Young Orson: The Years of Luck and Genius on the Path to Citizen Kane (118 page)

BOOK: Young Orson: The Years of Luck and Genius on the Path to Citizen Kane
9.08Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“No one had ever engaged in a dull conversation with Orson Welles,” his longtime friend, actor Joseph Cotten, said in a message read to a packed Directors Guild Memorial held one month after Welles died in 1985. “Exasperating, yes; sometimes eruptive, unreasonable, ferocious and convulsive . . . yet eloquent, penetrating, exciting, and always, never failingly always—even at the sacrifice of accuracy and his own vanity—witty and never, never,
never
dull.”

Among the friends and colleagues who spoke at the event was former Todd School headmaster Roger Hill, who finally made his trip to California, as Welles had predicted, to deliver his prize pupil’s eulogy. Also on hand was Oja Kodar, who angrily recounted the many discouragements Welles had suffered late in life, denouncing those “whose fingers are still sticky from plucking at his wings.”

“I promise you it didn’t make him bitter,” she told the crowd to Niagara-like ovations.

Sometime after his death, his thirty-year-old daughter Beatrice brought his ashes to Spain, the country of many of Welles’s youthful enthusiasms. At his request, his remains were buried in an ancient well covered by flowers on the property of an old friend, bullfighter Antonio Ordoñez, in the mountaintop village of Ronda. Ronda is only a short distance from Seville, where, as a young man, Orson had indulged in the sport of bullfighting, and where, for a brief time, he had felt “untroubled by the itch of ambition,” in his words. The mountaintop “well” beckoned to him, Orson jokingly told Ordoñez, as a kindred “Welles.”

The private estate bars visitors, although people stream to the place nearly every day, many of them coming from far away. The only way to catch a glimpse of Welles’s grave is from the road. There is no lengthy inscription on the marker: no mention of
Citizen Kane
, the Mercury Theatre, “War of the Worlds,” or any other work by the outstanding whirling pagoda of the cinema.

“He was some kind of man,” Tanya (Marlene Dietrich) says of Hank Quinlan (Welles) at the end of
Touch of Evil.
“What does it matter what you say about people?”

Welles himself always scoffed at posterity. “I’m against posterity in principle,” he said often. “I think it’s almost as vulgar as success.” And such is his legacy that the plaque on his gravestone bears only his dates and his immortal name:

G
EORGE
O
RSON

W
ELLES

1915–1985

SOURCES AND ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

“Two prevailing and diametrically opposed attitudes seem to dictate the way most people currently think about Orson Welles,” the critic Jonathan Rosenbaum wrote, when reviewing three books about Welles for
Cinéaste
in 1996. “One attitude, predominantly American, sees his life and career chiefly in terms of failure and regards the key question to be why he never lived up to his promise—‘his promise’ almost invariably being tied up with the achievement of
Citizen Kane.
Broadly speaking, this position can be compared to that of the investigative reporter Thompson’s editor in
Citizen Kane
, bent on finding a single formula for explaining a man’s life.

“The other attitude—less monolithic and less tied to any particular nationality, or to the expectations aroused by any single work—views his life more sympathetically as well as inquisitively; this position corresponds more closely to Thompson’s near the end of
Kane
when he says, ‘I don’t think any word can explain a man’s life.’ ”

When I launched my research four years ago, I was acutely aware of the many Thompsons who preceded me on the subject of Orson Welles. I find something worthwhile in even the least of the many books—and many more articles—about Welles. My goal was to collate and fact-check them, to explore fresh research, and to arrive at a different, more balanced, and, yes, more sympathetic account of Welles’s life in the years leading up to
Citizen Kane.
The backstory of his life and early career would help explain the genesis and ideas behind the famous film.

Previous books have suffered from both gaping holes and negative assumptions, all of which have contributed to the accepted mythology about Welles, feeding widespread theories about his egomania and self-destructiveness. I hoped to create a chronological narrative that would fill in gaps and blind spots and counter some of this negative mythology.

The job of writing film biographies has certainly changed since the first one I wrote, which I began as an undergraduate in college. Since
Young Orson
was intended to end, except for a final chapter, in 1940, and anyone who was Orson’s contemporary in 1940 would be in his or her mid-nineties today, I did fewer actual interviews for
Young Orson
than for any of my other books. Besides, I think it can be unfair to rely heavily on the fuzzy memories of nonegenarians—unfair to them and to the subject. I burrowed into libraries, archives, courthouses. I read endless microfilm, oral histories, letters, and unpublished memoirs. I pored over electronic records and newspaper and periodical indexes on the Internet. I read everything I could about Welles, including many hundreds of articles and books.

At the end of the long road of every book I write, however, I look back with similar fond memories. I could not tell you how many Oscars
Citizen Kane
was nominated for without looking up the number in my own pages. But I remember the interesting and helpful people I met along the road. I am grateful to those who answered the telephone, welcomed me to their institutions or homes, walked me around the places where young Orson lived, responded to my e-mail queries and persistent requests for information or documents. Behind each name or organization on this list is someone who inched this book toward the finish line.

Advice and assistance:
Charles Barr, John Charles Bennett, Matthew Bernstein, Richard Bleiler, Alan Brostoff, Mark Burman, Russell Campbell, Stuart Campbell, Lorenzo Codelli, William G. Contento, Paul Cronin, William Cross, Michael Dawson, Anne Edwards, Scott Eyman, Burt Fields, Touria El Glaoui, Diane Giles, Sidney Gottlieb, Kevin Greenlee, John Gurda, Ron Halberg, Reynold Humphries, Robert James, Josh Karp, Ray Kelly, Marian Wilson Kimber, Daniel Kremer, James Landers, Daniel and Caryl Lemanski, Tom Matthews, Lee Matthias, Patrick McGavin, Russell Merritt, Elliott Miller, Kathryn Morice, Gary Morris, Will Murray, Frank Noack, Holly Gent Palmo, James Robert Parish, Brian Reddin, Jonathan Rosenbaum, Santiago Rubin de Celis, Randy Rutsky, Karl Schadow, Beth Schroeder, Michael Schumacher, Roberta Smoodin, Jim Steinmeyer, Howard Suber, Peter Tonguette, Mary Troath, Jim Van Hise, Chris Feder Welles, Barry B. Witham, Leigh Woods, Jim Zimmerman.

Cynthia Richardson dug into Chicago court and government records for me. Vanda Krefft gave generously of her time, dipping into files at the Margaret Herrick Library of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Sky McGilligan conducted research at the Margaret Herrick Library and in the Special Collections of the University of Southern California. Clancy McGilligan read hours of microfilm at the Kenosha Public Library.

For interviews and supplementary material I am especially grateful to the children of persons who figure in Welles’s early life story. These include Mrs. Thallis Drake, the daughter of Phyllis Fergus; Bill Mowry, the son of William Mowry Jr.; Ryan O’Neal, the son of actor Charles O’Neal; Cynthia Bulens, the daughter of William Vance; and Mike Woldenberg, the son of Haskell and Edna Woldenberg, the last proprietors of Camp Indianola.

Screenings:
Joseph McBride dug into his personal vaults for his tape recording of Welles’s last appearance on
The Merv Griffin Show
; Brian Reddin, from Dublin, arranged for a viewing of his documentary
Orson Welles and the Gate Theatre
; Alberto Rojas Maza, from Seville, sent his documentary
El Americano
; Michael Tapper, from Sweden, mailed a copy of
The Well
(
Brünnen
).

Photographs:
Marie Kroeger, Ryerson Archives, Art Institute of Chicago; Christine Cheng, Federal Theatre Project Collection, Special Collections, George Mason University (Fairfax, Virginia); Dollie Banner, Jerry Ohlinger’s Movie Material Store (New York); Cathy Schenck, Librarian, Keeneland (Lexington, Kentucky); Meredith Jumisko, Public Relations, Kenosha Area Convention and Visitors Bureau; Tom Schleif, Executive Director, Kenosha History Center; Ann Tatum, Kentucky Derby Photo Archives, Kinetic (Louisville, Kentucky); Joseph McBride; Heather Winter, Milwaukee Institute of Art Archives, Milwaukee Art Museum; Dudley Crafts Watson Papers, Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University Libraries; Todd Tarbox, Carol Nishijima, Charles E. Young Research Library, University of California at Los Angeles; Lilly Library, University of Indiana (Bloomington); Special Collections Library, University of Michigan (Ann Arbor); Sandra Garcia-Myers, Charles Higham Collection, Archives of the Cinematic Arts, University of Southern California; Woodstock Public Library (Woodstock, Illinois).

Special thanks
to Francy Paquette and Andy Sharlein of Allied Digital Photo in Germantown, Wisconsin, for reproduction services.

Archives and organizations:
Gregg Tubbs, Director of Corporate Communications, American Lung Association; Marie Kroeger, Ryerson Archives, Art Institute of Chicago; Elizabeth Thrond, Center for Western Studies, Augustana College (Sioux Falls, South Dakota); Jean L. Green, Head of Special Collections, and Beth T. Kilmarx and Mary E. Tuttle, Tilly Losch Collection, Binghamton University Libraries (Binghamton, New York); Robert T. Muth, Director, Bozeman Fish Technology Center, Bozeman, Montana, and Carlos R. Martinez, Director, Fish Hatchery and Archives (Spearfish, South Dakota); Michele Westberg, Clerk, Bozeman Municipal Court (Montana); CA/RK, Buffalo and Erie County Public Library (New York); Catherine Williamson, Butterfields (Los Angeles, California); Stephanie Buck, Librarian/Archivist, Cape Ann Museum (Gloucester, Massachusetts); Ashlee Wright, Carmel Public Library (Carmel, California); Tina Eger and Danelle Orange, Archivists, Carthage College (Kenosha, Wisconsin); Cedar Rapids Public Library (Iowa); Jeanne Hamilton, Director, and Barbara Krehbiel, Charleston Carnegie Public Library (Charleston, Illinois); Lish Thompson, South Carolina History Room, Charleston County Public Library; Chicago History Museum Research Center; Deborah Hastings and Elizabeth Cline, Reference, Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County (Ohio); Teresa Yoder, Special Collections, Chicago Public Library; Cleveland Public Library (Ohio); Charis Emily Shafer, Brianne LaCamera, Brandi Kalicki, and Kristen La Follette, Mercury Theatre and Theatre Union Collections, Columbia University Center for Oral History, Butler Library, Columbia University (New York); Karen Meier, Dane County Court (Madison, Wisconsin); Sarah Hartwell, Reference, Baker-Berry Library, Dartmouth University (Hanover, New Hampshire); Cully Sommers, Music, Arts, and Literature Department, Detroit Public Library (Michigan); Julie Levang, Reference, Duluth Public Library (Minnesota); Michelle Franklin and Ashley Todd-Diaz, Curator of Special Collections and Archives, Emporia State University (Emporia, Kansas); Cheryl Bronkema, Freeport Public Library (Freeport, Illinois); Nancy Shlaes, Ann Birk Kuper Papers, Special Collections, Governors State University (Chicago, Illinois); Hope Schneider, Nahman-Watson Library, Greenfield Community College (Greenfield, Massachusetts); Carl White, Greenwich Public Library (Connecticut); Susan Halpert, Vera Zorina Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University (Cambridge, Massachusetts); Chris Applin, Local History, Hoyt Public Library (Saginaw, Michigan); Ralph A. Pugh, Archivist, Paul V. Galvin Library, Illinois Institute of Technology (Chicago); Taran T. Ley, John Reinhardt, and Sandra Fritz, Reference Librarians, Illinois State Library and Archives (Springfield); Kate Choplin, Public Services, Indianapolis Public Library (Indiana); Dr. John A. Horner, Missouri Valley Room, Kansas City Public Library (Missouri); Peter Shaw Johnson, President and Manager, Historic Green Ridge Cemetery, Kenosha (Wisconsin); Julia Johnas, Highland Park Public Library (Illinois); Kankakee Public Library (Illinois); Cynthia Nelson, Curator/Archivist, Kenosha County Historical Society (Wisconsin); Teresa Sutter, Research and Alumni Coordinator, Latin School (Chicago, Illinois); Ellie Jordan, Lake Geneva Public Library (Wisconsin); Lewis Wyman, George Middleton Papers, Manuscript Division, and Jan Grenci, Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress (Washington, D.C.); Romeo Dais, Madison Public Library (Wisconsin); Ken Syke and Carolyn Lowrey, Madison Public Schools Administration (Wisconsin); Nancy Fike, Museum Administrator, McHenry County Historical Society (Illinois); Heather L. Winter, Librarian/Archivist, Milwaukee Art Museum; Missouri State Archives; Jared Brennan, Special Collections, Nashville Public Library (Tennessee); Bonnie Marie Sauer, Archivist, National Archives and Records Administration (New York); Tom Ankner, Charles F. Cummings, New Jersey Information Center, Newark Public Library; Hope Dunbar, Ashton and Florence Stevens Papers, Newberry Library (Chicago, Illinois); John Calhoun, Billy Rose Theatre Division, New York Public Library; Diane Anderson, HR Coordinator, North Dakota Developmental Center (Grafton); Susan Sacharski, Archivist, Northwestern Memorial Hospital, Chicago; Janet C. Olson, Assistant University Archivist, and Nicholas D. Munagian, Gate Theatre Papers, Special Collections, Northwestern University Library (Evanston, Illinois); Edward L. De Sanctis, Oneida County Historical Society (New York); Alice Gerard, Town Historian, Palisades (New York); Linda White, Perrot Memorial Library (Greenwich, Connecticut); Marilyn Holt, Pennsylvania Department, Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh; Gabriel Swift, Rare Books and Special Collections, Princeton University Library; Curt Phillips, Pulp [email protected]; Elizabeth Wilkinson, Archivist, George Ade Papers, and Shauna Borger, Digital Collections, Purdue University Libraries (Indiana); Rachel Carter, Archivist, Everett Library, Queens University of Charlotte (South Carolina); Quincy Public Library (Illinois); Racine Public Library (Wisconsin); Linda Balk, Librarian, Renville Genealogical Society (Oliva, Minnesota); Mark Colly (press office) and Freek Heijbroek (author), Rijksmuseum (Amsterdam); Laura Haule, St. Charles Public Library (Illinois); Shirley Andria, Administrat Services Coordinator, Saint Francis Community Services (Salina, Kansas); Peg Koller, Librarian, St. John’s Northwestern Military Academy (Delafield, Wisconsin); Judy Oski, Sawyer Free Library (Gloucester, Massachusetts); Sandy Day, Local Historian, Schiappa Library (Steubenville, Ohio); Mahina Oshie, Seattle Public Library (Washington); Debbie R. Henderson, Archival Collection, Sierra Madre Public Library (California); Judith Munns, Skagway Museum (Alaska); Laurie Winship, Museum Director, Skaneateles Historical Society (New York); Erin Kinhart and Elizabeth Botten, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution (Washington, D.C.); Katharine J. Rinehart, Sonoma County Library (Santa Rosa, California); Pamalla Anderson, Ronald Davis Oral History Collection, DeGolyer Library, Southern Methodist University; Tessa Brawley, Dudley Watson Crafts Collection, Special Collections, Syracuse University Library; David Kessler, Bancroft Library, University of California–Berkeley; Christine Colburn and Rena Schergen, Special Collections Research Center, University of Chicago Library; Kelly M. Grogg and Haley Lott, Charles O’Neal Papers, Special Collections and University Archives, University of Iowa Libraries (Iowa City); Andrew Horbal, Hornbake Library, University of Maryland (College Park); Edward (Ned) Comstock, Archives and Special Collections, University of Southern California; David Null, Director, Archives and Records Management, University of Wisconsin–Madison; Troy Reeves, Head, Oral History Program, Steenbock Library, University of Wisconsin–Madison Archives; Dan Hauck, University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee Area Research Center Reading Room; Melissa Olson, University of Wisconsin–Parkside Archives and Area Research Center (Kenosha); Ginny L. Kilander, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming–Laramie; Lori B. Bessler, Reference, and Matt Tischer, Scott F. Roller, Richard L. Pifer, Harry L. Miller, and Mary K. Huelsbeck, Archives and Special Collections, Wisconsin State Historical Society (Madison); Neal Kenney, Special Collections, West Chester University Library (West Chester, Pennsylvania); Wheaton Public Library (Illinois); Jane Bouley, Local Historian (Branford, Connecticut), and Alice Pentz, Library Director, Willoughby Wallace Memorial Library (Stony Creek, Connecticut); Lesley Mackey McCambridge, Senior Director of Credits and Creative Rights, Writers Guild of America, West; Andrea Vernola, Martha Hansen, and Julie Fee of the Woodstock Public Library (Illinois); Doris Bannister, Historian, Town of Middlebury and County of Wyoming (New York); Laurie Klein, Thornton Wilder Papers, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University (New Haven, Connecticut).

Other books

Banes by Tara Brown
Chronicle of a Blood Merchant by Yu Hua, Andrew F. Jones
Still House Pond by Jan Watson
Solace of the Road by Siobhan Dowd
The Surrendered by Chang-Rae Lee