Authors: Otto Friedrich
To organize these views, Dreiser hired for a thousand dollars a young British novelist, Cedric Belfrage, to help him write an antiwar book to be called “Is America Worth Saving?” Belfrage marveled at the great man's obscurity in Hollywood. “I can recall introducing him to movie people whom I knew . . .” he said, “who obviously had never heard of him.” He marveled even more at Dreiser's working habits: “Along about noon he would begin to sag with weariness and he and I would stroll along to the drugstore . . . to get a pint of whisky. With this in a paper bag we returned . . . and within a few minutes Dreiser was out of action. . . . Dreiser began to ramble and could not organize his thoughts.” Somehow, the dreadful book got patched together, acquired a new title,
America Is Worth Saving,
and then appeared just before Hitler's invasion of Russia made it obsolete. Dreiser sent one autographed copy to Stalin.
It is strange and marvelous how some dying artists are unable to die until they have finished what they feel to be their essential work. Wagner, for example, held himself together until the premiere of
Parsifal
and then journeyed to Venice and died. Dreiser, now past seventy, both physically and mentally infirm, determined to finish
The Bulwark,
that novel about the Quaker for which Horace Liveright had paid him a four-thousand-dollar advance back before the First World War. And he did it. Then he determined to complete the story of Frank Cowperwood, the raging entrepreneur who had not been heard from since the publication of
The Titan
in 1914.
The Stoic,
this last volume was called, and though Dreiser had little strength left, he kept laboring away all that summer. “While he dictated much of the writing which I took down directly on the typewriter,” Mrs. Dreiser said, “there was always the necessary discussion about scenes, action, structure, and he tired easily. . . . Day after day, we worked on opposite sides of his long work table, Teddie in his old-fashioned yellow-winged rocking chair and I at the typewriter. . . . It was all he wanted to do.”
There was one other thing. Back in 1932, Dreiser had told Earl Browder, the head of the Communist Party, that he wanted to join. Browder, who regarded the novelist as “not . . . quite adult,” politely turned him away. But now, in the summer of 1945, Browder was expelled from the party and replaced by Dreiser's old friend William Z. Foster. Dreiser was also getting regular visits now from John Howard Lawson, the screenwriter, who talked about literature and politics and the possibilities of Dreiser's joining the party. And besides, Dreiser's popularity in Russia contrasted sharply with his fading celebrity in America. When the UN was founded in San Francisco that spring, several Soviet delegates came to Los Angeles and paid courtesy calls on Dreiser. And when Dreiser wrote a letter to Stalin to ask why he never earned any royalties from Russia (the Soviets had never signed the Bern Convention and acknowledged no obligation to pay royalties to foreign authors), he soon received a check for $34,600. So there was a certain inevitability in Dreiser's writing to Foster from Hollywood on July 20, 1945, “to tell you of my desire to become a member of the Communist Political Association.” There was an inevitability, too, in the fact that Dreiser only corrected and approved the letter of application that was actually written by a party functionary. “Dear Comrade Dreiser . . .” Foster replied. “I . . . extend to you this official welcome into our organization.”
Shortly before Christmas, Helen Dreiser had a strange dream. “Teddie and I were operating an open plane of peculiar design,” she recalled. “He was sitting in the rear, steering it with a rudder like that of a boat. We were flying over water toward a shore on which there were hundreds of people and I was concerned with the problem of gliding into a safe landing over the heads of the crowd. Glancing back to see if all was well with Teddie, I became terrified when I saw he had fallen over to one side. I went back quickly to where he was sitting and kissed him on the side of his mouth. Then I realized I must rush back to my place or we would crash. We glided to safety on the shore. . . .”
Christmas was not a very happy time. Dreiser sat at the piano beside an old friend and grew tearful as she played “On the Banks of the Wabash” and other songs written by Dreiser's celebrated brother, Paul Dresser. To another woman, he said morosely, “I am the loneliest man in the world.” He had finished a draft of
The Stoic
and sent it to a younger colleague, James T. Farrell, and Farrell had just sent back a nine-page commentary, suggesting revisions, particularly in the ending. “I simply stopped writing at the end because I was tired,” Dreiser confessed, adding a vow that he would somehow rewrite the last two chapters. He rewrote the next-to-last chapter on December 27, but at five o'clock he had to stop, exhausted. Mrs. Dreiser drove him to the beach at Venice, and they went for a stroll on the boardwalk, admiring a spectacular sunset, which Mrs. Dreiser described as “all blended in neutral shades of grays and blues with streaks of turquoise and cerise.”
At three o'clock in the morning, he called out, “
Helen,
I have an
intense
pain.” He struggled out of bed and then fell down. Mrs. Dreiser called a doctor, who provided drugs and an oxygen tent. Dreiser survived the night. A friend came the next day and asked him how he felt. Dreiser said only, “Bum.” As Mrs. Dreiser sat alone next to the dozing man, she noticed that his hands were cold. Then he suddenly said, “Kiss me, Helen.” “I did,
on the side of the mouth,
” she said, recalling her dream, “and then I kissed him again.” Dreiser kept sinking, fading, until, at about six o'clock in the morning of December 28, “his breath became shallower and shallower until I felt it stop.”
There were some of Dreiser's leftist friends who thought that the old radical wouldn't want to be buried in Forest Lawn, but Helen Dreiser knew better. She remembered that they had been at a funeral in the Whispering Pines section that August, and Dreiser had remarked to her that he had “never seen a more beautiful resting place.” So she had the funeral service held at Forest Lawn's Church of the Recessional, and the organist played Bach's “Come, Kindly Death.” To an audience of less than a hundred people, John Howard Lawson delivered a eulogy on the forces that had led Dreiser to communism. Charlie Chaplin then recited one of Dreiser's poems, which Mrs. Dreiser later had inscribed on a plaque at the grave:
Â
Oh, space!
Change!
Toward which we run
So gladly,
Or from which we retreat
In terrorâ
Yet that promises to bear us
In itself
Forever.
Oh, what is this
That knows the road I came?
Â
Then he was buried in an expensive lot in the Whispering Pines section. It was not far from the grave where Tom Mix lay, still wearing the belt buckle that spelled out his name in diamonds.
Â
Bugsy Siegel, Hollywood's favorite racketeer, came to a bloody end (
top
).
Below,
he enjoyed joking with his friend George Raft.
I
n the summers, the temperatures in the Mojave Desert rise to more than 120 degrees. Along what is now U.S. Route 15, running northeast from Barstow, the creosote bushes and the samphire stand like miniature skeletons in the grayish alkali flats. Everything seems lifeless, lifeless and eternally hot. So the two men who drove here one day in 1945 had loaded cans of extra gasoline and water into the back of their car for the three-hundred-mile trip from Los Angeles, but the bigger of the two kept grumbling about the hardships of the journey to this remote outpost known as Las Vegas. The smaller man, who stood barely five feet four but seemed to be in charge of the expedition, admitted later that Las Vegas was “a dinky, horrible, little oasis town,” but he said that the two of them would be pioneers. Here in the middle of nowhere, as he subsequently told an interviewer, here in this baked and parched wasteland, they would build the greatest gambling casino in the world. (“Here we'll have fun . . .” the Widow Begbick had said, “Gin and whiskey/Girls and boys. . . .”)
“We decided to . . . call it the Flamingo,” said the little man, a Polish-born entrepreneur named Maier Suchowljansky, better known as Meyer Lansky. “We thought up the name one day when we were at Hialeah Race Track, in Florida. There's a pretty little lake there and in the evening you can watch the flocks of pink flamingoes rise in the sky. There's a local legend that flamingoes are a sign of good luck and anyone who shoots the birds will have seven years of misfortune. So because of the good luck connection, Bugsy had the idea of naming our Las Vegas project.”
Bugsy was the nickname hated by the man who bore it, Ben Siegel. He and Lansky had grown up in the slums of New York, Lansky on the Lower East Side, Siegel in the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn. According to one hardly credible tale, they first met when Lansky acted as Good Samaritan and rescued the twelve-year-old Siegel from a girl's bedroom, where he was being furiously assaulted by the girl's young lover, Salvatore Lucania, later to become Lucky Luciano. More likely, all three of the future gangsters met in the ordinary course of New York street warfare.
Both Lansky and Siegel came from poor but respectable families. Though neither boy got beyond grammar school, the elder Lanskys found their son a job as a tool and die maker; Siegel's brother Maurice eventually became a successful physician in Los Angeles. New York's East Side provided endless temptations to a pair of ambitious boys, however, particularly when Prohibition brought to organized crime a quasi-legitimacy, even glamour. The New York underworld was roughly divided, during these years of the late 1920's, between the Italian mobsters like Luciano, Frank Costello, and Joey Adonis, and the Jewish gangs headed by Jacob “Gurrah” Shapiro and Louis “Lepke” Buchalter. Lansky and Siegel soon organized their own bootlegging operation, with the help of such future celebrities as Arthur “Dutch Schultz” Flegenheimer and Abner “Longie” Zwillman. They apparently did not control any specific “territory” but simply imported large quantities of high-quality liquor, notably from the Canadian distilleries of Samuel Bronfman, and sold it wherever profits were to be found. By the mid-1920's, Lansky and his partners were estimated to be making, after such expenses as five million dollars per year in graft, an annual profit of four million dollars.
The end of Prohibition in 1934 forced the bootleggers to find new fields of endeavor. Some, like Joseph P. Kennedy, became eminently respectable. Sam Bronfman evolved into the philanthropic patriarch of Seagram's Distilleries, and Lewis Rosentiel did much the same at Schenley's. Others shifted their efforts into various forms of what is commonly called racketeering. Buchalter, for one, built a substantial commercial empire by simply extorting money from Jewish enterprises, notably clothing and fur stores, butcher shops, groceries, and restaurants. He was all too successful. His notoriety soon made him a prime target for Thomas E. Dewey, who had received a state appointment in 1935 as a special district attorney in charge of racketeering. Lansky was more discreet. He decided to leave New York and to organize a gambling empire in the South. From his new headquarters in Miami, he developed the casinos of Florida's Gold Coast, the luxurious resorts around New Orleans, and the pleasure domes of Fulgencio Batista's Cuba. Lansky always remained in the background, a quiet, polite little man, rarely seen, and never convicted of anything, and yet he played as large a part as anyone in creating the flamboyant social style of what is known today as the Sunbelt.
Lansky's friend Siegel also decided to leave New York at the end of Prohibition, but the place that lured him was Los Angeles, and particularly Hollywood. In contrast to Lansky, Siegel loved display, glitter, celebrity. When he moved west in 1936, he first rented a mansion on McCarthy Drive from the opera singer Lawrence Tibbett. Then he began building a mansion of his own on Delfern Avenue in Holmby Hills. He had red marble walls installed in his bathroom, and a tier of slot machines in his lounge, and secret passages from the sliding bookshelves in his library up to the attic. He enrolled himself in the Hillcrest Country Club and his two daughters at the DuBrock Riding Academy.
In a society that regarded Jack Warner and Harry Cohn as distinguished feudal barons, Siegel fitted quite well. Raymond Chandler, who took note of such things, saw a band of studio executives trooping back from lunch one day and paused to marvel at the sight. “They looked so exactly like a bunch of topflight Chicago gangsters moving in to read the death sentence on the beaten competitor,” he wrote to a friend. “It brought home to me in a flash the strange psychological and spiritual kinship between the operations of big money business and the rackets. Same faces, same expressions, same manners. Same way of dressing and same exaggerated leisure of movement.”
Siegel seems to have nourished a secret ambition to become a movie star. He was good-looking in a rugged, square-chinned way, certainly as much so as his old friend George Raft, who had once been a New York street-corner tough named Georgie Ranft and who now made four thousand dollars a week. Siegel was vain about his looks; he massaged his face with skin creams and slept with an elastic strip tied under his chin. But it was beneath him to seek work as a mere actor, for he was already rich and successful. He called himself a “sportsman.” His sponsor in Hollywood society was a wealthy woman, born Dorothy Taylor, who preened herself on bearing the title of Countess Di Frasso. Her wealth, estimated at between ten and fifteen million dollars, came from her father's leather-goods factory in upstate New York, and her title came from her second husband, a penniless Roman who remained in Rome while his countess gave parties in Beverly Hills. She had just finished a stormy affair with Gary Cooper when she met Siegel at the Santa Anita racetrack and decided that he would do nicely as Cooper's successor.
What Bugsy Siegel really did in Los Angeles remains half hidden in clouds of police speculation, for nobody knows with much precision what actually happens in the underworld. Siegel liked to gamble, and he often bet as much as five thousand dollars a day on horse races, which generally came out as he expected. That, he told the Internal Revenue Service, was the only source of his income, which he claimed was about fifty thousand dollars a year. Any reports that said otherwise were hearsay. To the extent that the eastern gangs did form a national crime syndicate, though, Siegel seems to have been their chief representative in Los Angeles, and to the extent that they dominated all forms of gambling, Siegel controlled a large share in these operationsâbookmaking, roulette, crap games, numbers, everything. According to one account, he also explored, like Willie Bioff, the possibilities of organizing a union of movie extrasâthe kind of union that would be paid by the studios not to strikeâbut Siegel's real profession was gambling.
In the late 1930's, Siegel was one of the major investors (15 percent) in the S.S.
Rex,
a luxurious gambling ship that floated just beyond the territorial waters off Santa Monica until Governor Earl Warren's operatives finally seized it. In 1939, when Moses Annenberg abandoned his national monopoly on racing results, the Trans-National, the heirs of Al Capone set up their own news service, Trans-America, with Siegel in charge of bringing all West Coast bookies into the fold. By 1945, that alone was earning Siegel an estimated $25,000 a month. His overall income has been computed at $500,000 a year, roughly ten times the amount on which he paid taxes.
The only crime for which Siegel was actually prosecuted was the shooting in 1940 of Harry “Big Greenie” Greenbaum, a fugitive hoodlum who was suspected of trying to inform New York police about the activities of Louis “Lepke” Buchalter. Lepke sent Siegel two of his killers from the New York organization known as Murder Inc., and the three of them shot down Greenbaum outside a rooming house a few blocks off Hollywood Boulevard. Siegel was actually arrested and indicted for this murder, so he called in the celebrated Jerry Giesler to rescue him. It turned out, providentially, that the Brooklyn authorities were unwilling to permit any of their star witnesses against Lepke to travel to Los Angeles to testify against Siegel, so the indictment had to be dropped. Then, when the Brooklyn authorities mysteriously changed their minds, and Siegel was reindicted, the main witness suddenly fell out a New York hotel window while in police custody, and so the new indictment against Siegel had to be abandoned. It was perhaps only coincidental that the Los Angeles district attorney who finally cleared Siegel was the same John Dockweiler who was later to prove so righteous in the prosecution of Errol Flynnâand that this same Dockweiler had also received a thirty-thousand-dollar campaign contribution from Siegel. Dockweiler loudly declared that he had been unaware of Siegel's donation, and when it became publicly known, he refunded the money to the newly liberated gangster.
The war years brought prosperity to the Los Angeles underworld, just as they did to the expanding city as a whole (Siegel, it later turned out, organized a firm known as the California Metals Company, which somehow accumulated six million dollars' worth of “surplus” materials in a warehouse on Antonio Avenue), but it was the coming of peace that inspired entrepreneurs like Lansky and Siegel with grand visions of the future. Now, finally, there was lots of money around, and people wanted to play. Furthermore, traveling was going to be easy and popular. People wanted not only to play but to play in new places.
Las Vegas might have impressed any ordinary observer as an implausible El Dorado. Flat, hot, dry, it had nothing whatever to recommend it. Spanish explorers had somewhat charitably named it “The Meadows” and then moved on. Mormon settlers from Utah had made a brief effort to establish an outpost in the 1850's but then relinquished it again to the Paiute Indians. The Union Pacific established a stop in 1905, though only as a way station on the line to the coast. Nevada state authorities did whatever they could think of to attract outsidersâlegalized gambling, legalized prostitution, quick divorcesâbut most of the outsiders gravitated to the more established town of Reno, some three hundred miles to the north. Las Vegas, despite a temporary influx of money during the building of the nearby Boulder Dam, remained a ranch town of no more than ten thousand inhabitants. Its handful of modest gambling halls, several of them partly financed by Lansky and Siegel, occupied only about two downtown blocks, near Fremont and Second streets. “For Christ's sake, Ben!” protested one of Siegel's confederates, Morris Sidwertz, alias Little Moe Sedway, when he first saw the proposed site of the legendary Flamingo. “Seven miles out of town. Not a tree in sight, and nothing but bugs and coyotes and heat.”
But that was the whole point, the idea itself. “The choice of the desert was deliberate,” Lansky said. “Once you got tourists there, after they had eaten and drunk all they could, there was only one thing leftâto go gambling.” On September 13, 1945, Sedway acquired from a Las Vegas widow a roadside tract of thirty acres surrounding the hulk of a bankrupt motel. Two months later, Sedway transferred this same property to Greg Bautzer, a dashing young Hollywood attorney who was also notable for having deflowered the seventeen-year-old Lana Turner (“I must confess that I didn't enjoy it at all,” she said). Bautzer in turn transferred the property to an organization called the Nevada Projects Corp., in which the largest shareholder was Bugsy Siegel. Another substantial partner was Meyer Lansky. Siegel's backers provided him with a total of one million dollars to build the Flamingo. He chose as the builder Del Webb, a Phoenix contractor who was later celebrated as the builder of Sun City, owner of the New York Yankees, and friend to J. Edgar Hoover.
It should have been fairly easy to build a casino for a million dollars, but Siegel was determined to build not just a casino but the greatest casino ever built. The illuminated pillar at its entrance would be visible for miles across the desert, a beacon to the new palace of pleasure, where everything was permitted. In 1946, however, the American economy was still entangled in wartime regulations and wartime shortages. Siegel had to maneuver, partly by paying black market prices, partly by using connections. He called on Nevada's pliable Senator Pat McCarran, a conservative later celebrated for his investigations of alleged subversives, to help provide copper, steel, and other materials that were in short supply. He persuaded movie executives to delve into studio warehouses for lumber, piping, cement. He sent to Mexico and even Italy (what better use for Mafia connections?) to acquire fine marble and rare wood. He wanted a sunken tub in every bathroom, and a porcelain bidet. There were labor shortages too. Siegel flew in carpenters and plasterers, and he paid them as much as fifty dollars a day.
Things kept going wrong. The boiler room turned out to be too small, and the enlargement cost $115,000. Alterations in the kitchen cost $30,000. The novelty known as air conditioning broke down. The heavy curtains for the casino turned out to be highly flammable and had to be taken down and chemically treated. Siegel had ordered a special fourth-floor penthouse suite for himself, and he was dismayed to find his living room ceiling crossed by a steel beam only five feet eight inches from the floor. It cost him $22,500 to have it moved.