Eighty Is Not Enough: One Actor's Journey Through American Entertainment

BOOK: Eighty Is Not Enough: One Actor's Journey Through American Entertainment
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Copyright © 2009 Dick Van Patten

All rights reserved. Written permission must be secured from the publisher to use or reproduce any part of this book, except brief quotations in critical reviews and articles.

The opinions expressed in this book are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher or its affiliates.

eBook International Standard Book Number (ISBN): 978-1-61467-116-9
Original Source: Print Edition 2009 (ISBN: 978-1-60747-700-6)
Library of Congress Cataloging-In-Publication Data Available

Kindle Edition: 1.00 (7/28/2011)
Ebook conversion:
Fowler Digital Services
Rendered by: Ray Fowler

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Van Patten, Dick.

Eighty is not enough! : one actor's journey through American entertainment / Dick Van Patten and Robert Baer.

p. cm.

ISBN 978-1-60747-700-6 (hardcover)

1. Van Patten, Dick. 2. Actors--United States--Biography. I. Baer, Robert. II. Title.

PN2287.V337A3 2009
792.02'8092--dc22
[B]

2009034311

Book Design by: Marti Lou Critchfield

Printed in the United States of America

Phoenix Books, Inc.
9465 Wilshire Boulevard, Suite 840
Beverly Hills, CA 90212

10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

F
OR
M
OM
W
HO WAS THERE FOR ME AT THE BEGINNING

AND

F
OR
P
AT
W
HO'S BEEN THERE FOR ME EVER SINCE

T
ABLE OF
C
ONTENTS

Chapter 1   
K
NOCKOUT
Chapter 2   
E
ARLY
D
AYS
Chapter 3   
M
R.
P
ERSONALITY
Chapter 4   
L
AND OF
B
ROKEN
D
REAMS
Chapter 5   
S
TAGESTRUCK
Chapter 6   
B
ROADWAY
Chapter 7   
T
HE
L
AST
C
ASUALTY
Chapter 8   
T
HE
E
TERNAL
R
OAD
Chapter 9   
M
ENAGERIE
Chapter 10
A
ND
T
HEY'RE
O
FF
!
Chapter 11
A
B
ROADWAY
R
ÉSUMÉ
Chapter 12
T
HE
F
AMILY
H
EARTH
Chapter 13
T
HE
A
MERICAN
W
AY
Chapter 14
T
HE
G
REAT
F
AIR OF
'39
Chapter 15
T
HE
L
AND
I
S
B
RIGHT
Chapter 16
D
ANCING WITH THE
S
TARS
Chapter 17
T
HE
S
KIN OF
O
UR
T
EETH
Chapter 18
H
OW TO
B
EAT THE
R
ACES
Chapter 19
T
ROUBLE AT
H
OME
Chapter 20
T
OMORROW THE
W
ORLD
Chapter 21
K
IRK
&
THE
B
OYS
Chapter 22
T
HE
M
AGIC OF
L
UNT
&
F
ONTANNE
Chapter 23
C
OMING OF
A
GE IN THE
B
IG
A
PPLE
Chapter 24
P
ENETRATOR
Chapter 25
S
IDESHOWS
Chapter 26
M
AMA:
A
B
RAVE
N
EW
W
ORLD
Chapter 27
M
ISTER
R
OBERTS
Chapter 28
C
OMMAND
P
ERFORMANCE
Chapter 29
D
REAM
G
IRL
Chapter 30
E
VERY
S
O
O
FTEN
!
Chapter 31
S
LIPPING
A
WAY
Chapter 32
F
LITTING
O
FF
Chapter 33
C
RASH
Chapter 34
F
LEETING
F
AME
Chapter 35
T
OUGH
C
HOICES
Chapter 36
T
HE
R
OAD
B
ACK
Chapter 37
T
HREE'S A
C
HARM
!
Chapter 38
T
HE
P
HONES
A
RE
R
INGING
A
GAIN
Chapter 39
M
EL
Chapter 40
M
EMORY OF A
D
ARK
T
IME
Chapter 41
B
ACK TO
B
ROADWAY
Chapter 42
C
ONNING THE
C
ON
M
AN
Chapter 43
F
ARRAH
Chapter 44
G
OODBYE
Chapter 45
E
IGHT
I
S
E
NOUGH
Chapter 46
B
REAKFAST AT
W
IMBLEDON
Chapter 47
A
FRICA
Chapter 48
L
IFE AFTER
E
IGHT
I
S
E
NOUGH
Chapter 49
E
IGHTY
I
S
N
OT
E
NOUGH
E
PILOGUE
A
CKNOWLEDGMENTS

1
K
NOCKOUT

John Henry was down. It was only the first round, but I knew it was over. Above the roar of the crowd, I could hear the excitement in the announcer’s voice as I moved closer to the old Emerson radio against the back wall in the dressing room. I waited as the referee down the street at the Garden began the count.

It was 1939. I was ten years old, and Joe Louis was my hero. As I stood there pressed up to the radio, Joe’s opponent, a tough but aging former light-heavyweight champion named John Henry Lewis, was on the canvas. It was his second trip down in the first two minutes of the fight. The first time, Joe had knocked him clear through the ropes. Ten seconds later, the referee called the fight, and I raced out of the dressing room, bursting to tell the very next person I saw that the great Brown Bomber was still Champion of the World.

Fredric March stood in the wings of Broadway’s Center Theater. He was growing anxious, his entrance cue fast approaching. March was starring in
The American Way
—a popular Broadway spectacle, directed by the great George S. Kaufman, telling the story of a German-American named Martin Gunther, a man torn by mixed loyalties to his old and new countries in the late 1920s. Gunther’s divided loyalties would be further tested by the prejudice rising against his family as tensions in America later mounted along with the emergence of Hitler and the Nazis in Europe.

I reached the wings. I was playing Gunther’s grandson, Karl. Taking Fredric March’s hand, we waited together for our cue. At the moment, I was only vaguely aware that Fredric March was special. Standing there with him, I wouldn’t have known why. I wouldn’t have known that he won the Academy Award for
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
in 1932, nor that just a year before he was again nominated for his acclaimed performance in the smash hit,
A Star is Born
. None of that mattered to me. I had far more important news to relate.

“Louis won!” I blurted out. I was beside myself with excitement as I looked up, expecting March to be just as thrilled as I was. Instead, he glared back. Instantly, I saw something was wrong. This was Rockefeller Center. The play was a tremendous production with a cast and crew of over two hundred and fifty people. The seats were packed with New Yorkers who came to the theater in the hope of finding some small relief from the stress of ten years of the Great Depression and new anxieties over an impending World War. I wasn’t aware of all that, but I could tell that Fredric March was mad—and worse still, he was mad at me.

“Get your mind on your acting,” he snapped. “This is more important than the fight.” His tone startled me. For a moment I was devastated. We stood there waiting in silence. But seconds later the cue came, and we stepped out together under the bright stage lights of Broadway.

As we did, I found myself transforming. Quickly I became Karl Gunther, another young boy living in an entirely different world than mine. And just as fast, I forgot all about the fight. The old guy was right. The show really was more important. For the next seventy years in this line of work, I’ve come to realize that the show is
always
more important. That’s a lesson I first learned from Fredric March—and one I’d never forget.

That night—and every night—my Mom was backstage. Josephine Acerno Van Patten—everyone called her “Jo”—was quite simply the most extraordinary person I’ve ever known. Consider what she accomplished: in the midst of the Great Depression, Jo had this crazy idea that her two kids could be stars on Broadway. Without money, connections, access or advantages of any kind, she somehow, through sheer force of will, turned that crazy dream into reality. When she passed away in 1975, my father wrote poignantly to my sister Joyce and me, reminding us of just how important she was to our success: it was Mom’s “persistence and doggedness that put you where you are today.”

Dad was right. But it’s also true that her pursuit of that dream cost her dearly; probably even her marriage. She made that sacrifice, not because she wanted to, but, I believe, because she had no choice. Unrelenting ambition was something written in her nature. She felt it every minute of every day. Most important, she could never settle for not trying. It was one thing to fail, but, for Mom, it was unforgivable not to try. And so, my mother was utterly relentless, a force of nature, the likes of which I’ve never seen.

When I think about my mother in those early days in the 1930s and 1940s, I’m reminded of the ongoing debate about whether parents should bring their children into the world of entertainment. It’s something people will forever debate. The clash of opinion in my own family is striking. My sister Joyce and I have such different memories of life as child actors that I sometimes think we must have come from different homes.

I tend see the positive; some might—and do—say that I stress the positive to the point of being blind to reality. But for me, my mother made this wonderful life I’ve enjoyed possible, and I find it hard to imagine what I would have done without her ambition and drive. Joyce, however, has always been more sensitive to the downside. Joyce, so highly intelligent, has deeply felt the very real underside of a life where getting that bigger and better role became the only measure of things. She rebelled against a world that placed such a high premium on show business success. Joyce left home early and carved out her own wonderful and successful life. As her older brother, I could not be more proud of what she has accomplished, both as a person and a performer.

So the question remains, do child actors lose their youth? Are they exposed too soon to the often cutthroat and unforgiving world of entertainment? Is there a price to be paid later when an overly-protected and idealized childhood is insufficient training for the real challenges of life that inevitably lurk around the corner? After years thinking about this question, I’ve come to believe there’s no one simple answer. What works for some, doesn’t work for others. That’s not a cop-out; it simply reflects the fact that people are different.

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