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TIME: Almanac 1990
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1990 Time Magazine Compact Almanac, The (1991)(Time).iso
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1990-10-19
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106 lines
Show Business
Tall Tales from Tinseltown
January 4, 1988
A new anthology burnishes old movie legends
Does any real American ever get tired of listening to Hollywood
stories? Apparently not: year after year the movie books roll off
the presses. The newest--and one of the best--is Hollywood
Anecdotes by Paul F. Boller Jr., and Ronald L. Davis (Morrow; $18.95).
Boller and Davis seem to have mined every shiny nugget in the
Hollywood Hills. Could any screenwriter have written funnier lines,
for instance, than those of Lewis J. Selznick, one of the pioneer
moguls? A victim of anti-Semitism in his native Russia, Selznick
nonetheless had a forgiving nature. When Czar Nicholas II was
deposed in 1917, he sent him a cable: "When I was a poor boy in Kiev
some of your policemen were not kind to me...stop I came to America
and prospered stop now hear with regret you are out of a job...stop
feel no ill will...if you will come New York can give you fine
position acting in pictures stop salary no object top reply my
expense stop."
Most film buffs are familiar with the loony malapropisms of Producer
Samuel Goldwyn, such as "Include me out" and "I read part of it all
the way through." But how many remember when Goldwyn and his
competitor Jack Warner co-produced the following wonderful gaffe? At
a post-war banquet for Britain's war hero Field Marshal Montgomery,
Goldwyn rose and proposed a toast to "Marshall Field Montgomery."
After a stunned silence, Warner corrected him, "Montgomery Ward, you
mean."
In movieland, id and ego are often the same thing, and sexy Mae West
is also good for several laughs. Director Ernst Lubitsch complained
that West, who was her own screenwriter, was hogging the best lines
in one of her films. Every story has two characters, he reminded
her. "Look at Romeo and Juliet." To which Mae haughtily replied,
"Let Shakespeare do it his way, I'll do it mine. We'll see who comes
out better."
One of the biggest egos of all belonged to Orson Welles, who was
always seeking perfection, or better. When the 60-day shooting
schedule of Welles' The Lady from Shanghai ran to 90 days, the studio
sent a watchdog, Jack Fier, to speed him up. Welles erected a sign
that read THE ONLY THING WE HAVE TO FIER IS FIER ITSELF. Not to be
outdone, Fier put up his own placard: ALL'S WELL THAT ENDS WELLES.
No one, however, was faster with a comeback than Alfred Hitchcock.
"Mr. Hitchcock, what do you think is my best side?" asked an actress
during the filming of Lifeboat. "My dear," he replied, not even
bothering to look up, "you're sitting on it." A man wrote to say
that after seeing poor Janet Leigh butchered in the famous shower
scene in Psycho, his wife was afraid to step into the bathtub. What
should he do? "Sir," Hitchcock answered, "have you ever considered
sending your wife to the dry cleaner?"
--By Gerald Clarke
MOST OF '87
THE LOUDEST EXPLOSIONS The noisy breakups of Joan Collins and Peter
Holm (after 13 months of marriage); Sylvester Stallone and Brigitte
Nielsen (after 19 months); and Madonna and Sean Penn (after 28
months), who--don't hold your breath--seem to have had second
thoughts.
THE CLASSIEST NEW STAR Spuds MacKenzie, the spokesdog in the Bud
Light beer commercials and budding movie star. No contest.
THE FUNNIEST SCENE STEALER The blind camel who upstaged Co-Stars
Warren Beatty and Dustin Hoffman in Ishtar, the $40 million-plus
bust-of-the-year, and thereby proved that big salaries ($5 million
apiece for Beatty and Hoffman) do not necessarily produce either big
laughs or big bucks at the box office.
THE RICHEST SPOOK Andrew Lloyd Webber's Phantom of the Opera, which
doesn't open until Jan. 26 but has already had the largest advance
sale ($15 million) in Broadway history.
MOST MIRACULOUS TURNAROUND Disney, long in the box-office cellar,
which has turned out a sting of hits, including Outrageous fortune,
Stakeout and Three Men and a Baby, since Honchos Michael Eisner,
Jeffrey Katzenberg and Richard Frank took over just three years ago.
THE SWEETEST SCENTS The perfumes peddled by those lovely hucksters:
Elizabeth Taylor (Passion), Liza Minnelli (Metropolis), Sophia Loren
(Sophia), Catherine Deneuve (Deneuve) and Dionne Warwick (Dionne).
FARTHEST INTO THE OZONE Michael Jackson, who, after plastic surgery
on his nose and chin, unsuccessfully offered $1 million for the
remains of John Merrick, the Elephant Man. Knock, knock--Is anyone
there?
THE QUICKEST DEPARTURE ABC's Max Headroom, which was trumpeted as
the TV of the future but quickly became a show of the past.
THE MOST WORRIED MOGULS The heads of the three networks, who have
watched their share of the viewing audience drop from 81% five years
ago to 76% today.
THE SADDEST READING The obituary pages of Variety, which week after
week showed how much show-business talent is being lost to AIDS,
including Liberace, 67, Director Michael Bennett, 44, the innovative
creator of Manhattan's Ridiculous Theatrical Company.