Authors: Marc Eliot
Randolph Scott went on to a successful career in Hollywood westerns of the '50s. He retired from films in 1962, and was worth several hundred million dollars. That same year he left Los Angeles with his second wife and retired to North Carolina, where he played golf and followed his many investments. He died in 1987, one year after Grant, at the age of eighty-nine. Although he remained friendly with his former roommate, he rarely saw him again after Grant married Barbara Hutton.
Two years after his death, on October 19, 1988, the only formal public memorial ceremony was held for Cary Grant, attended by 940 of his most
famed admirers and friends. They paid tribute to him at a $1,000-a-plate dinner at emcee and host Merv Griffin's Beverly Hilton Hotel, with the proceeds going to the Princess Grace Foundation. Barbara Harris, a foundation trustee, helped organize the evening. Dyan Cannon was not invited and did not attend. Among those who did were Frank Sinatra and his wife Barbara, Monaco's Prince Rainier, his children Princess Stephanie and Prince Albert, Shirley Temple Black, Griffin's girlfriend Eva Gabor, Jennifer Grant and her then live-in fiancé television producer Randy Zisk, Gregory Peck, Richard Baskin, Barbra Streisand, Michael Caine, Jackie Collins, Liza Minnelli, Jack Haley Jr., Kirk Kerkorian, Angie Dickinson, Dina Merrill, Robert Wagner, Eva Marie Saint, Maureen Donaldson, and Sammy Davis Jr.
Also in 1988, a pavilion at the Hollywood Park Race Track was dedicated to Cary Grant. John Forsythe spoke at the ceremony: “Cary Grant was a man who had such presence and magnetism that every close-up was riveting to watch—you couldn't take your eyes off him. And did you ever notice that when he was presenting a trophy down in the winners circle after a big race, everything stopped at the track. People put down their racing forms and picked up their binoculars to get a closer look at him. Others ran down to the winners circle to catch a glimpse of him. Believe me, that rarely happens at a racetrack. He was also a star in the business community, a star as a member of our board of directors, and perhaps most important of all, he was a star as a friend.”
In the universe of the imagination, as long as there are movies and audiences who seek to find in them the reflection of their highest hopes and their deepest dreams, Cary Grant's star will indeed shine forever, offering the illusion of the pleasure of his company as it guides us along the most difficult journey of all: the one into ourselves.
The following research facilities were used by the author:
The Margaret Herrick Library of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences,
Beverly Hills, California
The New York Public Library, New York City
The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, New York City
The British Film Institute
The Bristol Information Center
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———.
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———.
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“the man from dream city.”
Kael, “The Man from Dream City.”
the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.
Mayer organized the multiplestudio “house” organization to deal with the fundamental shift in Hollywood toward labor unionism in what had been, for its first twenty years, a freewheeling, managementdominated factory town. The Academy was formally introduced by Mayer at a dinner party held at the Ambassador Hotel on January 17, 1927. Douglas Fairbanks, a charter member of the Academy (and one of the founders of United Artists), came up with the idea of merit awards for achievement as a way to promote movies to the public.
Grant's snubbing by the Academy.
Grant was by no means the only major star never to have won a competitive Oscar. Many Hollywood legends—Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton, the Marx Brothers, W. C. Fields, Greta Garbo, Fred Astaire, Kirk Douglas, Mickey Rooney, Maurice Chevalier, Bob Hope, Barbara Stanwyck, Robert Mitchum, Errol Flynn, Edward G. Robinson, Danny Kaye, and Jerry Lewis—never won an Oscar for their acting. Alfred Hitchcock never won one for direction. Grant, ever the outsider, made this observation about the Oscars after Fredric March's 1946 win for Best Actor (in William Wyler's
The Best Years of Our Lives
over Grant's longtime friend Laurence Olivier's self-directed
Hamlet
): “There is something embarrassing about all these wealthy people publicly congratulating each other. When it all began, we kidded ourselves and said, ‘All right, Freddie March, we know you're making a million dollars. Now come up and get your little medal [for
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
] for it.'” Grant's specialty, “light comedy,” he was fond of telling friends and interviewers alike, “has little chance for an Oscar.”
Aided by a 1948 landmark antitrust lawsuit.
The federal lawsuit was
SIMPP v. Paramount Pictures.
The decision in the case was handed down in February 1948 and
effectively ended the majors' forty-year domination of the production, distribution, and exhibition of motion pictures.
“poor judgment.”
The lawsuit was filed on August 8, 1969, in Los Angeles Superior Court against MCA and Universal Studios, asking for damages in excess of $8 million over the sale of four pictures coproduced by Grant and Donen that were financed by Universal prior to their eventually being purchased by MCA. The four films were
The Grass Is Greener, That Touch of Mink, Operation Petticoat,
and
Father Goose.
Sources:
Los Angeles Herald Examiner
and
Variety.
The sale voided the lawsuit.
“personal reasons.”
Quoted in Sheilah Graham, syndicated gossip column, March 1970.
Cynthia Bouron … One columnist claimed to have known it was coming …
In his March 1970 column in the
Hollywood Citizen-News,
entertainment editor John Austin wrote, “I and my fellow columnists have been aware of this story for weeks, some of us for months… Few of us are muckrakers and it is a great shame, a tragedy, in fact, that Cary Grant, at the age of 66 with an honorable career behind him, has been subjected to all this before it has even been established that he is the father of Miss Bouron's child.”
Grant secretly flew to the Bahamas …
Grant zigzagged his way around the world during the Bouron affair, traveling to Bristol, then the Bahamas, stopping in New York at the Warwick Hotel, then back to Beverly Hills, then to Las Vegas and home again. He flew in a private DC-3 that Howard Hughes provided for his unlimited use.
Judge Laurence J. Rittenband.
Grant may actually have fled on the advice of his attorney, fearing the hard line that Rittenband was known for, especially when it came to celebrities. Prior to the Bouron case, Rittenband had presided over the Elvis Presley divorce and Marlon Brando's custody battle, and in each instance his decision heavily favored the wife. A few years after the Bouron case, Rittenband would be the presiding judge in the sensational Roman Polanski sex-with-a-minor case, in which, it was rumored, despite an agreed-upon plea bargain he intended to throw the book at the wayward director. Like Grant, Polanski, very likely on the advice of his attorney, fled the country.
The scandal, however, refused to die.
Many questions remain unanswered to this day. Bouron was a high-priced call girl and had a long criminal record. The most serious charge against her was a felony arrest for theft in 1967, which was eventually dismissed. She had been married twice and was the mother of two previous children. Her first husband was former stuntman Milos Milocevic, whom she had married in 1964 for a reportedly high five-figure sum, to save him from deportation to his native Yugoslavia, where he faced a fifteen-year prison term for army desertion. Two years later, in February 1966, five months before her pre–agreed-upon divorce from him became final, Milocevic's dead body was found beside that of Barbara Rooney, who was married at the time to actor Mickey Rooney. He apparently committed suicide after killing her. On October 30, 1973, three years after Bouron's failed attempt to bring a paternity suit against Grant, her dead body was found in the trunk of a stolen car in a Hollywood supermarket parking lot. The cause of death was determined by the Los Angeles Coroner's Office to have been bludgeoning
with a claw hammer. Finally, the child Bouron accused Grant of fathering, a girl she named Stephanie Andrea Grant Bouron, was described in the police report as being “of strong Negro blood.” The murder case was never solved. According to the North Hollywood police, “several friends of the victim stated she would often pick up men at bars or restaurants.” When asked for a comment about the discovery of Bouron's body, Grant had none.
a “close friend.”
John Austin,
Hollywood Citizen-News,
April 2, 1970.
As the night of the Awards approached.
Grant gave Dyan Cannon the okay for an exclusive interview with syndicated gossip columnist Sheilah Graham one week after he received his Award. In it, Cannon gave some details of the night she and Grant spent together the night before the ceremonies. According to Cannon, Grant read his acceptance speech to her and asked her approval of its content; and she “read him my loser's speech.” Graham ended her column hinting that Grant and Cannon were contemplating getting back together, a bit of deliberate “family man” PR that Grant no doubt encouraged to help repair whatever damage his image might have suffered over Bouron. Grant took early control of his relationship with the Hollywood and national gossip columnists, and it was said that despite his always friendly and cooperative demeanor, he loathed every one of them. He sued Graham in 1940 over a piece she ran suggesting a little bit too strongly that Grant was gay and everybody in Hollywood knew it. He later dropped the lawsuit. His regular “contacts,” as he called them, were Hedda Hopper, John Austin, Ben Maddox, Leonard Lyons, Sidney Skolsky, Earl Wilson, Walter Winchell, and Ed Sullivan.
a six-minute montage of clips.
The montage of Cary Grant clips was put together by Mike Nichols. The only clip Grant asked Nichols to specifically include was his crying scene from 1941's
Penny Serenade,
a performance for which he was to receive one of his two Oscar nominations. The only film he insisted be excluded was
Singapore Sue,
a short he made while still in New York. It was his first appearance on film, and he always claimed he couldn't stand it.
“I'm reminded of a piece of advice …”
Cary Grant, “How to Dress Confidently,”
This Week
(supplement to the
Los Angeles Times
), April 1, 1962.
Bristol is the seventh-largest city.
Official University of Bristol website—“History, Architecture, Churches, Statues and Landmarks.”
http://www.bris.ac.uk/
.
Archibald Alec Leach.
Alec
is the familiar form of
Alexander
(as
Dick
is to
Richard
) and is the way the name appears in the birth records.
the unexpected death of her firstborn.
“It was only recently that I recognized a clue to the cause of my mother's retreat within herself. Some years prior to my birth my parents had another child…a baby boy who, alas, died of some sort of convulsions after only a few months of life.” Grant, in “Archie Leach.”
Archibald Leach was born on January 18, 1904.
The birth records of Archibald Alec (Alexander) Grant were not registered until February 29, 1904, five weeks after his
arrival—not an unusual amount of time in those days. Nevertheless, this time lapse has resulted in excessive confusion as to his actual birth date, his ethnic background, and his “true” parental heritage—specifically that he was secretly Jewish and/or adopted. The author found no substantial factual evidence supporting either of these claims. Nor has any solid evidence been found for any conspiratorial coverup of “real” origins, parents, heritage, and the like. At least one previous biographer has used reports that Grant was circumcised as “proof” that he was Jewish. If he was circumcised, it is probably because his mother insisted on it after the death of her first son, believing, as many did at the time, that circumcision helped prevent infant infection and disease. No reliable records have thus far been found of any such procedure actually having been performed on the baby Leach for either medical or religious reasons. Furthermore, while it is almost always done within days after birth, circumcision may be performed at any time.
“As a little boy …”
Quoted in Cleveland Amory, “That Touch of Class,”
Parade,
September 22, 1985, pp. 4–9.
Elsie enjoyed keeping little Archie's hair long.
“It seemed to me that I was kept in baby clothes much longer than any other child and perhaps, for a while, wasn't sure whether I was a boy or a girl,” Grant wrote in “Archie Leach.” Grant's meticulous attention to his wardrobe, particularly in his later films such as
That Touch of Mink
and
North by Northwest,
as well as his obsessional pursuit of the finest personal custom tailoring, echo Elias's occupation as a tailor, a sartorial link to his happier childhood memories of his father.
he still often preferred wearing women's nylon panties.
Harris,
Cary Grant,
194, quoting from the unpublished 1959 Joe Hyams interview made during the filming of
Operation Petticoat.
“My parents tried so hard …”
Amory, “Touch of Class.”
The value of good clothes.
Grant's complete quote regarding the value of good shoes: “I learned a lot about clothes and how to buy them from my father. We couldn't afford a great deal when I was a boy growing up in Bristol, England, but we were not unaware of what others who had money were doing. I remember I had bought three or four pairs of shoes. They were not very costly. My father reprimanded me. He said one should always look good and wear well-made things even if one doesn't have a lot of money. He taught me about clothes and that I should buy one good pair of shoes rather than four inexpensive pairs that look cheap and won't last. Shoes are very important. One should always have at least two pairs to switch off now and then. Yes, my father taught me to buy better clothes and less of them.” Davis, “Cary Grant.”
Left-handedness.
According to Leslie Caron, Grant's costar in
Father Goose,
in 1964: “He was basically left-handed, but he had trained himself to be ambidextrous. One time the prop man set a bottle he was to use in the scene by his right hand, and Cary flashed very angrily, ‘How do you expect me to pour the bottle with this hand?'” Caron, quoted by Marla Brooks, in
Lefthander,
January/February 1995, 13. In “Archie Leach,” Grant expresses gratitude that no one discouraged his natural left-handedness, as was often done in both British and American schools of the early twentieth century, where the preference was seen as an affliction.
“I [made] the mistake of thinking that each of my wives was my mother.”
Harris,
Cary Grant,
14; Grant, “Archie Leach.”
“came right up the Avon River …”
Grant, “Archie Leach.”
“That's when I
knew.
”
Grant, “Archie Leach.”
That August Archie eagerly signed a three-year contract.
“
MEMORANDUM OF AGREE
-
MENT
: Made on this day 9th, August, between Robert Pender of 247 Brixton Road, London, on the one part, Elias Leach of 12 Campbell Street, Bristol, on the other part. The said Robert Pender agrees to employ the son of the said Elias Leach, Archie Leach, in his troupe at a weekly salary of 10 shillings a week with board and lodging and everything found for the stage, and when not working full board and lodgings. This salary to be increased as the said Archie Leach improves in his profession and he agrees to remain in the employ of Robert Pender till he is eighteen years of age or a six months notice on either side. Robert Pender undertaking to teach him dancing and other accomplishments needful for his work. Archie Leach agrees to work to the best of his abilities. Signed, Bob Pender.” Nelson,
Evenings with Cary Grant,
39.
“cultured English talk.”
Ernest Kingdon (one of the cousins of young Archie who lived with him and his mother), quoted in Godfrey,
Cary Grant,
41.
“doggedly strive …”
Grant, “Archie Leach.”
“I never associated him …”
Peter Cadbury (a member of the famed chocolate family and a native Bristolean), interview by Xan Brooks,
Guardian,
August 17, 2001.
the famous B. F. Keith vaudeville circuit.
At the time, the most prestigious vaudeville circuit in America.