Enter Helen (33 page)

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Authors: Brooke Hauser

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( 46 )

T
HE
B
LUE
G
ODDESS

1971–1972

“You not only enjoy being a girl —you
thrive
on it! And this quality endears you, naturally, to men. Good thing, too, because you are baby-helpless without them.”

—from “How Feminine Are You?” a
Cosmo
quiz in the April 1971 issue

H
elen didn't always make it easy for feminists to claim her as one of their own, but in 1971, the mother of the movement went to her for help. When Betty Friedan called that spring, Helen braced herself for another diatribe against
Cosmo
, but it never came. Instead Betty asked if Helen would consider attending a press conference with her and some other women to protest the impending repeal of New York's new abortion law—the same one that
Cosmo
had covered in its November 1970 issue, soon after the law passed. “
I said a mighty yes,” Helen told her readers in the September 1971 issue of
Cosmo
. “Well, whether the press conference had anything to do with it I'm not sure (Betty is a powerful speaker), but the daddy of the abortion repeal bill, New York Senate Majority Leader Earl W. Brydges, decided to kill it. Hooray!”

By 1971, the women's movement was a visible presence on TV, in newspapers, and in magazines, but having a magazine of its own was a different story, and early into their search,
the founders of
Ms.
were having a difficult time finding financial backers.

Convincing investors to pour money into an alternative women's magazine was tough enough, but they were asking for a lot more than that. When they told those investors that they also wanted to retain at least 51 percent of the stock, screen ads for content demeaning to women (say, a beer company's depiction of a sexy girl straddling a rocket), and donate 10 percent of the magazine's profits to the women's liberation movement, many potential investors backed off. Others never saw the appeal in the first place. At most there would be 10,000 to 20,000 women interested in the issues they proposed covering, these skeptics said, not nearly enough to support a national magazine; certainly not anywhere near the 100,000 women the founders hoped to reach in the beginning.

Then came a couple of breakthroughs. First,
Washington Post
publisher Katharine Graham contributed $20,000 in seed money to help jump-start
Ms.
Next, Clay Felker came along with an offer too good to refuse. In August he still hadn't committed to a subject for
New York
's year-end double issue. For a while he had been exploring the possibility of publishing various “one-shots,” special issues on a theme that could become ongoing titles, depending on their newsstand success. Felker volunteered to finance a sample issue of
Ms.
in the pages of
New York
, suggesting that the two magazines could split the proceeds fifty-fifty. It was the best of both worlds:
New York
would pay the production costs of the first issue, but
Ms.
would have editorial control. After the debut of the first issue, Felker's financial participation would end, leaving
Ms
. to be as independent as its name suggested.

They took the deal. With Felker's early backing, Gloria Steinem could continue focusing on the editorial side of the operation—assigning articles for the debut issue of
Ms.
, which would preview as a condensed, forty-page insert in
New York
that winter.
In a small, cramped workspace, a handful of people worked around the
clock putting together the full-length Preview Issue, which would herald their national debut. (Both issues were called previews, which is confusing—the shortened
New York
version came out in December 1971, while the full-length issue of
Ms.
actually came out in January 1972. It was
labeled “Spring” just in case it dwelled on shelves until then.)

In addition to an article on “How to Write Your Own Marriage Contract,” written by
Eye
's former editor Susan Edmiston, the full-length
Ms.
included an essay by Anselma Dell'Olio arguing that the sexual revolution was a war waged by men—and not to the benefit of women. (“
A sexually liberated woman without a feminist consciousness is nothing more than a new variety of prostitute,” she wrote.) Also featured was “We Have Had Abortions,” a statement signed by fifty-three women who either had abortions themselves or knew someone who had. Gloria Steinem, Nora Ephron, Anaïs Nin, Susan Sontag, and Billie Jean King were among the names on the statement—soon to be addressed to the White House—which provided a card for readers to fill out and return to
Ms.
to help raise awareness.

Jane O'Reilly, a former colleague of Steinem's from
New York
, turned in her piece about the American housewife who was at once tired of feeling invisible and powerless in her own home and fortified by the knowledge that she was not alone. Women all over the country were having “clicks” of consciousness as they watched the men in their lives wait for dinner to appear and the dishes to be washed and the toys to be picked up off the stairs without lifting a finger to help. Click! Click! Click! “
Those clicks are coming faster and faster,” she wrote. “They were nearly audible last summer, which was a very angry summer for American women. Not redneck-angry from screaming because we are so frustrated and unfulfilled-angry, but clicking-things-into-place-angry, because
we have suddenly and shockingly perceived the basic disorder in what has been believed to be the natural order of things. One little click turns on a thousand others.”

Gloria chose to feature “The Housewife's Moment of Truth” on the cover, along with a one-of-a-kind cover girl who happened to be blue.
The artist Miriam Wosk painted a cerulean, modern-day version of the famously fierce Hindu goddess, Kali; her multiple arms juggling a typewriter, frying pan, steering wheel, and other objects symbolizing the many demands in a woman's life.

On December 20, 1971,
New York
's double issue hit newsstands. “
Until now, the Women's Movement has lacked an effective national publication to give voice to its ideas. We have placed our knowledge and experience at Gloria's disposal to help shape such a magazine,” Felker wrote in his editor's letter that accompanied the insert. “
Ms.
, like
New York
, will concern itself with one of the most significant movements of our time.”

Skeptics had laughed off the idea of a women's lib magazine, but that issue set a newsstand record, selling more copies than
New York
had ever sold before. Soon, delivery trucks drove 300,000 full-length issues of
Ms.
around the country.

At $1.50 apiece, the copies were supposed to last for at least eight weeks, but
they sold out in eight days, attracting the attention of the industry and investors. If the spring preview had stayed on shelves for a little longer, the blue goddess might have shared a shelf with February's
Cosmo
cover girl, a sultry redhead in a dusty-rose halter dress, posing seductively next to the blurb, “How Good a Lover Are You?”

B
Y THE EARLY
Seventies, the
Cosmo
look was so iconic that humor magazines had no choice but to spoof it (best of all was
Harvard Lampoon
's parody issue featuring a cross-eyed model in a
plunging yellow dress next to cover lines like “10 Ways to Decorate Your Uterine Wall”), but
Cosmopolitan
's art department was in crisis. Linda Cox, once an assistant art director, quit because she couldn't stand working for the difficult art director, Lene Bernbom. In 1971, Lene left, and Helen began the process of finding a new art director to replace her—she eventually hired several who didn't work out for various reasons.


Boom-boom-boom, one after the other,” Linda says. “One guy would shut the door and screw models on the desk. Another woman had a bottle of bourbon in her lower left-hand drawer. Another person was there . . . they broke her back before she could do anything. Some people just weren't good enough.”

Toward the end of 1972, one of Linda's former coworkers at
Cosmopolitan
, a slim, dark-haired woman named Marni, became the next to claim the title of art director when Helen promoted her from an associate position.
“Marni called me and said, ‘Please come back—you have to help me. I don't know what I'm doing,'” Linda says.

A new mother to an infant son, Linda was ready for a steady job and paycheck. Shortly after Marni called, she came back to
Cosmopolitan
as an associate art director. Marni and Linda worked well together, and Helen was happy, but she was about to lose her art director yet again—this time to a chubby, fifteen-year-old Indian boy who was alternately known to his peace-seeking followers as Guru Maharaj Ji, Lord of the Universe, and the one Perfect Master.
By the following year, his American disciples would number in the tens of thousands. Many were young, college educated, and from well-off families, and they were encouraged to give their worldly possessions to the movement.


She was so completely swept away,” Linda says of Marni. “She went to a lecture in New York, and she came in to work the
next day and said, ‘I've got to leave to go to Switzerland and hear him speak again.' The next week, she went to Switzerland. I kind of covered for her, but she didn't come back, and weeks went by. I called her mother, and her mother was crying: ‘Marni's given everything up, everything! She's had to give all her money to the guru, and she's decided to stay.'”

Not long after that, Helen promoted Linda to art director, a position she kept for twenty-four years.

( 47 )

C
OSMOPOLITAN
N
UDE
M
AN

1972


I thought it was a hoot. A clever takeoff.”

—Hugh Hefner on Burt Reynolds's nude centerfold in
Cosmo

I
t was a story made for gossip columns: As early as 1970,
Women's Wear Daily
caught a whiff of the latest
Cosmo
happening, and it had all the makings of a scandal. “
Helen Gurley Brown of Cosmopolitan magazine reportedly has a collection of photos of celebrities posing in the nude,”
WWD
announced in “Eye” that January. Shortly after the item appeared, Helen sent off a letter to the editors, cutely correcting their report. “You really are so naughty,” she began the note, which ran about a week later, typos and all. Besides, where on earth would she go to find pictures of naked famous people? It wasn't as though actors went around with nude photos of themselves in their portfolios, showing them off to magazine editors.

Three days later, “Eye” ran another item about “The Further Adventures of Mother Brown and the Great Male Nude Fold-Out Caper,” after getting a phone call from George Walsh, who set the record straight: Yes, it was true that Helen was on the hunt for a suitable movie actor to be photographed in a “relatively coy pose” for a full-color foldout in
Cosmopolitan
, but she still hadn't found the right man for the job. No, it was
not
true that she was
“collecting pornography,” as “Eye” had implied. It
was no longer a secret that
something
was in the works, but even Helen wasn't yet sure what it was.

The idea first came to her a couple of years before.
Men liked to look at women's bodies, and women liked to look at men's bodies—it just wasn't as commonly known. And no wonder: Men had been plastering nude pinup girls on their walls ever since the dawn of
Playboy
, but women had no equivalent.

In December 1968, Helen wrote a memo to Dick Deems and John R. Miller titled “
COSMOPOLITAN NUDE MAN
.” Hearst had been trying to deflect the constant comparisons between
Cosmo
and
Playboy
, not encourage them, but Helen had proved again and again that sex sells. Shortly after she raised the idea of a male nude centerfold, she got the money she needed to catch her man—this time, on camera. The only question was: Which man?

She wanted a famous actor, a big Hollywood name, someone like James Coburn, the magnetic tough guy who recently had starred as a suave secret agent in the 1966 James Bond parody,
Our Man Flint
.
Cosmo
issued the request, and Coburn agreed to pose on the condition that he could select the pictures.
Inspired by the Italian painter Caravaggio, the photographer Guy Webster was going for a lush Renaissance feel when he showed up at Coburn's Beverly Hills estate with assorted Moroccan-style rugs, curtains, and velvet pillows in a palette of burgundy and gold.

As a beautiful woman taught a naked yoga class outside in the backyard, Coburn stripped and stretched out on a rug, nude except for his beard and a piece of embroidered maroon fabric draped over his crotch. He was clearly a man who was comfortable with his sexuality, and his confidence translated to the photos, but when Helen saw the slides, she was sorely disappointed. She wanted a beefcake with a big smile, and they gave her Bacchus with a beard. “
Apparently he is in his mystical phase right now,”
Helen wrote to Deems and Miller. They had to get the concept just right or else not do it at all.

Despite Helen's best attempts, nobody wanted to be
Cosmo
's pinup boy.
The rejections piled up: Paul Newman. Joe Namath. Robert Redford. Clint Eastwood. Warren Beatty. Tony Curtis. Elliott Gould. Frank Langella. Dustin Hoffman.

Helen was discouraged, but she refused to settle. She wasn't interested in “Mr. Average household face,” she told her girls in her January 1971 editor's letter. She wanted someone famous and fun to look at—they deserved no less.
“You may or may
not
ever see a male nude centerfold in
COSMO
,” she wrote, “but I
hope
you do.”

And then, one day when she was not looking, she found him. Burt Reynolds hadn't been on her list of Possibles. He wasn't a star—not yet—but he was sexy. All man and mustache and swagger. The fact that he liked older women—he was dating Dinah Shore, nineteen years his senior—also intrigued her. And he was clearly sharp. Sharp enough to guest-host
The Tonight Show
, where Helen was a regular guest. She and Johnny had a rapport, but her chemistry with Burt Reynolds was explosive. “Like fire and gasoline,” Reynolds later recalled in his 1994 memoir,
My Life
.

Under the hot studio lights, they sparred and put on a great show into the commercial breaks. When Reynolds glibly suggested that men bought
Playboy
for its articles, Helen scoffed, and he came back with a joke about
Cosmo
's inane love advice.

“Are you a sexist?” Helen asked accusingly.

“I bet in ten years that word will be very tired and so dated that you'll sound like a dipshit to ask,” he countered.

They swapped barbs to the delight of the audience, and when they were off the air, Helen went for the kill and asked Reynolds to be
Cosmo
's first male nude centerfold. Reynolds was, for once, speechless.

“Why?” he finally asked.

“Because,” she cooed, “you're the only one who could do it with a twinkle in your eye.”

Reynolds deflected the offer with more jokes. But Helen wasn't joking. The next day, she called him at his hotel—she wouldn't take no for an answer.

His agent and manager told him not to do it. After years of playing cops on TV in shows like
Hawk
and
Dan August
, he was about to make a name for himself as a serious film actor with his role as a macho Atlanta businessman on a bad canoe trip in
Deliverance
, based on James Dickey's novel. He was thirty-six, and this performance could change his career. Why risk ruining it for a dumb gag?

Reynolds ignored their advice. He thought it sounded like a good send-up. “On the back of the foldout, I told them I wanted to underscore the
Playboy
takeoff with a photograph of me pushing a grocery cart,” Reynolds later wrote. “I'd list my favorite colors, hobbies, books, and be quoted saying, ‘I'm looking forward to becoming an actress.' But I got screwed.”

H
ELEN LEARNED HER
lesson after the Coburn shoot. This time she didn't mess around. Forget Caravaggio. She wanted Scavullo. He was her best man—or rather, her breast man. For seven years now he had been shooting
Cosmo
's cover girls in slips and body stockings, push-up and padded bras,
using masking tape, Vaseline, bobby socks, baseballs, and whatever else he needed to create the illusion of deeper, duskier cleavage. Women had always been sex objects. It was time for a man to have a turn, but the photo shouldn't be too serious, she told Scavullo, nothing soulful. It should be fun.

The day of the shoot, Reynolds's PR rep drove him to Scavullo's studio. On the way over, they stopped at a liquor store so that
Reynolds could buy a few bottles of vodka. He finished one bottle before they even got to the studio, which was colder than an ice bucket. Reynolds tried not to shiver. Or shrivel. After meeting Scavullo and a couple of his assistants, he asked for a glass, went to his dressing room, and cracked open his second fifth of vodka.

He would need the liquid courage soon enough. In the main studio, Scavullo and his assistants made some last-minute adjustments to the set they had created. Somewhat inoculated against the cold, Reynolds took off his clothes and stretched out on a bearskin rug. After letting it all hang out for a moment, he slung a hairy arm over his main attraction, and smiled with just enough teeth to hang on to his cigarillo.


Fabulous! Fabulous like that!” Scavullo said from behind his Hasselblad camera.

Reynolds knew the exact moment when Scavullo got his shot. “I always know,” he later wrote. “I don't have to do forty takes to know when I've got the take I want.
I've caught the butterfly. It can feel it flapping around on my finger. I don't have to open my hand to see if it's there.”

Still, the session lasted for another hour. Boredom and vodka made him bold. At one point he pretended to hump the bearskin rug. Why not mess around a little and make people laugh? No one would ever see the outtakes of him totally nude and rude. He had been told he'd be getting all the negatives.

T
HE
A
PRIL
1972 issue sold out instantly. Among the stories advertised on the cover was a profile of Bella Abzug, but that's not the one that stopped thousands of women in their tracks as they shopped for groceries at the supermarket or walked past the newsstand on the way to the subway. They were too busy reading a bright-orange banner slashed across the bottom right corner:

Cosmo
's Famous Extra Bonus Takeoff!

AT LAST A
MALE
NUDE CENTERFOLD

The Naked Truth About Guess Who!!

Helen said who in her editor's letter, but the centerfold needed an introduction all its own, and she assigned features editor Barbara Creaturo to prepare readers for the pages to come. Why was it, Creaturo wondered in her preface, that men had been ogling naked women in magazines forever, but if a girl wanted to catch a glimpse of a nude man, her best bet was to find a copy of
National Geographic
? Naturally, the double standard existed because the men controlling those publications catered to their fellow men, but social mores were changing. Women were becoming bolder in their sexuality, which was not to say they were becoming more promiscuous; they were “just
lusty
and honest in their appetite for an appreciation of attractive men,” Creaturo wrote. Fortunately, the modern man was willing, even eager, to show off his body and be a sex object.
“As for you (that COSMOPOLITAN girl), we know you don't need any instruction on how to appreciate the look of a beautiful man . . . and now (if you have not already done so), you probably want to flip the page. . . .”

It was a direct invitation. How could a girl resist?

More to the point: Now that
Cosmo
said it was okay to look and even important (in the name of equality!),
why
would she resist?

That thatch of dark hair. Those halfback shoulders. Those straight white teeth, balancing the tip of a tiny cigar . . . Open the rest of the gatefold, and there he was: a man in three sections, from his hairpiece and perfect teeth down to his splenectomy scar and nest of curly pubes. All in full color. Man on bear. Pelt on pelt.

As it turned out, Reynolds was more surprised than anybody
when he saw the photo that ran in
Cosmo
. Helen had invited Reynolds and Dinah Shore to the
Cosmo
offices to look over the pictures with her and about a dozen female editors, who had been running magnifying glasses up and down his furry body ever since the images arrived.

He had liked a shot where he was laughing with a who-gives-a-shit smile on his face, like he was in on the joke. That's the shot that was supposed to have run, but mysteriously, it disappeared. “
The original slide was lost,” says Mallen De Santis. “It had been on the light box, and it was the first choice. Everyone turned the whole art department inside out, trying to find it. It never turned up.”

Reynolds wasn't a fan of their second choice. He thought he looked smug. “Apparently the people at
Cosmo
took this thing more seriously than I did,” he told a reporter after the issue came out. “I preferred the shot where I was laughing at myself.”

He expected to be in on the joke; he didn't expect to
be
the joke. Reynolds was starring onstage in
The Rainmaker
in Chicago when the new issue came out. The next day, the audience started catcalling. He couldn't go anywhere without being heckled by some smart-ass shouting, “
Hey, I didn't recognize you with your clothes on.” After shows, screaming women mobbed him with their April issues in hand, opened to “That
Cosmopolitan
Man.”

After years of playing bit parts on TV, he was getting offered movie roles—at up to $150,000 per picture. “And a major factor in his ascendancy into the big time is the
Cosmopolitan
photograph as Playmate of the Year,” Mary Alice Kellogg wrote for Newsweek Feature Service. But Reynolds worried that he was getting attention for all the wrong reasons. “Face it, these women wouldn't be going crazy over me at the theater if it wasn't for
Cosmo
,” he said. “Now when I walk on stage I feel like I'm nude.”

Across the country, housewives taped the centerfold to their
refrigerators and above their bathtubs. College girls displayed it on the walls of their dorms, and in Huntsville, Alabama, members of the English department at Grissom High School pinned the centerfold to a wall, with a fig leaf covering Reynolds's discreetly placed arm, to see how many teachers would lift it.

After the issue came out, Reynolds received hundreds of Polaroids of naked women, and some of naked men. One fan in Nova Scotia regularly sent her pubic hair encased in wax paper to the actor for the next three years. Once, when Reynolds checked into a hotel, he pulled back the bedcover only to see his own hirsute body printed on the sheets.

The image was reproduced on key chains, coasters, wallpaper, and women's underwear. Every time he stepped onto a plane, women whistled at him. Months later in Denmark, where he was promoting
Deliverance
on its world tour, a woman showed him a porn magazine. Reynolds was surprised to see a photograph of himself on the cover—somehow, someone had gotten an outtake of him humping the bearskin rug.

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