Authors: Brooke Hauser
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28
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he became a mentor to David: Account of David Brown's relationship with Herbert R. Mayes from
Let Me Entertain You
, pp. 28â30.
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28
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“the best editor in New York”: Ibid.
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28
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“I said, âNo, Herb, the truth is”: Ibid.
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29
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David soon built a reputation in Hollywood: Background on David Brown's early career in film from Herb Stein, “Hollywood: Brown No Newcomer to Picture-Making; Producer Versatile in Story âKnow-How,'”
Morning Telegraph
, February 9, 1961; and from Hollywood columnist Joan Dew, “Joan Dew's Male Call: A Producer Who Isn't Stereotyped,” publication and date unknown, HGB Papers, SSC.
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29
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Wayne, a leggy brunette: David Brown discussed his ex-wife Wayne's unhappiness in Los Angeles, and the decline of their marriage, in
Let Me Entertain You
, p. 250; he later wrote about the importance of a wife having her own career in “Sex and the Single Girl as Seen by David Brown,”
Cavalier
, April 1964.
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29
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she and David finally married: Helen gave an account of their wedding in David Brown's memoir,
Let Me Entertain You
, p. 40, as well as in her unpublished autobiography, 1962â63, in which she described the later outing to see stripper Candy Barr, HGB Papers, SSC.
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30
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something of a little mascot: Helen Gurley Brown and Lyn Tornabene, audio recording file no. 2552a, tape 8, “3/25/72” (side A), HGB Papers, SSC. Helen described her comfortable position at Foote, Cone & Belding.
 Â
30
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Working on the Max Factor account: Helen described this naming process in Helen Gurley Brown,
Sex and the Office
(Fort Lee, NJ: Barricade Books, 2004), p. 308.
 Â
30
 Â
WHIPPED CHERRY
and following names
: Helen Gurley Brown, “SHADE NAMES,” circa 1959, early advertising copy, HGB Papers, SSC.
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30
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She doubted herself: Accounts of Helen's frustrations at Kenyon & Eckhardt from Helen Gurley Brown and Lyn Tornabene, audio recording no. 2552a, tape 8, “3/25/72” (side A), HGB Papers, SSC; and from Helen Gurley Brown,
Sex and the Office
, p. 308.
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31
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“What am I going to do?”: Dialogue from Helen Gurley Brown's version of the story told in David Brown's memoir,
Let Me Entertain You
, pp. 104â5.
 Â
31
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“There's a chapter on the apartment”: Ibid.
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31
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“that sounds like my book”: Ibid.
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31
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“It won't work”: Helen Gurley Brown and Lyn Tornabene, dialogue from audio recording no. 2552a, tape 8, “3/25/72” (side A), HGB Papers, SSC.
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32
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the stigma of the single woman: Eleanor Harris, “Women Without Men,”
Look
, July 5, 1960.
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32
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“There are two sound ways”: Betsy Marvin McKinney, “Is the Double Standard Out of Date?”
Ladies' Home Journal
, May 1961.
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33
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“I think you've got it”: Helen Gurley Brown and Lyn Tornabene, dialogue and account from audio recording no. 2552a, tape 8, “3/25/72” (side A), HGB
Papers, SSC. Helen talked about how David made her rewrite three times. She also cited the article “Women Without Men” as a motivating force.
 Â
33
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It was David who told Helen: David explained how he wanted Helen to write the book under her married name, sharing her own experiences, in “Sex and the Single Girl as seen by David Brown.”
5: A
F
UN
S
CAM
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34
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“An extra woman is a problem”: Marjorie Hillis,
Live Alone and Like It: A Guide for the Extra Woman
(London: Virago Press, 2005), chapter 1.
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34
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“Your very kind, very superlative comments”: Letty Cottin to Helen and David Brown, February 6, 1962, HGB Papers, SSC.
 Â
35
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“When the clock says Charlie's due home”: Michael Drury, “Live the Life You Love,”
Good Housekeeping
, April 1962.
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36
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In 1960, there were an estimated 21 million: Eleanor Harris, “Women Without Men,”
Look
, July 5, 1960.
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36
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“I think marriage is insurance for the
worst
years of your life”: Helen Gurley Brown,
Sex and the Single Girl
(Fort Lee, NJ: Barricade Books, 2003), p. 4.
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36
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Letty would pull off a lot of stunts: Descriptions based on Letty Cottin Pogrebin's interview with the author, January 2014; Letty's eulogy for Bernard Geis; and description of billboard from Barbara Seaman's excellent biography
Lovely Me: The Life of Jacqueline Susann
(New York: William Morrow, 1987), p. 325.
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38
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“She worked very hard to create this package”: Letty Cottin Pogrebin, interview with the author, January 2014.
6: S
INGLE
W
OMEN OF THE
W
ORLD,
U
NITE!
 Â
39
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“Should Men Be Allowed?”: Letty Cottin, press release for
Sex and the Single Girl
, April 16, 1962, HGB Papers, SSC.
 Â
39
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“It's the old â
Everybody
is talking about
Sex and the Single Girl
' approach”: Letty Cottin to Helen Gurley Brown, March 14, 1962, HGB Papers, SSC.
 Â
40
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“We're not getting too far”: Ibid.
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40
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“Maybe a Catholic ban!”: Helen Gurley Brown to Letty Cottin, March 19, 1962, HGB Papers, SSC.
 Â
40
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Mary Magdalene, pre-salvation: Letty Cottin to Helen Gurley Brown, March 30, 1962, HGB Papers, SSC.
 Â
40
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No, Helen wrote back, her semi-famous exes were out: Helen Gurley Brown to Letty Cottin, March 19, 1962, HGB Papers, SSC.
 Â
40
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“I know you worked like a dog”: Letty Cottin to Helen Gurley Brown, March 14, 1962.
 Â
41
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“I just don't think there would be anything
in
it for them”: Helen Gurley Brown to Letty Cottin, March 19, 1962, HGB Papers, SSC.
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41
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“Douse the perfume on cotton”: Helen Gurley Brown,
Sex and the Single Girl
, p. 80.
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41
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On her pink paper, Helen drafted a note to Max Factor: Helen Gurley Brown to Letty Cottin, May 2, 1962, HGB Papers, SSC.
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42
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“You are that
rara avis
”: Letty Cottin to Helen Gurley Brown, March 14, 1962, HGB Papers, SSC.
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42
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“There are just too few single girls browsing through book stores”: Helen Gurley Brown to Letty Cottin, March 19, 1962, HGB Papers, SSC.
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43
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“Don't Knock It, Girls, Says Author”: Letty Cottin, press release for
Sex and the Single Girl
, April 16, 1962, HGB Papers, SSC.
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44
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“What
The Best of Everything
did”: Letty Cottin to Jerry Wald, April 24, 1962, HGB Papers, SSC.
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44
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“Naturally, not all of your girls will become the wife of a Hollywood producer”: Letty Cottin to Director, Katherine Gibbs Schools, April 27, 1962, HGB Papers, SSC.
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45
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“The book may shatter conventional shibboleths”
and following
: Letty Cottin to editor,
Record Chronicle
, Denton, Texas, April 26, 1962, HGB Papers, SSC.
7: T
HE
D
ECLINE OF
W
ESTERN
C
IVILIZATION
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46
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“As tasteless a book”: Robert Kirsch, “Sex and the Single Girl Falls Short of Its Promising Title,”
Los Angeles Times
, July 6, 1962, HGB Papers, SSC.
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46
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“HEARTIEST CONGRATULATIONS”: Bernard Geis Associates to Helen Gurley Brown at the Hotel Madison, 15 East 58th St., New York, NY, HGB Papers, SSC. Reproduced with the permission of Bernard Geis Associates.
Note:
The telegram is dated “23 1050 EDT,” which author interpreted to mean May 23 at 10:50 eastern daylight time. Letty Cottin Pogrebin confirmed that Bernard Geis sent his book authors a congratulatory telegram on their publication dates.
 Â
46
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Godless Gotham: Letty Cottin Pogrebin, eulogy for Bernard Geis.
 Â
46
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Helen's book tour had begun: Details taken from various correspondence between Helen Gurley Brown and Bernard Geis Associates, as well as from collected book tour itineraries and miscellany, 1962â69, HGB Papers, SSC.
 Â
48
 Â
Sex and the Single Girl
instead of
Sex for the Single Girl
: “Playboy Interview: Helen Gurley Brown,”
Playboy
, April 1963.
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48
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“How does it feel to be on top of Richard Nixon?” Letty Cottin Pogrebin to Helen Gurley Brown, June 21, 1962, HGB Papers, SSC.
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49
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“Now, I don't have to go out and promote”: Ron Fimrite, “The Single Girl's Expert on Sex,”
San Francisco Chronicle
, July 6, 1962, HGB Papers, SSC.
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49
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“Of course you feel alone sometimes”: Joy Miller, AP, reprinted as “Former Little Rockian Analyzes Spinsterhood,”
Arkansas Democrat
, June 7, 1962.
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49
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“So do murder and rape!”: Cleo Bryan to Helen Gurley Brown, May 3, 1962, HGB Papers, SSC.
 Â
49
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“When Mrs. Cleo Bryan”: Art Berman, “Helen's Book Was a Shock to Her Mother,”
Los Angeles Times
, June 24, 1962, HGB Papers, SSC.
 Â
50
 Â
Helen didn't mention that she thought her mother was being totally selfish: Helen aired her true feelings about her mother's reaction to Lyn Tornabene years later in audio recording no. 2552b, “Emotions,” tape 8 (side B), HGB Papers, SSC.
 Â
50
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“My mother is quite a dame”: Art Berman, “Helen's Book Was a Shock to Her Mother.”
 Â
50
 Â
“David put me up to writing the book”: Ibid.
 Â
51
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“HUSBAND SAID âWRITE'”: Ibid.
 Â
52
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Pickwick's in Hollywood devoted a window display: “How to Promote a Book and Sell 1,000 Copies,”
Publishers Weekly
, October 1962, HGB Papers, SSC.
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52
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“There are no girls that age down here”: Stephanie Gervis, “In Greenwich Village, Sex Is Where You Find It,”
Village Voice
, July 26, 1962, HGB Papers, SSC. 53 “a libel against womanhood”: reader letter,
San Francisco Chronicle
, July 12, HGB Papers, SSC.
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53
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“Miss Brown provides the blueprint of a female so phony”: Robert Kirsch, “Sex and the Single Girl Falls Short of Its Promising Title.”
 Â
53
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“At long last someone has written a book”: Anne Steinert, “Being a Single Girl Can Be Fun,”
New York Journal-American
, May 23, 1962, HGB Papers, SSC.
 Â
53
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“sometimes shocking but always stimulating philosophy”: Mildred Schroeder, “âSex and the Single Girl'âStartling, Stimulating,”
San Francisco Examiner
, May 30, 1962, HGB Papers, SSC.
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53
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“racy and sassy”: Initials T. M., “1962 Baedeker for âLes Girls,'
Houston Chronicle
, date unknown, HGB Papers, SSC.
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53
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“âDo I dare go on?'”
and following
: Miss Zora Ann Krneta, “Handbook for âThe Chase,'”
Charleston Gazette
, West Virginia, June 10, 1962, HGB Papers, SSC. Quote is slightly condensed.
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54
 Â
“David Brown in for new scrutiny”: Information about
Sex and the Single Girl
's success is from Helen Gurley Brown's memo, “Brief Resume of What's Happened With the Book So Far,” July 1962, HGB Papers, SSC.
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54
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“Now it's time to get down to work”: Diane Patrick, “Royal Correspondence: PW Talks with Helen Gurley Brown,”
Publishers Weekly
, February 23, 2004. Helen spoke about her Royal manual typewriter in this interview as well.
8: S
OMETHING
'
S
G
OT TO
G
IVE