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- 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.