Entertainment . Reviews
Marriage Hollywood Style
Britney Spears' rapid walk down the aisle and subsequent annulment
continued a long line of wild marriages in Tinseltown.
The legendary
union that began it all was between Silent Film Icons Douglas
Fairbanks and Mary Pickford. Beneath the glamorous veneer was
a troubled relationship. The agile and athletic Fairbank's
idea of a good time was walking fifty yards on his hands on the
beach.
Or having pool party contests to see who could hold their head
underwater the longest. He loved hitting baseballs with Babe
Ruth, playing tennis with Bill Tilden and sparring with Jack
Dempsey. He would never use a door if he could climb through
a window or walk around a park bench if he could jump over
it.
The dashing matinee idol who did his own stunts in movies
like
The Mark Of Zorro (1920) and Robin Hood (1922), wrote journals
advising children how to stay physically fit. Conversely,
Mary Pickford's idea of a good time was sitting around the Pickfair
mansion getting bombed out of her mind by noon. Fairbanks,
whose father had given him many lectures on the evils of drink,
frowned
on her inebriation and that led to their divorce. She outlived
him by forty years.
If a couple has different levels of tolerance for mind altering
substances, the marriage is likely to be short-lived. Two years
before his breakout role in Easy Rider (1969) struggling actor
Jack Nicholson was finding too little time to spend with his
wife Sandra Knight. They went to see a marriage analyst who suggested
they both take LSD. While Sandra found the experience terrifying,
the always experimenting Nicholson felt that the drug trips opened
a whole new world of exploration.
After his marriage ended, the
often moody and withdrawn actor continued to get high during
his working relationship with the out of control Easy Rider
star Dennis Hopper. The film's producers had hired Jack to be
a calming
influence, fearing that Hopper was going blow all their money
and kill co-star Peter Fonda. One morning while filming in
Taos, New Mexico, Jack and Dennis woke up in a tree and neither
could
remember how they got there.
Sometimes even a little partying is too much. When Dean Martin
announced that he was divorcing his wife Jeannie he joked," She'll
get the house. Doesn't matter. I could never find it anyway." One
sore point during their union was Dean's unwillingness to have
any company over, his main concern was getting up early to play
golf. One time Martin reluctantly acquiesced to his wife's request
to have a social gathering at their house. At ten pm Dean excused
himself and went upstairs to his room. A half hour later Jeannie
knocked on his door," Dean come out! The police are here." An
apologetic officer explained that they had received several calls
about another loud obnoxious party at the Martin household. "But
we never have parties," said Jeannie. "Never mind that
Jeannie. You heard the officer. OK, everybody out." The
next day after rising early and playing a nice round of golf,
old Dino confessed to her that he had made the phone calls using
several different voices.
A Hollywood couple can interpret the dissolution of their marriage
differently. When Jim Carrey's acting career seemed to move ahead
of his wife Lauren Holley's, he implied that her ambition and
jealousy regarding his success had led to their divorce. But
Holley claimed that a sticking point in their relationship was
Jim's problem with mirrors. He was incapable of passing one without
making several funny faces and it scared her.
Gossip about a star's marital state can be used to draw moviegoers
to the box office. After several very short, very public relationships
which included leaving Keiffer Sutherland at the altar, Julia
Roberts seemed to have the perfect reputation for the title role
in the movie Runaway Bride (1999). What was less known was that
Sutherland had an affair with a stripper three days before the
marriage and Roberts didn't buy his story that he was doing research
for a movie.
Ultimately, star temperament may be the ultimate factor that
drives Hollywood couples apart. Betty Davis met her fourth and
final husband Gary Merrill on the set of All About Eve (1950).
She would later say that he was a tough guy, but none of her
husband's were macho enough to be Mr. Bette Davis. When they
divorced in 1960, a tearful Davis told the judge that the two
had gotten into a fight while driving through Connecticut. Merrill
had stopped the car, picked her up and thrown her out. She had
landed face first in a snow drift. "I might be there still,
if I hadn't been rescued by a local farmer." Merrill had
stood up and said angrily," Your honor, you're not going
to believe this malarkey, are you? I never threw Bette out of
the car in Connecticut. It was Vermont where I threw her out!"
Later, Bette stood out on the courthouse steps, brandishing
a long cigarette as she spoke with the press. She was asked if
she'd ever marry again. "Well gentlemen, it's tough with
my career and all, but never say never. I do however have three
conditions." She took a puff from her cigarette. "First
he must have at least fifteen million dollars. Second, he must
immediately sign half it over to me. And finally," she paused
for dramatic effect "he must promise to be dead within the
year!" Her criteria were never met.
Want to hear more stories? Stephen Schochet is
the author and narrator of the audiobooks Fascinating Walt
Disney and Tales
Of Hollywood. The Saint Louis Post Dispatch says," these
two elaborate productions are exceptionally entertaining." Hear
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Marriage, Hollywood Style
By Stephen Schochet
orgofhlly@aol.com
COPYRIGHT: ©2004 by Hollywood Stories. All rights reserved
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