because they may cause problems. It’s that straightforward: Rather than tolerating something, you speak up. Perhaps you’re even a little bit angry. You don’t pretend it’s okay, or (as I sometimes do) bend over backward to see the other point of view, or try to magically convert rage to empathy. (I’m sure Hermione has a spell for that.)
In 2004, when Rowling’s 19-month-old son, David (from second husband, Neil Murray, whom she married in 2001), was “papped” by a photographer with a telephoto lens while she was out walking him in his baby buggy, she sued everyone who could possibly be sued for invasion of privacy.*2 I think it’s safe to say she never thought, The guy’s just doing his job.
Rowling is also reputed to be “famously reclusive”—a descriptor that’s vaguely disapproving. If there was ever a word that needed to be redefined for the digital age, it’s recluse. Although it’s true that Rowling doesn’t throw neighborhood potlucks or get sloppy drunk doing karaoke at the local pub, the woman has almost 10 million Twitter followers, and has been known to tweet many times a day about rugby, Scottish politics, her favorite charities, and various Potter arcana (there are Jews at Hogwarts but not Wiccans, oddly enough).
Before I go any further, I should point out that I am no devotee of Twitter. I suspect you need to be either famous or an existential masochist to enjoy it. Nothing makes it clearer that you’re a lone soul living out your uneventful days on an undistinguished planet orbiting a mediocre star in a far-flung arm of the Milky Way than blasting out a few wickedly insightful or funny tweets, only to have them met with…nothing.
Obviously, Rowling doesn’t have that issue. The downside of her visibility and influence is that she’s routinely held to task for refusing to behave like a proper children’s book author (which seems to be a mix between a Sunday school teacher and full-time literacy advocate).
When Jo published The Casual Vacancy, a hefty adult novel about a local city council election in the small English town of Pagford, the parents of young fans apparently took umbrage with the clearly grown-up content (by which I mean that Rowling used the word “vagina”). Her tweet on the matter was a delicious snippet of the snark to come: “There’s no part of me that feels that I represented myself as your children’s babysitter or their teacher.”
She was just warming up. During the 2016 presidential election, she regularly weighed in about her disdain for Trump. After the third debate, she tweeted: “Well, there you have it. A highly intelligent, experienced woman just debated a giant orange Twitter egg. Your move, America. #debate.” She went on to offend legions of Trump-supporting trolls who shot back that they were going to burn all their Potter books and DVDs and never read her work again.
Her takedown: “Well, the fumes from the DVDs might be toxic, and I’ve still got your money, so by all means borrow my lighter.”
Of course, the more success a woman enjoys, the more complicated things become. Sometimes, there is no winning for women—for deep and deeply infuriating reasons that legions of feminists, sociologists, psychologists, and culture anthropologists have spent entire lifetimes attempting to sort out.
In 2016, Slate posted a piece called, “J. K. Rowling’s Twitter Feed Is Slowly Ruining Everything I Love About J. K. Rowling.” The tone is tongue-in-cheek, but the message is unmistakable: Stay in your lane, Jo. Don’t ruin our image of you as the sweet, slightly eccentric author of the best books of our youth by being an adult woman with thoughts and feelings of her own. Please spend your life being an emissary for Harry Potter.
Over on Gawker, however, she was mocked for doing exactly that. A regular J. K. Rowling feature headlined “God, Get a Life!!!” pictured Jo either reading from a Potter book, or holding one up. As authors are wont to do.
Luckily for Jo, she doesn’t mind being called thin-skinned. She owns it. She isn’t thin-skinned about being called thin-skinned.
To be blasé about what others view as a shortcoming is pure difficult woman. Please join me in a thought exercise: That thing you hate about yourself? Accept it now. Make no excuses for it. Be inspired by Jo Rowling, and embrace your complexities! Your public, like hers, will simply have to deal with them.
*1If I had an indie rock band, I would totally name it Forest of Dean.
*2The landmark ruling strengthened privacy laws across the land, protecting the children of celebrities who wish to keep their kids out of the public eye.
CHAPTER 2
ELIZABETH TAYLOR
Notorious
DIFFICULT WOMEN SHARE many commonalities. But the one trait they all possess is complete indifference to what people think. There was no one for whom this was more true than Elizabeth Taylor.
During her seven decades in the spotlight as America’s sexiest, most gossiped-about film actress, there was never any doubt that Hollywood’s first modern movie star was doing exactly what she wanted to do, regardless of what people said about her. She rarely explained herself or interpreted her behavior to put other people at ease. She was both wondrous and terrifying: a hyperfeminine and hypersexual woman who couldn’t be contained or controlled by public opinion. To be a woman like Elizabeth—who tells you to take your scarlet A and shove it—is to be difficult, dangerous, and powerful.
Her résumé is well known, though less so as time marches on. When I asked my 24-year-old daughter what she knew about Elizabeth Taylor, she said Liz had a lot of husbands and rocked the eyeliner in Cleopatra. True! But she also was a child actor whose breakout role in National Velvet (a film my horse-loving daughter adored and apparently forgot) occurred when she was 12. From that moment on, Elizabeth Taylor was a star, and would remain one of the brightest in the firmament for the next 67 years, until her death in 2011 at age 79.
Elizabeth made a handful of classic films, including A Place in the Sun (1951), Giant (1956), BUtterfield 8 (1960), and Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966); the last two earned her a pair of best actress Oscars. But the real show was the way she conducted herself. She was a sexy woman who did nothing to hide her appetites; she lived her very public life with gusto and a complete lack of remorse during the buttoned-up 1950s.
In 1964, she married Richard Burton, with whom she costarred in Cleopatra. They would divorce, then remarry, then divorce once and for all in 1976. Every public quarrel, separation, and tearful reunion was front-page news.
During and after the Liz and Dick years, Elizabeth made some great and terrible movies (Doctor Faustus, anyone?*1), spent two stints in rehab after becoming addicted to booze and prescription pain pills, got fat, got thin, married a few more times (Republican senator John Warner, construction worker and mullet-rocker Larry Fortensky), launched a series of fragrances that made her extremely rich, and founded what would be the first important organization to battle AIDS. And these are only a handful of the high points.
ELIZABETH ROSEMOND TAYLOR was born in London to American parents in 1932. The Taylors traveled in rarified circles: Elizabeth’s father, Francis, was an art dealer with a posh gallery on Bond Street; her mother, Sara, had acted a bit on the stage. From the time she was a toddler, people remarked on Elizabeth’s beauty: her black hair, her alabaster skin, and her stunning eyes that were in fact a lovely medium blue (and not violet, as everyone would one day have it*2). Eye color aside, she was also blessed with a genetic mutation called distichiasis: double eyelashes. (I know: I feel for her too.) In 1943, Elizabeth costarred with Roddy McDowall in Lassie Come Home. McDowall liked to tell the story of how the director ordered Elizabeth to wash off her mascara the first day on set. Except: She wasn’t wearing any.
More evidence, as if we needed any, that life is unfair.
Elizabeth’s eyes may have been beautiful, but they were also alarming. Studio heads at Universal, where she had a brief contract that was allo
wed to expire, said she didn’t look like a child, but had “old eyes.” In those days, the studios were all looking for the next Shirley Temple, with her sausage curls, jaunty pinafore, and chirpy songs about the Good Ship Lollipop. But that was not Elizabeth Taylor. There was something too knowing about her, something unsettling and a little wild.
The 11-year-old Elizabeth had been a huge fan of National Velvet, the 1935 novel by Enid Bagnold. Together, she and her mother lobbied Pandro S. Berman, the head of MGM, for the costarring role of Velvet Brown. Berman turned her down flat, saying that she was simply too short for the role, which required her at one point to pass herself off as a male jockey. In one of the first, great apocryphal stories meant to convey the sheer tenacity of Elizabeth Taylor, she went home, willed herself to grow three inches, then came back and landed the part.
Velvet Brown is a young English girl who wins a horse in a raffle and aspires to ride him in the Grand National Steeplechase. She’s aided in her quest by a down-on-his-luck jockey (is there any other kind?), played by Mickey Rooney. Because girls weren’t allowed to ride in the Grand National, she disguises herself as a boy and rides to triumph. Rooney is ostensibly the star, but Elizabeth steals the show. It’s a treat to see her in a prepubescent moment: that blink of a cultural eye before she became a woman to be reckoned with.
That was the thing about Elizabeth Taylor: There were no coltish years during which she languished awkwardly on the cusp of womanhood. She was a kid, and then suddenly, she was a va-va-va-voom hottie. In 1949, she starred with 38-year-old Robert Taylor in Conspirator, complete with torrid-for-the-time love scenes. She was a mere 16 during the film’s production.
These days, there are some women who take pride in being called “girls,” shopping in the junior (or even children’s) department, and banishing post-baby pooches as soon as is humanly possible. But Taylor reveled in her hourglass figure and looked to cash in on the spoils of adult womanhood as soon as she could.
As a child star, Elizabeth had been cloistered by her parents and managed by the studio; she had no real friends. “Without the usual crowd of peers most teens use to define themselves, I knew I would have to grow up even faster,” she wrote in her 1987 memoir/self-help tome Elizabeth Takes Off: On Weight Gain, Weight Loss, Self-Image, and Self-Esteem. “I didn’t have to be a genius to realize that I would have to find a place away from both my parents’ house and the studio. After several failed attempts, I realized the only way I could escape was through marriage.”
Which she did, to Conrad “Nicky” Hilton, in 1950. Even at the tender age of 18, marriage for Elizabeth wasn’t marriage as we lesser mortals think of it. It was more like industrial-strength dating. For the rest of her life, she would breezily swing from one man to the next, like Tarzan from vine to vine. Mr. Right Now was always Mr. Right. “I’ve only slept with men I’ve been married to,” she once said, “How many women can make that claim?” If that’s true, she was more decorous than anyone gave her credit for.
There were the Major Husbands who rocked her world (Michael Wilding*3, Mike Todd, Richard Burton, and Richard Burton). And then there were the Minor Husbands, companions who seemed only to keep her bed warm (Conrad Hilton, Eddie Fisher, John Warner, Larry Fortensky). She loved them until she didn’t; then it was on to the next. Elizabeth was romantic, passionate, impetuous, but she had no aptitude for riding out the rough patches. Nor, in her entitled way, did she believe that she should.
The engagement to Nicky Hilton was multipurpose: an instance of boffo cross-promotional kismet. Studio publicists routinely stirred up gossip about romances between costars as a form of cheap marketing. But rarely did something like this happen: In the spring of 1950 Elizabeth also happened to be costarring in Father of the Bride with Spencer Tracy as, you guessed it, a bride. MGM was thrilled to pick up the tab for Elizabeth’s May wedding (including the dress). The church for the real wedding was decorated in the same way as the church in the movie wedding. The ceremony took place a month before the release of the film. The film was a hit, while the marriage was not; they were divorced after eight months. Elizabeth was still 18.
In 1951, she costarred in the classic A Place in the Sun. It was the height of the Hays Code era, when movies were censored within an inch of incomprehensibility. The Motion Picture Production Code, as it was also known, ruled Hollywood between 1930 and 1968—but it was particularly stringent during Elizabeth’s early movies. Every page of every script was scrutinized to be sure that there was no nudity, profanity, shots of people in bed, or references to “sexual perversion,” which included homosexuality, open or implicit criticisms of marriage, law enforcement, or religion. There was also a specially appointed BI, or Bust Inspector, to police the cleavage.
The film starred Montgomery Clift as George Eastman, the poor nephew of a rich uncle who manufacturers women’s bathing suits. He meets vivacious, breathtaking socialite Angela Vickers (Elizabeth) at one of his uncle’s parties. Assuming she’s completely out of his league, he settles for innocent factory co-worker Alice Tripp, played to perfection by Shelley Winters. George and Angela meet again and fall in love, just as Alice learns she’s “in trouble.” George wants her to terminate the pregnancy; we know this because he makes a few phone calls from a sketchy pay phone and writes down the name of a doctor on a sad little crumpled piece of paper. Alice drags herself to the doctor, who apparently cannot help her (unless you consider his stern lecture about how she will make a healthy mother, “help”). Alice blackmails George into marrying her—but thinking better of it, he decides to drown her instead. In short order, he’s apprehended and sent to the electric chair. The end.
The movie was provocative in its time because it dared to dramatize the plight of pregnancy out of wedlock. But it’s also an unwitting cautionary tale for what happens to men who settle. Don’t have unprotected sex with the first girl who says yes, sir. You’re better than that! Have a little self-respect! With that handsome mug and full head of hair, you could land gorgeous, ditzy Angela Vickers.
A Place in the Sun won a slew of production Oscars, and Clift and Winters were both nominated. Elizabeth was not, and for good reason. Variety wrote: “[Taylor’s] histrionics are of a quality so far beyond anything she has done previously, that Stevens’ skilled hands on the reins must be credited with a minor miracle.”
But it didn’t matter. It would never matter. Whether she turned in an Oscar-worthy performance or something more typical of a community college theater department on the skids, Elizabeth Taylor on the screen—with that heart-shaped face and 19-inch waist—was a female force to be reckoned with.
Elizabeth Taylor would be called the Most Beautiful Woman in the World, but come on. Beauty is possibly the most subjective thing on Earth (after how people like their eggs). Grace Kelly, Elizabeth’s peer, was easily as beautiful. But Elizabeth stirred up something in our wayward human hearts. In The Accidental Feminist, M. G. Lord writes about Elizabeth’s genius for evoking primitive, nonverbal feelings: “Taylor spoke directly to our ancient aft-brain: our amygdala, the repository of love, hate, fear, and lust.” Camille Paglia, in her usual overheated way, wrote, “[A]n electric, erotic charge vibrates the space between her face and the lens.” Elizabeth was, in fact, the perfect screen siren for the Hays Code era—because she could evoke deep, dirty, confusing thoughts simply by standing there.
IN HER WOMANLY WAY Elizabeth was also a prodigy of procreation. In 1952, a year after she cast aside Hilton, she tied the knot with British actor Michael Wilding in a low-key wedding at the registry office. He was 40, she was a month shy of her 20th birthday. He was a friend-and-protector-style husband. A year later, their son Michael Jr. was born. Two years later, another son, Christopher, was born. An heir and a spare. Done and done.
Elizabeth had been making movies all along, as best she could. Her pregnancies stalled her career. Weddings were great publicity, but the pregnancies that followed? Not so much. A pregnancy wasn
’t romantic. It wasn’t something the Hays Code could reframe, and the specter of a wasp-waisted lovely gaining 50 pounds, as Elizabeth did with both pregnancies, was too appalling for words. There was no provision for maternity leave in a studio contract. Actresses who dared to get pregnant were suspended without pay. When they returned, wasp-waisted again, they were often given the lousy roles that less troublesome, nonpregnant actresses had turned down. I’m simplifying the situation, but not much. After her sons were born, Elizabeth dutifully appeared in a handful of forgettable films because she needed to work. Wilding was a rank-and-file actor, respected in London, but unknown in L.A. Touchingly, they needed the money.
At the tender age of 23, Elizabeth told the press she’d had it with Hollywood and was thinking about retiring to devote herself to her family. Had this happened, perhaps another actress would have been left to lay the groundwork for modern celebrity culture, where the so-called private life is the entertainment, and whatever the celebrity produces—movies, plays, paintings, fragrances, or Instagram accounts—gives us an excuse to form a devoted and completely illogical attachment.
Producer Mike Todd, husband number three, arrived on the scene in 1956. Elizabeth’s rebound marriage to Michael Wilding was in tatters. He was unhappy in Hollywood, both at the state of his career and in his role as Mr. Taylor. He soothed his despair with strippers, thus proving he was also ahead of his time.
Out went the old Mike, in came the new, even older Mike. He was 49; she was 24. Best known for producing Around the World in 80 Days and developing Todd-AO, a widescreen theater format that improved the moviegoing experience, older Mike was loud and showbizzy, and sounds perfectly awful. He was one of those guys who, at a large dinner party, gestures to his wife with a chicken leg and says, “I’m going to eat this, and you, too.” Wink.