Howard Hawks: The Grey Fox of Hollywood

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Authors: Todd McCarthy

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Howard Hawks

HOWARD HAWKS

The Grey Fox of Hollywood

TODD McCARTHY

Copyright © 1997 by Todd McCarthy

For photo credits, see pages 755–756.

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer, who may quote brief passages in a review. Any members of educational institutions
wishing to photocopy part or all of the work for classroom use, or publishers who would like to obtain permission to include the work in an anthology, should send their inquiries to Grove/Atlantic, Inc., 841 Broadway, New York, NY 10003.

Published simultaneously in Canada
Printed in the United States of America

FIRST PAPERBACK EDITION

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

McCarthy,
Todd.

Howard Hawks : the grey fox of Hollywood / Todd McCarthy.

   p.      cm.

Filmography: p.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

eBook ISBN-13: 978-0-8021-9640-8

1. Hawks, Howard, 1896–1977 2. Motion picture producers and directors—United States—Biography. I. Title.

PN1998.3.H38M33 1997

791.43′0233′092—dc21

[B]

96–49075

Design by Laura Hammond Hough

Grove Press
841 Broadway
New York, NY 10003

TO SASHA AND MADELEINE

Contents

Introduction: The Engineer as Poet

1 Origins

2 Boy of Privilege

3 Rich Kid in Hollywood

4 Showtime

5 The Sound Barrier

6 A New Dawn

7 The Criminal Code

8 Tough Guys: Hughes, Hecht, Hays, and Scarface

9 Back to Warners: The Crowd Roars

10 Tiger Shark

11 Sidetracked at MGM: Faulkner, Thalberg, and Today We Live

12 Viva Villa!

13 Screwball: Twentieth Century

14 Barbary Coast

15 Flying High: Ceiling Zero

16 The Road to Glory

17 Include Me Out: Come and Get It

18 Big Spender: RKO, Gunga Din, and Bringing Up Baby

19 Only Angels

20 His Girl Friday

21 Slim, Hemingway, and An Outlaw

22 Sergeant York

23 Catching Fire

24 Air Force

25 The Bel-Air Front

26 Not in the Script: To Have and Have Not and The Big Sleep

27 The Urge to Independence: Red River

28 Slim Walks, Money Talks

29 Skirting Trouble: I Was a Male War Bride

30 An Old Boss, A New Mate

31 The Fox at Fox: Monkey Business and Gentlemen Prefer Blondes

32 In the Land of the Pharaohs

33 Sojourn in Europe

34 Bravo

35 Fun in the Bush:
Hatari!

36 A Fishy Story:
Man’s Favorite Sport?

37 Fast Cars and Young Women

38 The Last Roundup

39 From Sand to Dust

40 Posterity

Filmography

Acknowledgments

Notes

Bibliography

Index

Howard Hawks

Introduction:
The Engineer as Poet

Howard Hawks is the most important of the classical Hollywood directors of whom there has been no biography. Certainly, he has long since emerged from his status as the exclusive property of film cultists and buffs to become recognized as one of the half dozen great American filmmakers whose careers began in the pre–World War II era. At the very least, a dozen
of his pictures are as universally admired as any produced by the major studios. He pursued the requisite colorful life filled with sport, drink, and women; befriended the rich, famous, and talented; possessed ego to burn; and lived long enough to, however casually, build and bend the facts of his life into legend.

But the fact remains that Howard Hawks, despite having had his name above the
title virtually from the beginning of his career, was never as well known as such contemporaries as Alfred Hitchcock, Frank Capra, John Ford, Cecil B. De Mille, William Wyler, or Billy Wilder. He was only once nominated for an Oscar, which he did not win. Although between 1939 and 1949 Hawks enjoyed a remarkable unbroken string of hits that placed him in the commercial front rank, this success helped
brand him as a reliable supplier of entertainment, discoverer of new talent, and director of big stars, not as an American artist of the first caliber. To become a brand-name Hollywood filmmaker in that era, one either had to appear in one’s own films (Chaplin, Stroheim, Keaton, Welles), win awards (Ford, Capra, Wyler, McCarey, Wilder, Kazan, Stevens), exclusively specialize in a certain kind
of production (Hitchcock, De Mille, Lubitsch, Sternberg for a while), or cultivate a reputation as a social commentator of rare and bold seriousness (Stanley Kramer). Superficially, at least, Hawks specialized in diversity; and since every bone in his body opposed pretension, politics, and pompousness in pictures, the public has always had trouble automatically associating his name with specific films.

Going one step further, the Hawks style is, at a glance, invisible. His films’ visuals are the least distinctive of any of the major directors, his work
less immediately identifiable than that of most masters. Ironically, Hawks was one of the most stylized of all filmmakers, but the stylization had more to do with rituals, behavior, dialogue delivery, performance, and abstracting the action from
the real world than with distinctive camera angles, editing patterns, a regular stock company, repeated settings, or anything else that would breed familiarity in the viewer. In other words, the stylization was disguised by a deceptive directness, by humor, by the openness of the characters and the liveliness of the players. This remarkable achievement meant that Hawks would not even be recognized
as an artist for much of his career, but in this he was only the most prominent among many.

In the late 1960s a small film magazine published a cover article called “Who the Hell Is Howard Hawks?” The very title of Robin Wood’s piece, which appeared in advance of his seminal critical book on the director, mocked the lack of serious appreciation of Hawks’s work, a situation that was to be rectified
over the following few years. Ironically, “Who the Hell Was Howard Hawks?” could easily serve as the title for any investigation of Hawks the man. It is far easier to read Hawks, to get a strong sense of what he was all about, through his work than it was in life even for those closest to him. Many people are conveniently called enigmas, but even Hawks’s friends referred to him that way. He
was Sphinxlike, remote, cold, private, intimidating, self-absorbed, a man with eyes like blue ice cubes. He was, like any director worthy of the profession, crafty and controlling, and he never lost self-control. At the same time, the frigid blue eyes could quickly turn warm and impudent. He was invariably a gentleman of impeccable elegance, taste, judgment, and style, a director of infinite generosity
to his performers and crew, a friend of great loyalty, a man of intelligent discrimination. But that there was always a sense of distance, of not really knowing this man, was freely admitted even by those who spent months and years with him.

This distance alone could be enough to discourage any biographer, as could the fact that Howard Hawks was not a man of letters. The few literary exchanges
that do exist are remarkably unrevealing and unconfidential, generally dotted by Hawks’s apologies for not being a better correspondent. Nor did the director keep diaries, memos, or even helpful datebooks. Simply put, Hawks left no contemporaneous record of what he was thinking, feeling, or doing throughout his life, and the material he did leave behind was spotty and virtually accidental.

For
the most part, Hawks’s legacy exists in the form of the interviews he so readily granted late in life, in which he expounded to acolytes about
his career and accomplishments. To anyone with an interest in his work, or in American films in general, these testimonies are fascinating not only for their anecdotal richness but also as a revelation of Hawks’s innate intelligence, of how much thought
and theory he put into what were long regarded variously as examples of Hollywood escapism, star vehicles, and assembly-line products. In their own way, however, the interviews create yet another barrier to an accurate view of Hawks’s life and career, for they go beyond ego in their self-aggrandizement into an advanced realm of imagination and fantasy. Many people have taken Hawks’s beguiling stories
at face value, and many of Hawks’s tall tales involved people who were already dead for twenty-five years when Hawks related the incidents in which he was, coincidentally, the only surviving witness. When cursory research proved Hawks’s versions of events to be exaggerations at best and blatant lies at worst, it served notice that just about everything he ever said would need to be doubted, investigated,
corroborated—when possible.

But this detour provides its own reward, in the sense that it leads one to the substance of Hawks’s nature. That Hawks was a natural storyteller may be a handicap to objectifying his life but a linchpin to defining his character. His disinclination to keep a record of his life anywhere other than in his own head did not represent a deliberate attempt to frustrate later
chroniclers, as it has been with certain self-conscious, self-tailoring artists; nothing could have been further from his mind. Hawks’s account of his own life—in which everything revolved around him, in which he was always right, in which he told Hemingway, Faulkner, Cooper, Grant, Bogart, Wayne, Hepburn, Bacall, and Monroe what was best for them and told Mayer, Warner, Cohn, Goldwyn, Hughes,
Wallis, and Zanuck where to get off—was merely the fantastic flip side of the imagination that went into his film stories.

The other happy truth is that while he may not have done everything he said he did, Hawks also accomplished a great deal. As the photographer Robert Capa said, “There are two kinds of mythomaniacs: The ones who are that way because they have never done anything, and the ones
who have done so much they can never be satisfied with anything. Howard Hawks is the prototype of the second category.” It remains impossible to know why Hawks felt compelled to insist that he was the one who told Josef von Sternberg how to dress Marlene Dietrich or that he instructed his friend Victor Fleming how to direct
Gone with the Wind
or that he was once asked by TWA to take the controls
of a commercial airliner when the pilot took ill midflight. Such preposterous claims were laughed off by his friends during
his lifetime but tend to be taken more seriously when put down in black-and-white by interviewers and film scholars who didn’t choose to challenge Hawks on most of his improbable assertions.

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