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- <text>
- <title>
- (1982) Paul Newman
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1982 Highlights
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- December 6, 1982
- PEOPLE
- Paul Newman: Verdict on a Superstar
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Paul Newman wins in auto racing, salad dressing and his 43rd
- movie
- </p>
- <p> For the first scene we need underwater photography. Very
- expensive, but we're going first-class. The opening shot is a
- stunner. The viewer doesn't know it yet, but he's looking up
- from inside the drain of a bathroom sink. Very spooky. There's
- a lot of ice floating around, seen from below, and in the middle
- of the Cinemascope screen something that looks, at extreme close
- range, as if it might be the hull of Titanic. Bubbles are coming
- out of this ambiguous mass. "BLUB-BLUB-BLUB-BLUB." Tension
- grips the audience as the bubbling thing, strangely facelike,
- rises and breaks the surface of the water. The camera follows.
- Water dribbles off the lens, and the viewer is on the point of
- understanding what this goofball nonsense is all about when the
- screen is obscured by masses of what looks like--Turkish
- toweling?
- </p>
- <p> You bet. What we have here it not only dripping but gripping
- stuff, whose essence might be summarized as: Can a 57-year-old
- Westport, Conn., salad-dressing manufacturer find satisfaction
- as a hot-shot race-car driver, successful political activist,
- prizewinning movie director, solid-state sex symbol, show-biz
- iconoclast and possibly the most commanding male presence in
- films during the past three decades? If that sounds just a
- touch overheated, never fear. We have Paul Newman to play the
- lead.
- </p>
- <p> Can this be so? Are you telling us that Newman, old Cool Hand
- Luke, old Hud, old Butch Cassidy, old smoothie Henry Gondoroff
- from The Sting, is really a salad-dressing manufacturer? Yes,
- but we'll get back to that. The title credits are ready to roll,
- and our soggy opening scene is still unresolved. What's going
- on? The facelike apparition turns out to be a face indeed, that
- of Newman himself. He has just finished plunging his muzzle into
- ice water, a ritual of his that, it is said, accounts for much
- of his eerie youthfulness. Newman was 42 in 1967, for instance,
- when he appeared in Cool Hand Luke, a character who looked about
- 28, and who would not have made sense as a man much older than
- that: he was 52 in 1977 when he played Reggie Dunlop in Slap
- Shot, an over-the-hill hockey player who looked 39 1/2. In
- person now, without makeup, he might be man in his mid-40s.
- </p>
- <p> Did you actually see him do the ice-water routine? No, dammit,
- tried like hell, in fact we hid a reporter in a clothes hamper,
- but he got hit in the face with a pair of pajamas just at the
- wrong moment. Newman says he soaked his face in ice water and
- sometimes still does, and he actually did it on the screen in
- Harper and The Sting. The story goes that he puts a rubber tube
- into his mouth and stays submerged for two to three minutes
- (although one press account has inflated the figure to 20
- minutes). It is the rubber tube that sounds a bit overdone.
- </p>
- <p> So there is a possibility that Newman thought up the whole
- business just to con millions of middle-aged men into sticking
- their jowls into ice water every morning?
- </p>
- <p> You certainly can't rule it out. There is more than a trace of
- whimsicality to the man. Assuming, of course, that it was
- whimsicality that prompted him to saw George Roy Hill's desk in
- half with a chain saw and to put 300 live chicks into Director
- Robert Altman's trailer when they were on location with Buffalo
- Bill and the Indians.
- </p>
- <p> Is it time to explain about the salad dressing?
- </p>
- <p> Let's have the salad after the main course.
- </p>
- <p> A star is a distant incandescence, vast and mysterious. For a
- mere human being, an actor, a speaker of other people's words,
- a wearer of other people's pants, eyebrows, mustaches and
- attitudes, to be called a star is an absurdity. Yet in show
- business a being at the level of Paul Newman cannot simply be
- called a star; the term is not weighty enough. He becomes Reddi
- Whip topping with jimmies--a superstar! Not just your everyday
- vast, mysterious, distant incandescence, but a really big one.
- </p>
- <p> The distinction is very important. It happens that Joanne
- Woodward, Newman's wife of 24 years, is a star. She is an
- enormously versatile and respected actress, who won an Academy
- Award for The Three Faces of Eve when she was 28. Paul, who has
- never won, has been nominated five times. The guess here is that
- there is a strong possibility of a sixth nomination for his role
- as a drunken lawyer in The Verdict, which opens on Dec. 17. She
- does not work very often, and she says unworriedly that she is
- in a period of artistic hibernation (she will play a part in
- Paul's next film, tentatively title Harry and Son). When she
- does appear in a picture, knowledgeable moviegoers find out
- where it is playing and go see it. Yet she can usually walk
- unrecognized down a street, and her presence in a cast has
- never started one of those alarming tidal movements toward the
- box office that a superstar sometimes generates and in which,
- for reasons that seem closer to the migration of geese than to
- entertainment, every third soul on the planet decides to see a
- certain movie.
- </p>
- <p> Matters are quite different with Newman. His face--the nose so
- straight, the eyes so blue, the lips so cruelly curled, the
- fine countenance so strong and yet so vulnerable--is not just
- universally recognizable. It is almost universally a catalyst
- of moist and turbulent emotions. Men's eyes mist over, and
- women's knees go wobbly.
- </p>
- <p> "It was pretty bewildering when we'd go out to dinner and 300
- crazed women would approach our table," recalls Susan Newman,
- 29, Paul's daughter by his first wife, Jacqueline Witte (the two
- have another daughter, Stephanie, 27; their son Scott, then 28
- died of an overdose of painkillers and alcohol in 1978; and Paul
- and Joanne have three daughters, Nell, 23, Lissy, 21, and Clea,
- 17). Susan, who is now close to her father but resentful of the
- superstar phenomenon, goes on to say that "even in the fields
- of Italy, these kerchiefed people looking over the vines would
- be crying `Paul-o Newman.' It wears you down. It's tiring."
- </p>
- <p> Author Gore Vidal, a friend since the early '50s, recalls
- walking with Paul on Fifth Avenue in Manhattan a few years back.
- Newman had been holding his head down, to avoid recognition, but
- he raised it to make a point in conversation. "An extremely
- large woman was coming toward us," says Vidal, "and she gave a
- gasp as he looked up. We kept going and we heard a terrible
- sound, and Paul said, `My God, she's fainted. Let's keep
- moving.'"
- </p>
- <p> "I don't think Paul Newman really thinks he is Paul Newman in
- his head," says Screenwriter William Goldman, who wrote the
- scripts for Harper and Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. That
- understates the case. In his head, and in as much of his life
- as he can control, he insists on not being "Paul Newman." In
- his first scene in The Sting, Newman is discovered lying drunk
- and unshaven, with his nose mashed against the baseboard of a
- crummy bathroom. Not many of Hollywood's firm-jawed preeners
- would have allowed the shot, but he has taken pains to look as
- gruesome as possible. It is an obvious mockery of the "sex
- symbol" blather that makes him writhe. He refuses to play out
- the celebrity part. He will not sign autographs because, says
- his Westport buddy Writer A.E. Hotchner (Papa Hemingway), "the
- majesty of the act is offensive to him." Hotchner goes on to
- say, "He is the most private man I've ever known. He has a moat
- and a drawbridge which he lets down only occasionally." Over
- the years he has amused himself, and twitted solemn Hollywood
- establishmentarians who feel that superstars should have
- Rolls-Royces, by driving a series of VWs hopped up with racing
- engines. He and Joanne made a point 21 years ago of exiling
- themselves to Westport, a woodsy exurb, which, although
- prosperous and arty, had no connection to show biz.
- </p>
- <p> His most effective way of expunging "Paul Newman," however, was
- to become P.L. Newman (the "L." stands for Leonard), auto racer
- from April through October. He does not make movies during the
- summer months. As much as possible he does nothing but race
- sports cars, although this year he also campaigned hard for the
- nuclear-freeze movement. Quite unexpectedly, after doing no
- racing at all until his late 40s, he has become one of the best
- amateur race drivers in the country. Newman, say the records,
- has been twice national champion in his class (and with this
- success has dropped the anonymous "P.L." and now feels
- comfortable racing under his full name). This year he drove one
- of the fastest cars on the circuit, a $70,000, 170-m.p.h.,
- turbo-charged Datsun 280ZX.
- </p>
- <p> The scene: a road-racing course for sports cars set in wooded,
- rolling terrain an hour north of Atlanta. Noise, crowds,
- confusion, the racketing whine of unmuffled racing engines as
- drivers repeatedly blip their throttles in anticipation of the
- start. For a week now the Sports Car Club of America has been
- running its national championships here on the twisting 2
- 1/2-mile Road Atlanta track. Paul has been here a week, and
- Joanne arrived a couple of days ago to join him. "We have a
- deal," he says. "I trade her a couple of ballets for a couple
- of races." In fact, they enjoy each other's company. At a
- catfish restaurant near the track they argue amiably about
- tenors. She: Placido Domingo. He: Luciano Pavarotti. Joanne,
- a fit-looking woman of 52, whose very short hair squares off a
- strong, self-contained face, says she actually likes to watch
- her husband race. "Paul likes to test himself," she says.
- "That's what makes Paul run. He's got a lot of courage, a highly
- underrated element in people's lives these days." Says Paul:
- "I enjoy the precision of racing, harnessing something as huge
- and powerful as a car and putting it as close to where you want
- it as you can. Besides, it's a kick in the ass."
- </p>
- <p> Friends drop by the restaurant table to jaw comfortably about
- cars (Friend: "You could put a taller gear in the rear end."
- Newman: "Yeah, but you'd screw up second gear"). The only "Paul
- Newman" nonsense of the evening is harmless: a very pretty
- teen-age waitress turns pink and forgets her list of pies as she
- stares at Paul. He twists his nose goofily between thumb and
- forefinger and goes cross-eyed; she turns pinker and hides her
- face, bubbling with giggles. Someone tells him that he did well
- in an hourlong nuclear-freeze interview for Ted Turner's Cable
- News Network; he is not sure. On the air he knows his material
- cold, but some instinct for humility in the face of serious
- matters keeps him from injecting any show biz into his delivery.
- He can't or won't speechify, and while listeners who agree with
- him nod their heads, those who don't are not convinced.
- </p>
- <p> Now, on race day, he is resting in the team motor home, driving
- shoes off, blue driving suit unzipped, the neck of his white
- Nomex long johns showing. He is thin through the hips, and
- thinner through the shoulders than when he played the arrogant
- cowboy stud Hud in an undershirt. He has no belly, although he
- drinks several can of Budweiser a day (he has not drunk hard
- liquor since a boozy period at the beginning of the '70s when
- he was shooting Sometimes a Great Notion). A daily sauna and a
- three-mile run seem to take care of the beer. His thick, curly
- white hair is short, his face is pink and lightly lined, his
- eyes are shut. He is driving the race in his head, plotting how
- to steal tenths of a second from a Triumph TR8 driven by a rival
- named Ken Slagle.
- </p>
- <p> A few feet away outside is a gleaming white tractor-trailer
- labeled BOB SHARP RACING. This is the team's machine shop and
- car van. Sharp is a Connecticut Datsun dealer and former racing
- champion who prepared the cars that Newman races. He says that
- Newman is faster around the track than last year; his reflexes
- have not slowed. It took him a couple of years, but he learned
- how to be a winning driver. The other drivers quickly got over
- the fact that his eyes are blue. He has great concentration,
- almost a woman's delicacy, guts enough to be good in the rain.
- He's foxy, says Sharp; he'll out-think you.
- </p>
- <p> Newman appears, flashing his 1,000-watter at a kid who yells
- "Good luck!" and heads off to the starting line. He qualified
- his red, white and blue No. 33 in the second row, and should be
- among the leaders after the first lap. But the spark plugs foul
- as the car starts, and two plugs are changed. By that time, it
- is too late to rejoin the other cars at the front of the
- starting grid. This competition is a sprint, only 18 laps, and
- he seems to have no change.
- </p>
- <p> He drives a beautifully scripted race. After six laps he has
- pushed his car up to fifth. After ten laps he passes Slagle's
- TR8 for fourth place. He is third after eleven of the 18 laps,
- second after 13. He has, we learn later, broken the course
- record three times in succession. But he runs out of race, and
- although he is gaining fast, at the end he is still 2.5 sec.
- behind Winner Doug Bethke's Corvette. Newman jokes with Bethke
- on the victory stand, puts his arm around Joanne, smiles for the
- photographers, and then goes back to the trailer to rage. Later,
- very seriously, he apologizes for losing. He does not really
- cheer up until the awards dinner that night, when, looking as
- impish as Butch Cassidy, he succeeds in smuggling a camera bag
- full of Bud past a rent-a-cop assigned to keep alcohol out of
- the hall.
- </p>
- <p> It takes Newman longer--seven years, he figures--to know whether
- his movies are winners or not. His acting in The Verdict is
- brilliant and solid and, what is more, brilliant in the right
- direction. He plays a boozy Irish-Catholic lawyer, who is
- on-screen for nearly all of the film's 125 min., accurately
- enough to be utterly convincing, with enough restraint so that
- the audience does not get a hangover, and sympathetically enough
- so that he reaches out, shakily, and touches heroism. Frank
- Galvin is a formerly bright and formerly young Boston attorney
- who was railroaded out of his law firm by a crooked senior
- partner. He took to what in Boston is called the drink and fell
- apart. Galvin has had five cases in three years and has lost
- four. The fifth is what we are watching: a suit for damages
- against no less than the Archdiocese of Boston, brought by the
- impoverished sister of a woman who was given the wrong
- anesthetic by eminent doctors at a Catholic hospital and left
- in a coma.
- </p>
- <p> The lawyer for the archdiocese (James Mason, who can give to a
- three-piece suit more menace than was radiated by Darth Vader's
- armor) suspects that the doctors blundered. On his
- recommendation, the archbishop offers Frankie's client $210,000.
- "When they give you the money it means you won," says his old
- legal mentor Mickey Morrissey (a gallant old wreck superbly
- played by Jack Warden). But Frankie, without consulting his
- client, decides to try the case and bring the guilty doctors to
- punishment.
- </p>
- <p> The details of plot and motivation progress slowly and are
- often unbelievable. Director Sidney Lumet has over-directed
- Mason's chorus of legal underlings, who smirk absurdly whenever
- he cooks up one of his nasty stratagems. What we are left to
- admire is fine, dark photography of the brown, guilt-stained
- marble in the gut of a Boston courthouse, and of Boston slush
- turning blue in winter twilight; Warden's humane old counselor;
- and Newman. His voice has the breathy rasp of a drinker, his
- walk the uncertainty of a strong man going down. We see him
- playing pinball in a darkened bar, his shirt clean and his tie
- carefully knotted; we see him tenderly embracing a drinking
- lady, played wanly and sadly by Charlotte Rampling, as each of
- them carefully holds a full whisky glass.
- </p>
- <p> The journey to this poignant, uneven movie, through a succession
- of worse and better ones, began in Cleveland Heights, a
- comfortable suburb of Cleveland, where Paul was born in 1925.
- He was the second son of Arthur S. Newman, a prosperous Jewish
- partner in a sporting-goods store, and Theresa Fetzer, a
- Hungarian-descended Catholic. By the time Paul and his brother
- Arthur, now 58, a film production manager living in Lake
- Arrowhead, Calif., were children, Theresa was a Christian
- Scientist. Paul's exposure to that faith did not make any
- lasting impression (he has followed no religion as an adult,
- but calls himself a Jew, "because it's more of a challenge").
- At 5 ft. 10 in. and 145 lbs. he is a fair-size man, but he was
- tiny as a boy, and, he says, "I used to get the bejesus kicked
- out of me regularly in school." The result wasn't any
- artistically fruitful psychological trauma, as far as he knows;
- it was that he learned to anesthetize himself from pain. As he
- observes now, "That isn't a very valuable quality for an actor."
- </p>
- <p> Acting was not important to him when he was young, but one way
- or another he did a lot of it, in children's groups and high
- school. He enlisted in the Navy in the summer of 1942 but
- flunked the physical because his brilliant blue eyes turned out
- to be color-blind. He ended up in the Air Corps and spent most
- of the next three years as a radioman in torpedo plans and in
- submarine patrols off Guam, Hawaii and Saipan. He saw no serious
- combat. He says, "I got through the whole war on two razor
- blades."
- </p>
- <p> At Kenyon College in Gambier, Ohio, he joined the student
- dramatic society after being kicked off the second-string
- football team because of a barroom squabble. His drama
- professor, James Michael, remembers "having trouble not casting
- Paul as the lead in every play," but Newman remembers being a
- very bad actor. His self-assessment then and now is of a very
- slow study without much natural talent for anything except
- concentration and tenacity. "I was terrorized by the emotional
- requirements of being an actor," he recalls. "Acting is like
- letting your pants down: you're exposed."
- </p>
- <p> After graduating from Kenyon in 1949, he spent a season doing
- summer stock in Williams Bay, Wis. The following year he moved
- to Woodstock, Ill., joined the Woodstock Players, met Actress
- Jacqueline Witte and married. He had appeared in 17 Players
- productions by May of 1950, when the news came that his father
- had died. With Jackie, by then pregnant with their son Scott,
- he returned to Shaker Heights to become a salesman in the store.
- </p>
- <p> There was a family echo here. Arthur Newman, "a brilliant,
- erudite man" with "a marvelous, whimsical sense of humor," at
- 17 had been the youngest reporter ever hired by the Cleveland
- Press, Paul says, but he had quit to go into the family
- business. Newman is uncharacteristically subdued in recalling
- his father: "I think he always thought of me as pretty much of
- a lightweight. He treated me like he was disappointed in me a
- lot of the time, and he had every right to be. It has been one
- of the great agonies of my life that he could never know. I
- wanted desperately to show him that somehow, somewhere along the
- line I could cut the mustard. And I never got a chance, never
- got a chance."
- </p>
- <p> Paul was set free when his family decided to sell the store. In
- September 1951, with Jackie and Scott, he headed toward New
- Haven to enroll in the Yale University School of Drama. "I
- wasn't driven to acting by any inner compulsion," says Newman,
- who was 26 then; "I was running away from the sporting goods
- business.
- </p>
- <p> He was 27, and things were going well for him. Before the
- opening of Picnic, he had been promoted to a supporting role and
- had got excellent notices. He was studying with Lee Strasberg
- and Elia Kazan at the prestigious Actors Studio (with, among
- others, Geraldine Page, Rod Steiger and James Dean). Then Warner
- Bros. offered him a long-term movie contract starting at $1,000
- a week. Abruptly he found himself wearing what he called a
- "cocktail gown" and playing a Greek slave named Basil in a
- religious costume saga, The Silver Chalice. It was the sort of
- absurdity that Virginia Mayo used to appear in, and she was in
- it. Newman, who is self-conscious about his bony legs, was so
- abashed that, as he points out now with some glee, he refused
- to look at the camera. When what is referred to in Newman family
- lore as the Worse Picture Ever Made played in a weeklong run on
- television in Los Angeles some years ago, he took out a large
- ad in the Los Angeles Times: PAUL NEWMAN APOLOGIZES EVERY NIGHT
- THIS WEEK. He got hold of a print and showed it to friends in
- the screening room of his Westport home not long ago, supplying
- everyone with a metal pot and a large wooden spoon to beat on
- it with. "It was fun for about the first reel," he said, "and
- then the awfulness of the thing took over."
- </p>
- <p> The Hustler, made in 1961 by Director Robert Rossen, was among
- the first of a handful of Newman films that have become
- American folklore. Newman recalls wandering into a disco a few
- years ago and shooting a few games of pool. A kid walked up to
- him and said, "Mr. Newman, I've seen The Hustler four times, and
- watching you shoot pool is one of the biggest disappointments
- of my life." The kid had just seen Davy Crockett shoot himself
- in the foot.
- </p>
- <p> Fast Eddie, the pool shooter who told Jackie Gleason's
- Minnesota Fats, "I'm the best you've ever seen, Fats, I'm the
- best there is," is all speed and charm and thin-ice cockiness.
- Hud Bannon, the surly cowboy womanizer who is the turbulence at
- the center of Martin Ritt's 1963 film Hud, seems twice the size
- of Fast Eddie. He is a brawler with the looks of a fallen angel,
- and he sneers at emotion: "My mother loved me but she died."
- Hud is rotten. He is trying to have his father declared
- incompetent so he can sell his ranch to oilmen. But Newman gave
- him a crooked, loser-winner smile that caught at the heart, and
- although the script didn't really justify it, he was a
- scape-grace hero.
- </p>
- <p> These miscreants are not just part of our culture now but almost
- part of our national character: the hero as romantic screw-up,
- the loner crabbed by society and usually, despite his looks, not
- very lucky with women. The purest and most consistent of these
- Newman voices is the sweet-natured convict hero of Stuart
- Rosenberg's Cool Hand Luke, released in 1967. Luke is not very
- bright, but he is an original, and the scene in which he brags
- that he can eat 50 eggs, and then proves it, is marvelous
- comedy. There is a powerful sadness when fumblingly he plays
- Plastic Jesus on the banjo after his mother's death and when he
- is ground to his inevitable death by the vicious prison system,
- the waste of a gentle man.
- </p>
- <p> The loner as enchanted loon appeared next. Butch Cassidy and
- the Sundance Kid and The Sting, two improbabilities directed by
- George Roy Hill, should not have worked, but they flew like
- butterflies. The entire joke of Cassidy is that two boyish and
- harmless train robbers, Newman and Robert Redford, arouse the
- anger of the railroad boss, who to their pained astonishment
- sends real detectives after them. The lovely conceit of The
- Sting is that several dozen swindlers will band together to
- wreak intricate vengeance on a villain who has killed one of
- their tribe. Neither film can bear analysis; as with a
- butterfly, you can see the wings, but where is the engine? No
- matter. When Redford and Newman jump off the cliff in Cassidy,
- and when Newman and Robert Shaw cheat each other at draw poker
- in The Sting, the audience knows it has died and gone to heaven.
- </p>
- <p> George Roy Hill, who directed it, has no reluctance in calling
- The Sting's poker scene "one of the best pieces of comedic
- acting I've ever seen. I defy any actor to play that scene
- better." Screenwriter Goldman says that Newman "could be called
- a victim of the Cary Grant syndrome. He makes it look so easy,
- and he looks so wonderful, that everybody assumes he isn't
- acting."
- </p>
- <p> Win some, lose some. How can you take seriously an industry
- whose three biggest draws a few years ago, says Newman, were
- "two robots and a shark"? And if moviemaking goes numb, as it
- is bound to do sometimes, maybe salad dressing will draw a smile
- from the gods. Newman is the sort of man who questions his
- acting ability, but is sure he makes the world's best salad
- dressing. He always makes his own in restaurants, which, come
- to think of it, is a fairly gaudy stunt for a man who does not
- like to attract attention. Years ago, at the posh Chasen's
- restaurant in Los Angeles--"It was one of our first stylish
- meals out," says Joanne, rolling her eyes at the memory--"he
- took an already oiled salad to the men's room washed it clean,
- dried it with towels and returned to the table to do things
- right, with oil cut by a dash of water."
- </p>
- <p> Probably because Hollywood is sure to consider it revoltingly
- tacky, he has begun manufacturing the stuff as Newman's Own
- Olive Oil and Vinegar Dressing (Appellatin Newman Controlee),
- with a sketch of Paul right there on the bottle. His
- collaborators are his Connecticut friends Photographer Steven
- Colhoun, Hotchner and Hotchner's wife Ursula. The conspirators
- are threatening to go into organically grown popcorn, popcorn
- being another of Newman's passions, and something tentatively
- called Newman's Own Industrial Strength Venetian Spaghetti
- Sauce. Profits will go to educational funds, consumer groups and
- the Scott Newman Foundation, an organization set up to promote
- accurate portrayal of the drug problem in films and on
- television.
- </p>
- <p> There is a touch of elaborate fantasy about the salad-dressing
- venture and, for two people whose reality is Hollywood, a
- suggestion of make-believe to the contented exiles in Westport.
- For years Paul and Joanne lived beside the small, tumbling
- Aspetuck River, where Paul would break the ice and splash on
- winter mornings after his sauna. They have another house in
- Beverly Hills and an apartment in an East Side Manhattan hotel.
- In the summer of 1981, keeping their former house for the use
- of whichever daughters happened by, they moved across the river
- to a small, 1736 farmhouse. They have an apple orchard, a
- swimming pool, eleven acres of fields and woods, and a
- refinished barn used as a guesthouse and screening room. They
- have cats, dogs and an expensively renovated stable half an hour
- away that Paul swears he will have memorialized in an oil
- painting showing a huge hole into which beautiful people are
- throwing money. They have a piano that Paul, a lover of Bach (he
- urges his sportscar friends to buy Glenn Bould's new digital
- recording of the Goldberg Variations), has learned to play
- fairly well.
- </p>
- <p> They have a marriage. A few years ago, when he was filming in
- Hawaii, Paul handed Joanne a box with a new evening gown in it.
- When she had changed, they were flown to a deserted golf course
- where they were served an elegant dinner alone beside the sea,
- serenaded by a string quartet. A superstar's easy gesture; what
- says more is that after 2 1/2 decades he describes her, with
- great relish, as a "voluptuary."
- </p>
- <p> On the wall of their kitchen is a sampler, which Paul had made
- to commemorate a remark by Joanne "that seemed appropriate at
- the time." It says "I will regulate my life. JWN." The sampler
- shows a lit light bulb and an exploding cannon: husband's view
- of wife's character. Since then Joanne has attended est sessions
- and resolved to stop "choosing to be in Paul's shadow" and to
- stop apologizing for being what she calls "a creative
- dilettante." Says she: "As I look back, I think what I really
- wanted was to have a life with no children, but I was raised in
- a generation that taught us otherwise. I felt very torn at
- times, lured away by the satisfaction of acting, which is a
- worthy thing, and by my sense of ambition, which isn't. Acclaim
- is the false aspect of the job, which screws you up. You start
- to need it, like a drug, and in the final analysis, what does it
- all mean? I won my Academy Award when I was very young, and it
- was exciting for five or ten minutes. Sitting in bed afterward
- and drinking my Ovaltine, I said to Paul, `Is that it?' Now I
- think being a full-time parent would be O.K. with me. With what
- I've learned, I'd enjoy it a lot more." Though she isn't
- interested in playing "mother roles" in films, she remains a
- mother, who, in a competitive, talented family, had the
- difficult job this fall of convincing their 17-year-old daughter
- Clea that a mediocre performance at the National Horse Show at
- Madison Square Garden was not the end of the world.
- </p>
- <p> When Paul is traveling, he calls Joanne every day, and when they
- are in Westport he will break off a conversation to say, "I want
- to see my lady." Fifteen years ago, he decided that his first
- try at directing would be Joanne's film Rachel, Rachel. The film
- is a gentle and perceptive look at a spinster schoolteacher
- awakening in her 35th year. "Paul has a sense of real adoration
- for what Joanne can do," adds the film's writer Stewart Stern.
- "He's constantly trying to provide a setting where the world can
- see what he sees in her." He has directed her twice since then,
- in The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds and
- The Shadow Box. In the first of these, their pretty blond
- daughter Nell (then 13, now 23) played opposite Joanne.
- </p>
- <p> Paul says that he loves directing his wife. "Given the right
- parts, she is a great actress. She can find so many different
- facets of herself to play. Those are two different people in
- Rachel, Rachel, and The Shadow Box. That is magic." He and
- Joanne also take pleasure in acting together, says Newman. "When
- we work together, we both know we can't get away with any old
- tricks, because the other one is sitting there nodding his head
- knowingly and saying, `Yes, I seem to remember your doing that
- on the 28th page of The Helen Morgan Story.'" Newman, says
- Stern, "is very sensitive to writing, and is the best director
- of actors I know. I think there's less impediment between his
- talent and its expression when he's directing. That's probably
- because, as in racing, `Paul Newman' doesn't have to be there."
- </p>
- <p> The portrayer of loners is himself a loner who likes to be with
- people, but who says he has few friends. His pal Hotchner says
- that during an unproductive period in the late '70s. Newman
- seemed least glum bobbing around with him on Long Island Sound
- in a fishing boat they call Cocadetoro (in fractured Spanish,
- bullcrap). His bawdiness can be spectacular; and, says Susan,
- she and her sisters are constantly heading off raunchy stories
- with not-now-Dad looks flashed across the room. After years of
- complaining that Robert Altman's cheap white wine tasted like
- goat pee, he gave the director a baby goat, saying, "Here, now
- you have your own vineyard." In a similar mood, he once had
- Robert Redford's face printed on every sheet of 150 cartons of
- toilet paper (which, on second thought, he did not send to
- Redford because the two are, as Newman says, merely "close
- acquaintances").
- </p>
- <p> The laughter and the jokes die, and he feels alone again. He
- says he has been a good father "in flashes," and admits that at
- times his children "almost had to say a password" when they saw
- him to find out whether they were considered friend or foe that
- day.
- </p>
- <p> He is a lifelong liberal who was participating in civil rights
- marches in 1963. He speaks out on the nuclear freeze and gay
- rights and why everyone should use seat belts, although he feels
- awkward doing it, because he thinks he should. After a
- frustrating nuclear-freeze debate on television recently with
- Hollywood conservative Charlton Heston, Newman was doubtful
- about his own effectiveness. But he is an experienced
- campaigner, and he soon cheered up. "I've done better and I've
- done worse, but in the final analysis, it was better than not
- doing anything at all." His interest in weapons control is
- longstanding; in 1978 President Carter appointed him as a
- delegate to a U.N. special session on disarmament. He recalls
- feeling futile. But being No. 19, he says, on Nixon's enemies
- list made him feel fine. He doesn't have many regrets. Oh, he
- says, maybe he wishes he were Actor Laurence Olivier or Auto
- Racer Mario Andretti, "but I guess I don't wish it hard enough
- or fiercely enough."
- </p>
- <p> He believes strongly that "an actor should act." There seemed
- to be more good scripts when he was younger. Maybe it's that the
- world has become too bewildering for writers to come to any
- conclusions. At any rate he has written his first script with
- a Los Angeles friend, Lawyer-Restaurateur Ron Buck. He will
- direct and star in Harry and Son, a story about a father's
- struggle to understand and control a 22-year-old son. No, he
- says, Harry is not an attempt to deal with his feelings about
- his son Scott, although he "definitely" intends to make a film
- about Scott's death. "We were like rubber bands," he says, "one
- minute close, the next separated by an enormous and
- unaccountable distance. I don't think I'll ever escape the
- guilt." As the Westport week ended a few days after the
- election, Newman wondered whether the nuclear-freeze victory
- would have any influence on the Reagan Administration ("Probably
- not") and prepared to fly to Florida to scout locations for
- Harry and Son.
- </p>
- <p> His friend Gore Vidal, an acute and frequently caustic observer,
- is notably uncynical in his assessment of Newman: "He has a
- good character, and not many people do. I think he would rather
- not do anything wrong, whether on a moral or an artistic level.
- He is what you would call a man of conscience--not necessarily
- of judgment, but of conscience. I don't know any actors like
- that." Susan Newman considers her singular father and says with
- an innocent smile, "Who knows? None of us in the family has a
- handle on how Old Skinny Legs made it."
- </p>
- <p>-- By John Skow. Reported by Elaine Dutka/New York and Denise
- Worrell/Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p>His Own Critic: Newman on Newman
- </p>
- <p> Asked by TIME to assess his career, Newman offered a wry and
- sometimes caustic critique of a remarkable series of memorable
- hits and forgotten turkeys:
- </p>
- <p>The Silver Chalice (1954): Junk.
- </p>
- <p>Somebody Up There Likes Me (1956): Had some fun with that.
- </p>
- <p>The Rack (1956): Really aspired to something, and nobody went
- to see it. A fine example of me trying too hard.
- </p>
- <p>Until They Sail (1957): Not much to play there.
- </p>
- <p>The Helen Morgan Story (1957): Ugggghhh.
- </p>
- <p>The Long Hot Summer (1958): Pretty good. Still aware of how
- hard I was working.
- </p>
- <p>The Left Handed Gun (1958): A little bit ahead of its time and
- a classic in Europe. To this day I still get $800 at the end of
- the year. Go to Paris right now, and I bet you it is playing in
- some tiny theater.
- </p>
- <p>Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1958): Pretty good film. I'm still aware
- of how hard I was working.
- </p>
- <p>Rally 'Round the Flag, Boys (1958): A situation comedy. I was
- probably weak.
- </p>
- <p>The Young Philadelphians (1959): Just kind of a cosmopolitan
- story that didn't demand very much.
- </p>
- <p>From the Terrace (1960): Pretty good soap opera. Didn't ask for
- a lot.
- </p>
- <p>Exodus (1960): Chilly.
- </p>
- <p>The Hustler (1961): I had occasion to see some segments of it
- recently. Again, very conscious of working too hard, which
- comes partly from lack of faith in your own talent and lack of
- faith that just doing it in itself is all the audience requires.
- </p>
- <p>Paris Blues (1961): I had some fun with that. Not that it is
- a great film.
- </p>
- <p>Sweet Bird of Youth (1962): Pretty good.
- </p>
- <p>Hemingway's Adventures of a Young Man (1962): I tried to do
- what I did in the TV show, and that wasn't the way to go at it.
- </p>
- <p>Hud (1963): Pretty good, again, working hard, working hard.
- </p>
- <p>A New Kind of Love (1963): Joanne read it and said, "Hey, this
- would be fun to do together. Read it. "I read it and said,
- "Joanne, it's just a bunch of one-liners." And she said, "You
- son of a bitch. I've been carting your children around, taking
- care of them at the expense of my career, taking care of you and
- your house." And I said, "That is what I said. It's a terrific
- script. I can't think of anything I'd rather do." This is what
- is known as a reciprocal trade agreement.
- </p>
- <p>The Prize (1963): A lark.
- </p>
- <p>What a Way to go! (1964): Done out of whimsy.
- </p>
- <p>The Outrage (1964): I liked that one.
- </p>
- <p>Lady L (1966): I woke up every morning and knew I wasn't
- cutting the mustard.
- </p>
- <p>Harper (1966): An original character who would simply
- accommodate any kind of actor's invention. There was no way you
- could violate the character; he was so loose and funky and
- whimsical.
- </p>
- <p>Torn Curtain (1966): Not so good.
- </p>
- <p>Hombre (1967): By then I was doing it less and enjoying it
- more.
- </p>
- <p>Cool Hand Luke (1967): I had great fun with that part. I liked
- that man.
- </p>
- <p>The Secret War of Harry Frigg (1968): A lurch at comedy. I
- didn't accomplish it very well.
- </p>
- <p>Rachel, Rachel (directed 1968): Great fondness, great
- fondness. That is a really good film.
- </p>
- <p>Winning (1969): Pretty good story about racing. The people were
- not integrated well into the racing, but pretty good.
- </p>
- <p>Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969): A delight. Too bad
- they got killed at the end, 'cause those two guys could have
- gone on in films forever.
- </p>
- <p>WUSA (1970): A film of incredible potential, which the
- producer, the director and I loused up. We tried to make it
- political, and it wasn't.
- </p>
- <p>Sometimes a Great Notion (starred and directed 1971): A much
- better film than its popularity would signify.
- </p>
- <p>Pocket Money (1972): Loved the character, the script never
- came together though.
- </p>
- <p>The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds (directed
- 1972): I may not have been able to make the transition from
- stage to film. Too much theater and not enough cinema. I screwed
- up there.
- </p>
- <p>The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean (1972): Marvelous. The
- first three-quarters of the picture are classic. We never came
- to grips with the ending though. I loved that character.
- </p>
- <p>The Mackintosh Man (1973): Thought we could make an effective
- melodrama out of that, and I was wrong.
- </p>
- <p>The Sting (1973): Oh, great fun.
- </p>
- <p>The Towering Inferno (1974): Of its kind, rather good. Get the
- actors off and the stunt men on as quick as you can.
- </p>
- <p>The Drowning Pool (1975): Only time I ever played the same
- character twice [Harper], and it didn't work.
- </p>
- <p>Silent Movie (1976): Just a cameo.
- </p>
- <p>Buffalo Bill and the Indians (1976): Don't know what happened
- to that one. Made a mistake somewhere, along the line. Great
- potential.
- </p>
- <p>Slap Shot (1977): One of my favorite movies. Unfortunately
- that character is a lot closer to me than I would care to
- admit--vulgar, on the skids.
- </p>
- <p>Quintet (1979): Again, made a mistake somewhere. Director
- Robert Altman is very interesting, a real explorer.
- </p>
- <p>When Time Ran Out (1980): I'm trying desperately to look the
- other way.
- </p>
- <p>The Shadow Box (directed for television 1980): I take some
- pride in that one.
- </p>
- <p>Fort Apache, The Bronx (1981): Some good moments, I guess.
- </p>
- <p>Absence of Malice (1981): A relatively easy part for me and
- compatible with the image.
- </p>
- <p>The Verdict (1982): It was such a relief to let it all hang out
- in the movie--blemishes and all.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-