Read Dorothy Parker: What Fresh Hell Is This? Online

Authors: Marion Meade

Tags: #American - 20th century - Biography, #Women, #Biography, #Historical, #Authors, #Fiction, #Women and literature, #Literary Criticism, #Parker, #Literary, #Women authors, #Dorothy, #History, #United States, #Women and literature - United States - History - 20th century, #Biography & Autobiography, #American, #20th Century, #General

Dorothy Parker: What Fresh Hell Is This? (38 page)

But not before Dorothy quarreled with her old friend: Ever since she had published a
New Yorker
profile of Hemingway the previous year, Stewart had been simmering with indignation over her praise for a man who had vilified her, even if she knew nothing about it. Dorothy had commended Hemingway as a writer who, unlike others, would never traffic with the gentry who lived on the North Shore of Long Island, and Stewart had assumed those words meant him. In fact, she was probably thinking of herself and Benchley, and of the whole Round Table, who at one time or another had kowtowed to the Lovetts and the Whitneys. It pained Stewart to read her adulatory remarks about his former friend, with whom he had quarreled for her sake, and he told her that the piece had “hurt like hell.” Dorothy swore she had not been thinking of him, and after many cognacs, the misunderstanding was finally smoothed over. Despite Hemingway’s cordiality whenever they happened to meet, his private feelings remained hostile because the following year he composed another poem about her:

Little drops of grain alcohol
Little slugs of gin
Make the mighty notions
Make the double chin—
Lovely Mrs. Parker in the Algonquin
Loves her good dog Robinson
Keeps away from sin
Mr. Hemingway now wears glasses
Better to see to kiss the critics’ asses—

 

It seemed to be the season for quarreling. One morning at breakfast she got embroiled in a ridiculous but upsetting dispute with Gerald, who had reprimanded Baoth with a severity so stinging that Dorothy found it intolerable to witness. When she asked him not to be so hard on the boy, Gerald advised her to mind her own business. It
was
her business, she replied, because she thought he was being mean to his son, and she had a right to express her opinion. Finally she threatened to leave, and Gerald agreed it might be for the best.

While that quarrel was predictably mended, she found the conflicts unsettling. In fact, the atmosphere seethed with tension and festering angers. Patrick’s ordeal had left its mark on the health of both his parents—Gerald suffered from depression and Sara, in poor physical health since her son had fallen ill, developed a gall-bladder disorder. In October, Sara traveled to Cannes for treatment and Dorothy came along as a companion for Honoria, but almost as soon as they reached the Hotel Majestic, she changed her mind about remaining with the Murphys. AM NEARLY GONE WITH LONELINESS AND DISCOURAGEMENT, she cabled Oppenheimer. It was melodramatic but true. From Cannes she cabled Benchley that it would be ALL RIGHT WITH ME IF NEVER SEE ANYONE UNDER SIXTY AGAIN and asked him to send her a kind word.

After booking passage on the
Saturnia,
she wired Viking for a thousand dollars. A few days later, apologizing for being a pest, she requested another thousand because she was having difficulty paying her bills and promised Harold and George repayment from the money Cosmopolitan owed her for “Here We Are.” She remembered to cable birthday greetings to her sister, and finally, to Benchley, she reported that the Saturnia would be sailing from Cannes on November 15 and

ARRIVING NEW YORK SO FAR AS I CAN MAKE OUT SOME TIME IN EARLY APRIL ... AND WILL I BE GLAD TO SEE YOU DEAREST FRED.

 

Getting away from it all had been fine, she wrote, but “when the day comes .that you have to tie a string around your finger to remind yourself of what it was you were forgetting, it is time for you to go back home.” Unfortunately, her bank account was so overdrawn that it looked “positively photographic,” and as a consequence she had to find walking-around money in a hurry. She wanted to retire to a vine-covered cottage in the country where she could “spend the rest of my life raising cheques,” but that idea lacked practicality, and soon she was working for
The New Yorker
again. In January, her Constant Reader column appeared for the first time in two years, opening with “Maybe you think I was just out in the ladies’ room all this time,” and in mid-February, when Benchley went to Hollywood for two months, she agreed to take his place as the magazine’s theater critic. She found the job of play reviewing just as unpleasant as ever. Her first review concluded with a plea, “Personal: Robert Benchley, please come home,” an appeal that might just as easily have been voiced by Gertrude Benchley.

Benchley led a classic double life. His domestic and extramarital arrangements confined Gertrude to Scarsdale, where she seemed content to raise the boys and paste Robert’s newspaper clippings into scrapbooks. After breaking with the chorus girl, Benchley had a lengthy affair with actress Betty Starbuck. After that his love life grew too complex to document easily. In addition to the prostitutes he patronized at Polly Adler’s, he made routine overtures to countless women and very often met with success. At any given time, there were four or five women openly claiming to be madly in love with him. Ending these infatuations proved difficult sometimes. The wife of a well-known banker was so eager to continue sleeping with him that she once crawled through the transom of his room at the Royalton Hotel. In 1931, he began a long-term relationship with Louise “Louie” Macy, a Smith College graduate who worked as a saleswoman at Hattie Carnegie’s fashionable shop. Their first dates were threesomes that included Dorothy, which caused Louie to conclude that Mrs. Parker was one of his lovers. The adoring Louie would do practically anything for him, including the selection of Gertrude’s Christmas gifts at Hattie Carnegie. Benchley treated her—all his women for that matter—with a protective courtliness that verged on the Victorian. Escorting her home at the end of an evening, he shook her hand and said, “Thank you very much. I had a wonderful time.” This performance misled Louie’s sister Gert so completely that it was years before she realized that Louie’s relationship with Benchley had been sexual.

Soon after Dorothy’s return to New York, she met a reporter who worked for the
New York Sun,
a husky, sandy-haired man with a cheerful manner that put people at ease. His name was John McClain, and he was twenty-seven years old. A native of Marion, Ohio, he had played football at Brown where he had been one of the so-called Iron Men, players who never needed a substitute. He returned to Ohio for graduate work at Kenyon College. In spite of his education, McClain remained on the bottom rung of the ladder in New York journalism. He frequently was assigned to cover shipping news and strove for promotion to the
Sun’s
regular ship reporter. For the time being, he scraped along on little money, rode the subway to work, and lived on Morton Street in the Village, where the flat he shared with two other young men seldom knew heat or hot water.

In more ways than one, McClain was a hungry man, determined not to live in a cold-water flat any longer than necessary. Among his assets were blond good looks and a well-built, athletic body, in which he took great pride. He kept fit with regular workouts at a gym. A friend later described him as pink and white, “the male equivalent of a Rubens nude,” while another observer graphically portrayed him as “a bohunk.” So often had women told him he was good in bed that he had come to believe it. He realized that one way to infiltrate New York’s smart circles might be on the arms of well-known women. Not bothering to bandy words among his friends, McClain bluntly announced his premeditated campaign of fornicating his way to a more satisfying life. His first success was torch singer Libby Holman. Before long, he was frequenting saloons like Tony’s and Moriarty’s, where his winning demeanor and convivial drinking skills made him popular with the literary crowd.

McClain knew Dorothy by reputation only, because his arrival in the city had coincided with her absence from it. One night they were introduced at Tony’s, and McClain set out being seductive and ingratiating. While he may have been genuinely attracted to her, it was probably also true that had she not been a celebrity he wouldn’t have glanced twice at a woman ten years his senior. At that particular time she was looking far from her best anyway. Her face remained lovely—at times she still resembled an adolescent—but her body was bloated from alcohol and her chin was doubling. This failed to deter McClain, who escorted her back to the Algonquin and settled down for the night.

Afterward, he bragged to friends about his success. He boasted that Dorothy had assured him he was a good lover and added that she knew some tricks herself, which he enumerated as if she were a neighborhood tart.

Meanwhile, Dorothy assumed that John McClain’s desire was genuine and rejoiced at her good fortune. At first they had enjoyable times together because he was star-struck, awed by the glamour of her life, and eager for introductions to people in the literary community.

One of her regular drinking companions was John O’Hara, whom she had known since 1928 as a reporter and rewrite man on the
New York Herald Tribune.
Dorothy believed his short stories showed unusual promise and steadfastly championed him to editors as a coming major writer, at a time when others doubted he was exceptional. Although O’Hara was not physically attractive to her—he had bad teeth and acne—she enjoyed his company late at night when he joined her at Tony’s. She assured him he would never be happy because he was a genius, and she further bet him that if Ernest Hemingway read some of his stories he would want to cut his own throat. “I am sorry to be compelled to add,” O’Hara wrote to his brother, “that Mrs. Parker was tight, but I understand she has told other people the same thing about me,” and he was right. O’Hara admired John McClain whose dashing self-assurance and success with women represented the type of male O’Hara wished he could be.

William Faulkner, another friend of Dorothy’s, impressed her as a vulnerable country boy in desperate need of her protection. She introduced him to the Round Table and her
New Yorker
friends, and she further made sure he received a welcome in the drawing rooms of rich people like Adele and Robert Lovett. In the fall of 1931, when Faulkner was staying at the Algonquin, she gave a cocktail party in his honor. He turned up late with an old friend of his, Eric Devine, by which time most of the guests were gassed. So was the hostess, who proudly passed around manuscript pages from
Light in August
, the novel he was working on at the time. Eric Devine recalled that John McClain was so firmly glued to Dorothy’s side as to leave no doubt about the intimacy of their relations.

With or without McClain, Dorothy and Robinson went out every night. Some people felt sorry for poor Robinson who would try to sleep under a table in the smoke and noise of Tony’s at two or three in the morning. Given her love for animals, Frank Sullivan thought, “she could have been a little more considerate.” He might have been more disapproving had he known that when Dorothy took her nightly sleeping pills she sometimes fed one to Robinson so that he wouldn’t wake up too early the next day.

Occasionally there was an evening memorable for its serenity. Once she and John were drinking double Scotches at Tony’s with a group that included Benchley, Vernon Duke, and Monty Woolley, when the conversation turned sentimentally to Paris and the city’s special beauty in springtime. “Oh,” somebody sighed, “to be in Paris now that April’s there!” What a great title for a song, Duke recalled remarking, whereupon the obliging Tony Soma escorted them upstairs to a delapidated piano, and Duke composed the music for “April in Paris,” while everyone hummed along quietly.

 

 

With a new man in her life, Dorothy felt compelled to slim down and smarten up her appearance. As she had done with John Garrett, she telephoned McClain every day to arrange their meeting later in the evening. She expected to be the only woman in his life, but this John behaved remarkably like the old one and soon began to vocalize his martyrdom. He felt smothered, resented her demands, and began to invent engagements. Increasingly, he told Dorothy that he was fatigued after work, then he had to work out at the gym, and after that he was exhausted and simply wanted to crawl back to his flat and tumble into bed. To his friends McClain grumbled that Dorothy refused to leave him alone and it took all of his ingenuity to escape her.

At the outset, some of Dorothy’s friends sized up McClain as a social climber and a sponge who had no qualms about taking advantage of her. Bea Stewart despised him, and others tried to caution Dorothy, but she disregarded their warnings. She was even able to find humor in John’s social aspirations and his gargantuan appetite for women who owned penthouses and luxurious country estates. He was only twenty-seven and she made up her mind to be tolerant of his imperfections.

At one of her cocktail parties, to which McClain had been invited, she waited expectantly for him to suggest dinner together. He said nothing and finally asked if he might use her telephone. Everyone in the room could hear him confirming a dinner engagement elsewhere, and off he went. Dorothy broke the tension with a quip and a shrug.

“I have no squash courts,” she said. “What can I do?”

What she did was to write about her lover, although he proved less inspiring than his predecessors.
Death and Taxes
, a collection of verse published that year by Viking, was mostly written before she met McClain, but a few of the poems apply to him: “Every love’s the love before / In a duller dress.” She entertained her friends with postmortems on the latest outrage he had perpetrated. After a quarrel, when he called her a lousy lay and slammed out, she said that his body had gone to his head. She described him as a male prostitute, who mistook her for a stepladder so that he could climb into the beds of famous women. When she once learned that a wealthy Long Island socialite had invited him to her home for the weekend, Dorothy predicted that he would be back “as soon as he has licked all the gilt off her ass.”

 

 

Depressed, Dorothy described 1932 as “this year of hell” and again attempted to kill herself, this time with barbiturates, after preparing a last will and testament and setting it aside for Benchley’s attention. “Any royalties on my books are to go to John McClain. My clothes and my wrist-watch to my sister, Helen Droste, also my little dog Robinson—Dorothy Parker.” But her resolve to die was not particularly solid. On a Thursday evening at the end of February, she made her departure with sleeping powders, but it was apparently the will of God that she be shipped back like an undelivered letter, to the Hotel Algonquin, 59 West Forty-fourth Street, New York City, return receipt attached. On Friday afternoon, feeling like a cadaver but nonetheless very much alive, she managed to call Dr. Barach and explain what had happened.

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