Authors: Otto Friedrich
539Â Â Â Â
“The living room”:
Peter Manso,
Mailer: His Life and Times,
pp. 138, 146â7.
542Â Â Â Â
To celebrate:
Patricia Bosworth,
Montgomery Clift,
p. 188 (1979).
542Â Â Â Â
It was worse:
Manso,
Mailer,
p. 149.
543Â Â Â Â
Mixed feelings is:
Mills,
Mailer,
p. 119.
543Â Â Â Â
The blacklist grew:
Dore Schary,
Heyday,
p. 365.
544Â Â Â Â
The age of:
Larry Ceplair and Steven Englund,
The Inquisition in Hollywood,
p. 362. Stefan Kanfer,
A Journal of the Plague Years,
pp. 94â5.
544n   Â
Mrs. Hopper had:
Schary,
Heyday,
p. 206.
545Â Â Â Â
On this matter:
Ceplair and Englund,
The Inquisition,
pp. 368â9.
545Â Â Â Â
Protestations of loyalty:
Village Voice,
Aug. 7, 1984.
545Â Â Â Â
“Forty-nine”:
Ceplair and Englund,
The Inquisition,
pp. 363â4.
546Â Â Â Â
The blacklist didn't:
John Cogley,
Report on Blacklisting,
vol. 1, pp. 97, 125, 133, 82. Ceplair and Englund,
The Inquisition,
p. 359.
546Â Â Â Â
Under Reagan's leadership:
Ronald Reagan and Richard C. Hubler,
Where's the Rest of Me?,
p. 182. Cogley,
Blacklisting,
p. 163, and Ceplair and Englund,
The Inquisition,
p. 367.
547Â Â Â Â
One of the oddities:
Edward G. Robinson,
All My Yesterdays,
pp. 212, 243â5, 322, 250, 261, 263.
549Â Â Â Â
John Garfield faced:
Larry Swindell,
Body and Soul,
pp. 238, 223, 227â9.
550Â Â Â Â
He returned to:
Kanfer,
Journal of the Plague Years,
pp. 156â7.
550Â Â Â Â
Garfield tried:
Swindell,
Body and Soul,
pp. 229â40, 243â52, 255â64. Kanfer,
Journal of the Plague Years,
pp. 179â80.
553Â Â Â Â
Hildegard Knef:
Hildegard Knef,
The Gift Horse,
pp. 266â7 (1972).
554Â Â Â Â
The process of:
Charles Higham,
Orson Welles,
p. 247.
555Â Â Â Â
The HUAC investigators:
Barbara Leaming,
Orson Welles,
p. 326. Ted Morgan,
FDR,
p. 621.
556Â Â Â Â
Welles did not:
Higham,
Orson Welles,
p. 219. Leaming,
Orson Welles,
p. 348.
556Â Â Â Â
So although Welles:
Higham,
Orson Welles,
pp. 247â8.
557Â Â Â Â
Then to Welles's:
Leaming,
Orson Welles,
p. 369.
557Â Â Â Â
Welles returned to Rome:
Higham,
Orson Welles,
p. 250.
558Â Â Â Â
Welles was by now:
Charles Higham,
The Films of Orson Welles,
p. 136.
558Â Â Â Â
If Welles's improvisations:
Higham,
Orson Welles,
pp. 136, 260, 263, 270â3. Leaming,
Orson Welles,
pp. 370â1.
561Â Â Â Â
In his later years:
People,
Feb. 14, 1983.
561Â Â Â Â
It was a thought:
Time,
Feb. 21, 1949.
562Â Â Â Â
Marijuana was such:
Time,
Sept. 13, 1948. Kenneth Anger,
Hollywood Babylon,
pp. 20â4.
562Â Â Â Â
Time
's account:
Time,
Sept. 13, 1948.
563Â Â Â Â
Once again, as:
Jerry Giesler,
The Jerry Giesler Story,
p. 246.
563Â Â Â Â
That was how:
Time,
Oct. 11, 1948.
564Â Â Â Â
Mitchum, who was:
Time,
April 11, 1949.
564Â Â Â Â
Despite the ordeal:
Charles Chaplin,
My Autobiography,
p. 493.
564Â Â Â Â
Chaplin began writing:
David Robinson,
Chaplin,
p. 550.
565Â Â Â Â
The aging Calvero:
Ibid., p. 559.
566Â Â Â Â
Having worked three:
Claire Bloom,
Limelight and After,
p. 88 (1983).
566Â Â Â Â
That sounds like:
Robinson,
Chaplin,
pp. 750, 752, 754.
567Â Â Â Â
So Chaplin went on:
Ibid., p. 564. Bloom,
Limelight,
pp. 89â90.
567Â Â Â Â
When Chaplin had:
Chaplin,
My Autobiography,
pp. 496â7. Robinson,
Chaplin,
p. 548. Chaplin and his authorized biographer differ on many details of Chaplin's legal difficulties.
568Â Â Â Â
The Internal Revenue:
Chaplin,
My Autobiography,
pp. 495â9. Robinson,
Chaplin,
pp. 511, 570â1.
568Â Â Â Â
Two days out:
Robinson,
Chaplin,
p. 572. Chaplin,
My Autobiography,
pp. 501â2.
569Â Â Â Â
Not everyone supported:
Robinson,
Chaplin,
pp. 575â6, 579, 581, 673â6.
571Â Â Â Â
At the 1947 hearings:
Hearings Regarding the Communist Infiltration of the Motion Picture Industry,
p. 29. Nora Sayre,
Running Time,
p. 79.
571Â Â Â Â
The trouble was:
Sayre,
Running Time,
p. 40.
571Â Â Â Â
Still, the HUAC:
John Cogley,
Report on Blacklisting,
vol. 1, pp. 218â20, 215â17. Sayre,
Running Time,
p. 78.
573Â Â Â Â
Movies have different:
Sayre,
Running Time,
pp. 178, 199.
573Â Â Â Â
The most peculiar:
Nathaniel Branden,
Who Is Ayn Rand?,
pp. 150â73.
574Â Â Â Â
She submitted her:
Ibid., pp. 175â82, 190, 192â3.
576Â Â Â Â
“I see,” said:
Ibid., p. 195. Ayn Rand,
The Fountainhead,
p. 198 (1952).
576Â Â Â Â
Miss Rand spent:
Sayre,
Running Time,
p. 74. Branden,
Who Is Ayn Rand?,
pp. 198â9. Rand,
The Fountainhead,
p. 687.
577Â Â Â Â
Most of the reviews:
Branden,
Who Is Ayn Rand?,
pp. 204, 207.
578Â Â Â Â
She finished her:
Mervyn LeRoy,
Take One,
p. 153. Branden,
Who Is Ayn Rand?,
p. 211. Kanfer,
Journal of the Plague Years,
p. 82.
578Â Â Â Â
Miss Rand provided:
Cogley,
Report on Blacklisting,
pp. 1â11.
579Â Â Â Â
No Communist propagandist:
Larry Swindell,
The Last Hero: A Biography of Gary Cooper,
p. 264.
579Â Â Â Â
To Miss Rand:
Branden,
Who Is Ayn Rand?,
p. 213. Swindell,
The Last Hero,
pp. 267â73.
580Â Â Â Â
Cooper repeatedly told:
Swindell,
The Last Hero,
pp. 282â3.
580Â Â Â Â
The Fountainhead
proved:
Sayre,
Running Time,
pp. 74â8.
581Â Â Â Â
Roberto Rossellini probably:
Joseph Henry Steele,
Ingrid Bergman,
p. 168. Ingrid Bergman and Alan Burgess,
My Story,
p. 240.
581Â Â Â Â
Rossellini needed no:
Bergman and Burgess,
My Story,
pp. 241â3, 245â7, 249, 257, 259, 264.
584Â Â Â Â
Rossellini was determined:
Steele,
Ingrid Bergman,
p. 197.
584Â Â Â Â
“Roberto would give”:
Bergman and Burgess,
My Story,
p. 281.
584Â Â Â Â
Rossellini apparently thought:
Steele,
Ingrid Bergman,
pp. 173, 204. Bergman and Burgess,
My Story,
pp. 269, 287â8.
586Â Â Â Â
“I went into”:
Steele,
Ingrid Bergman,
pp. 183â4, 186, 205, 224, 226. Bergman and Burgess,
My Story,
298, 310, 312.
587Â Â Â Â
Steele, the public:
Steele,
Ingrid Bergman,
pp. 254â62. Bergman and Burgess,
My Story,
p. 343.
590Â Â Â Â
Hughes was determined:
Dore Schary,
Heyday,
p. 246.
590Â Â Â Â
Senator Edwin C. Johnson:
Bergman and Burgess,
My Story,
pp. 331â2.
591Â Â Â Â
In his seventy-ninth:
Nigel Hamilton,
The Brothers Mann,
pp. 347â51, 356â7, 352â4. Anthony Heilbut,
Exiled in Paradise,
p. 301.
593Â Â Â Â
Heinrich agreed:
Hamilton,
The Brothers Mann,
pp. 357â8, 360â4. Heilbut,
Exiled in Paradise,
pp. 309â10.
Â
12 Farewells (1950).
597Â Â Â Â
Gloria Swanson was:
Gloria Swanson,
Swanson on Swanson,
p. 465 (1981).
598Â Â Â Â
So Miss Swanson:
Maurice Zolotow,
Billy Wilder in Hollywood,
pp. 161, 57.
599Â Â Â Â
Billy Wilder, of course:
Ibid., pp. 126â8, 131, 133, 151.
600Â Â Â Â
Real Wilder movies:
Otto Preminger,
Preminger: An Autobiography,
p. 108. Charles Higham,
Marlene,
p. 237.
601Â Â Â Â
It was originally:
Zolotow,
Billy Wilder,
p. 159. Bob Thomas,
Golden Boy: The Untold Story of William Holden,
p. 70 (1984).
602Â Â Â Â
There are several:
Tom Wood,
The Bright Side of Billy Wilder, Primarily,
p. 98.
602Â Â Â Â
But
Sunset Boulevard:
Ibid., p. 99. Zolotow,
Billy Wilder,
p. 165. Swanson,
Swanson,
p. 500.
603Â Â Â Â
As so often happened:
Zolotow,
Billy Wilder,
pp. 159â60.
604Â Â Â Â
For the role:
Patricia Bosworth,
Montgomery Clift,
pp. 160, 176. Thomas,
Golden Boy,
pp. 68, 71. Zolotow,
Billy Wilder,
p. 162.
605Â Â Â Â
Brackett hated:
Thomas,
Golden Boy,
p. 71. Zolotow,
Billy Wilder,
p. 166.
605Â Â Â Â
Gloria Swanson was:
Swanson,
Swanson,
p. 498.
606Â Â Â Â
But there was:
Zolotow,
Billy Wilder,
pp. 166â8.
607Â Â Â Â
William Randolph Hearst:
W. A. Swanberg,
Citizen Hearst,
pp. 511â16. Anita Loos,
Kiss Hollywood Good-by,
p. 141 (1975).
607Â Â Â Â
Once, when Hearst:
Swanberg,
Citizen Hearst,
pp. 305, 489. Marion Davies,
The Times We Had,
pp. 268â9 (1977). Loos,
Kiss Hollywood Good-by,
p. 145.
608Â Â Â Â
Despite Hearst's pretensions:
Swanberg,
Citizen Hearst,
pp. 515, 518.
608Â Â Â Â
On New Year's Eve:
Loos,
Kiss Hollywood Good-by,
p. 146.
609Â Â Â Â
In attaching:
Helen Gahagan Douglas,
A Full Life,
pp. 299, 314. David Halberstam,
The Powers That Be,
p. 260ff.
609Â Â Â Â
The Supreme Court:
Edward Dmytryk,
It's a Hell of a Life but Not a Bad Living,
p. 127.
610Â Â Â Â
Dalton Trumbo and:
Bruce Cook,
Dalton Trumbo,
p. 208.
610Â Â Â Â
To Alvah Bessie:
Alvah Bessie,
Inquisition in Eden,
pp. 23, 250, 253.
611Â Â Â Â
After two weeks:
Cook,
Dalton Trumbo,
p. 209. Dmytryk,
Hell of a Life,
p. 135.
611Â Â Â Â
The prisoners' physical:
Cook,
Dalton Trumbo,
pp. 214â15. Dmytryk,
Hell of a Life,
p. 135. Lester Cole,
Hollywood Red,
pp. 314, 319. Ring Lardner, Jr.,
The Lardners,
p. 328.
612Â Â Â Â
The most unusual:
Bessie,
Inquisition in Eden,
p. 58. Cole,
Hollywood Red,
p. 321.
612Â Â Â Â
Dalton Trumbo, once:
Cook,
Dalton Trumbo,
pp. 217â18.
613Â Â Â Â
The most extraordinary:
Cole,
Hollywood Red,
p. 316.