Authors: Otto Friedrich
207Â Â Â Â
Young Margarita:
Ibid., pp. 28â9, 36, 43â50, 174, 181.
208Â Â Â Â
Middle-aged men:
Ibid., pp. 50â1. Bob Thomas,
King Cohn,
p. 169.
209Â Â Â Â
Sheehan shortened:
Kobal,
Rita Hayworth,
pp. 52, 63, 70â4. Joe Morella and Edward Z. Epstein,
Rita,
p. 253.
209Â Â Â Â
Then along came:
Charles Higham,
Orson Welles,
p. 210.
210Â Â Â Â
But Judson:
Thomas,
King Cohn,
pp. 72, 170â2. Kobal,
Rita Hayworth,
pp. 76, 80â2, 95, 102, 113, 123.
212Â Â Â Â
Once Miss Hayworth:
Time,
Nov. 10, 1941. Morella and Epstein,
Rita,
p. 257.
213Â Â Â Â
It was apparently:
Kobal,
Rita Hayworth,
pp. 154, 159, 161.
213Â Â Â Â
Cover Girl
was an:
Author's notes on TV showing.
214Â Â Â Â
The purpose of:
Kobal,
Rita Hayworth,
pp. 157, 161â3, 142â4.
216Â Â Â Â
Love is eternal:
Joseph McBride,
Orson Welles,
p. 11. Anne Baxter,
Intermission,
p. 119 (1978). André Bazin,
Orson Welles,
pp. 30, 40.
216Â Â Â Â
The trip to:
Charles Higham,
The Films of Orson Welles,
pp. 91â2, 95. Bazin,
Orson Welles,
p. 86.
217Â Â Â Â
But in 1943:
McBride,
Orson Welles,
p. 42.
217Â Â Â Â
Of the Hollywood figures:
Frank Capra,
The Name Above the Title,
pp. 360â3.
218Â Â Â Â
Major William Wyler:
Axel Madsen,
William Wyler,
pp. 220â40. John Huston,
An Open Book,
pp. 99ff.
218Â Â Â Â
Jack Warner:
Jack Warner,
My First Hundred Years in Hollywood,
p. 283. Michael Freedland,
The Warner Brothers,
pp. 153â5. Rudy Behlmer,
Inside Warner Bros.,
p. 161.
219Â Â Â Â
Before that unfortunate:
Warner,
First Hundred Years,
pp. 290ff. Freedland,
The Warner Brothers,
p. 150.
219Â Â Â Â
White House officials:
Freedland,
The Warner Brothers,
p. 189. Colin Shindler,
Hollywood Goes to War,
pp. 58â9. Warner,
First Hundred Years,
p. 293. Howard Koch,
As Time Goes By,
pp. 101ff.
219n   Â
In her witty book:
Nora Sayre,
Running Time,
p. 6.
220Â Â Â Â
Warner's other big:
Freedland,
The Warner Brothers,
pp. 155â6.
220Â Â Â Â
Reagan had managed:
Ronald Reagan and Richard C. Hubler,
Where's the Rest of Me?,
pp. 124â5, 127â8, 130.
220Â Â Â Â
The Army Air Corps:
Reagan and Hubler,
Where's the Rest,
pp. 132â3. Huston,
An Open Book,
108.
221Â Â Â Â
Lieutenant Reagan apparently:
Laurence Leamer,
Make-Believe,
pp. 122â3.
221Â Â Â Â
Reagan was always:
Reagan and Hubler,
Where's the Rest,
p. 134.
221Â Â Â Â
There was equally:
Gottfried Reinhardt,
The Genius: A Memoir of Max Reinhardt,
pp. 10, 20, 24â5.
224Â Â Â Â
In one reasonably:
Time,
Sept. 20, 1943. James Naremore,
The Magic World of Orson Welles,
p. 137. William Robert Faith,
Bob Hope,
pp. 32â3.
224Â Â Â Â
Hope began simply:
Faith,
Bob Hope,
pp. 161â4. Bob Hope,
Have Tux, Will Travel,
p. 189.
225Â Â Â Â
A friend urged:
Faith,
Bob Hope,
pp. 173â6. Bob Hope,
I Never Left Home,
p. 48.
226Â Â Â Â
By now, the Allies:
Bob Hope,
I Never Left Home,
pp. 3, 8â9, 161â2, 178.
227Â Â Â Â
Billy Wilder, who:
Maurice Zolotow,
Billy Wilder in Hollywood,
p. 35.
227Â Â Â Â
This
Double Indemnity:
Roy Hoopes,
Cain,
p. 258. Gay Talese,
The Kingdom and the Power,
p. 22 (1970).
228Â Â Â Â
Cain, who had:
Hoopes,
Cain,
pp. 268, 331â2.
229Â Â Â Â
At that point:
Zolotow,
Billy Wilder
, p. 108.
230Â Â Â Â
Paramount bought
Double:
Ibid., p. 111. Hoopes,
Cain,
pp. 332â3.
230Â Â Â Â
Chandler was a:
Frank MacShane,
The Life of Raymond Chandler,
pp. 35â40 (1978). S. J. Perelman,
The Most of S. J. Perelman,
p. 17.
231Â Â Â Â
Summoned to Paramount:
Zolotow,
Billy Wilder,
pp. 113â14.
231Â Â Â Â
It was a kind:
MacShane,
Raymond Chandler,
pp. 107, 101. Zolotow,
Billy Wilder,
p. 121.
232Â Â Â Â
So the struggles:
Zolotow,
Billy Wilder,
pp. 114â16. MacShane,
Raymond Chandler,
pp. 108â9. Tom Wood,
The Bright Side of Billy Wilder, Primarily,
p. 20.
234Â Â Â Â
“I don't read”:
Zolotow,
Billy Wilder,
pp. 117â19, 123. Hoopes,
Cain,
p. 335. Wood,
Billy Wilder,
p. 84.
235Â Â Â Â
It was never:
Gene D. Phillips,
Hemingway and Film,
p. 41. Ingrid Bergman and Alan Burgess,
My Story,
pp. 125, 128. David O. Selznick,
Memo from David O. Selznick,
p. 333.
236Â Â Â Â
Hemingway had turned:
Ernest Hemingway,
Selected Letters, 1917â1961,
pp. 577, 540.
237Â Â Â Â
Ingrid Bergman was:
Paul Henreid,
Ladies' Man,
p. 130.
237Â Â Â Â
The day after:
Bergman and Burgess,
My Story,
pp. 148â9.
237Â Â Â Â
Dialogue was one:
Richard Corliss, ed.,
Talking Pictures,
pp. 225ff. Nancy Lynn Schwartz,
The Hollywood Writers' Wars,
p. 53. Carlos Baker,
Ernest Hemingway,
p. 371. Hemingway,
Letters,
p. 540.
238Â Â Â Â
But even then:
Phillips,
Hemingway and Film,
p. 43. Larry Ceplair and Steven Englund,
The Inquisition in Hollywood,
pp. 210â11.
238Â Â Â Â
Wood was by no means:
Ceplair and Englund,
The Inquisition,
p. 211.
239Â Â Â Â
After that heroic:
Maurice Zolotow,
Shooting Star: A Biography of John Wayne,
pp. 249â53 (1975).
239Â Â Â Â
By this time:
Ceplair and Englund,
The Inquisition,
p. 209.
239Â Â Â Â
But all this:
Phillips,
Hemingway and Film,
p. 42.
240Â Â Â Â
Miss Bergman was:
Bergman and Burgess,
My Story,
pp. 151, 153.
240Â Â Â Â
One major Hollywood:
David Niven,
Bring on the Empty Horses,
p. 127. Charles Higham,
Errol Flynn,
pp. 140ff. Michael Freedland,
The Two Lives of Errol Flynn,
p. 164.
241Â Â Â Â
To Warner Bros.:
Errol Flynn,
My Wicked, Wicked Ways,
pp. 253â4 (1974). Alvah Bessie,
Inquisition in Eden,
p. 80.
241Â Â Â Â
Flynn's search:
Flynn,
Wicked Ways,
p. 239.
241Â Â Â Â
Among the many:
Freedland,
The Two Lives,
p. 95.
242Â Â Â Â
It was to this:
Flynn,
Wicked Ways,
pp. 239â40. Walsh acknowledged in his own memoirs that he had done the deed. He said that he had done it alone, that no money had changed hands, and that he was a friend of the undertakers, whom he identified as the Malloy Brothers. Raoul Walsh,
Each Man in His Time,
pp. 331â3.
243Â Â Â Â
Betty Hansen was:
Jerry Giesler,
The Jerry Giesler Story,
pp. 94â8.
244Â Â Â Â
As charges of rape:
Florabel Muir,
Headline Happy,
p. 137. Kenneth Anger,
Hollywood Babylon,
pp. 296, 363â4.
245Â Â Â Â
Florabel Muir:
Muir,
Headline Happy,
pp. 136â7, Higham,
Errol Flynn,
p. 185.
245Â Â Â Â
Betty Hansen claimed:
I have taken all this verbatim testimony from Giesler, pp. 95, 104, 107, 100, 110â11, 113, 115, 116, 123â5, 130â1, 133, 136, 141.
251Â Â Â Â
Two of the three:
Higham,
Errol Flynn,
p. 213.
251Â Â Â Â
If Bertolt Brecht:
Luis Buñuel,
My Last Sigh,
p. 189.
Â
6 Reunions (1944).
253Â Â Â Â
The Hollywood people:
John Huston,
An Open Book,
pp. 109â10.
256Â Â Â Â
Darryl F. Zanuck:
Mel Gussow,
Darryl F. Zanuck,
pp. 58â9, 105, 75, 109. Leonard Mosley,
Zanuck,
pp. 197, 200â1, 169. Stephen Farber and Marc Green,
Hollywood Dynasties,
pp. 66â7, 93.
258Â Â Â Â
Zanuck did produce:
Colin Shindler,
Hollywood Goes to War,
p. 86. Mosley,
Zanuck,
pp. 203â5.
259Â Â Â Â
Another one of:
Otto Preminger,
Preminger,
pp. 1, 13.
260Â Â Â Â
Then Zanuck handed him:
Preminger,
Preminger,
pp. 21â5, 73, 82. Willi Frischauer,
Behind the Scenes of Otto Preminger,
p. 85.
262Â Â Â Â
One of the remarkable:
Preminger,
Preminger,
pp. 85â6.
263Â Â Â Â
Laura
was all:
Gene Tierney,
Self-Portrait,
p. 119.
263Â Â Â Â
Zanuck read the script:
Preminger,
Preminger,
pp. 86â9, 92â3. Tierney,
Self-Portrait,
pp. 121â2.
265Â Â Â Â
After the emotional:
Charles Chaplin,
My Autobiography,
pp. 396â7, 414â15, 418â19. Also David Robinson,
Chaplin,
pp. 512â28.
267Â Â Â Â
For most of his life:
John McCabe,
Charlie Chaplin,
pp. 201, 209.Chaplin,
My Autobiography,
pp. 229â30, 240.
268Â Â Â Â
Lillita McMurray was:
McCabe,
Charlie Chaplin,
pp. 141, 143, 160â3.
269Â Â Â Â
Paulette Goddard, née:
Chaplin,
My Autobiography,
pp. 400, 407â9, 413â15, 417. Charles Chaplin, Jr.,
My Father, Charlie Chaplin,
pp. 258â9.
272Â Â Â Â
Warner himself later:
Jack Warner,
My First Hundred Years in Hollywood,
pp. 295â6.
272Â Â Â Â
Chaplin insisted that:
Chaplin,
My Autobiography,
p. 407. Warner,
First Hundred Years,
p. 297.
273Â Â Â Â
Chaplin went to:
Chaplin,
My Autobiography,
p. 416. McCabe,
Charlie Chaplin,
p. 204.
274Â Â Â Â
With the three hundred:
Jerry Giesler,
The Jerry Giesler Story,
p. 187.
274Â Â Â Â
A week later:
Chaplin,
My Autobiography,
pp. 419â22. Giesler,
Story,
pp. 183â90. McCabe,
Charlie Chaplin,
pp. 204â8. Hedda Hopper,
From Under My Hat,
pp. 149â53.
277Â Â Â Â
One of the cornerstones:
Charles Higham,
Sisters,
p. 145. Also Larry Swindell,
Charles Boyer,
p. 168.
277Â Â Â Â
They were frightened:
Lana Turner,
Lana,
p. 17. Daniel Fuchs,
West of the Rockies,
p. 84.
278Â Â Â Â
In addition to:
Roland Flamini,
Ava,
pp. 17â18 (1984).
278Â Â Â Â
If an actor:
Hortense Powdermaker,
Hollywood: The Dream Factory,
pp. 34â5, 85.
279Â Â Â Â
The first rebel:
Charles Higham,
Bette,
pp. 109â21. Bette Davis,
The Lonely Life,
pp. 194â208. Warner,
First Hundred Years,
pp. 248â50.
279Â Â Â Â
Still, holdouts and:
Larry Swindell,
Body and Soul, John Garfield,
p. 157. Warner,
First Hundred Years,
p. 234. Joseph Blotner,
Faulkner,
pp. 1121, 1154.