Read Ernie: The Autobiography Online

Authors: Ernest Borgnine

Tags: #Entertainment & Performing Arts, #United States, #Personal Memoirs, #Actors, #Biography & Autobiography, #Biography

Ernie: The Autobiography (9 page)

Naturally, there was a local critic in the audience on opening night. Her review was lukewarm, but she said that of all the people in that show, the only one who made an impression on her was me.

“Here was a man who literally stole the show. All he did was walk across the stage, but he captivated you.”

Of course, my brain told me that not every review I’d ever get would be that good, but I didn’t care. Right then it was the shot I needed. I sent it to my mom and she wrote back that she couldn’t be prouder. That meant even more to me than the review.

Unfortunately, mom didn’t get to read too many more of those.

Mom passed away a few weeks later. I was toggling between acting and working on the sets. We had just finished a show and were packing up when Larry Gates, one of the actors in the show, came up to me and said, “Ernie, I’ve got some bad news for you.”

I said, “What is it?”

He said, “There was a call during the show. Your mom just passed away.”

I started to cry as I helped pack away all the stuff. Everyone gave me space. I tried to think of what my mother would want me to do. I had obligations here and I said that to the cast. But everyone said, “No, no, you’ve got to go home.”

They were right. I made arrangements to leave the next day. I sat outside on the loading dock and cried all night long, out loud. I cried myself out.

The next morning I caught the train to go home. I couldn’t cry any more. I was just thinking of all the things that had happened in my lifetime with my mother. I said to myself “I’ve lost my life. I’ve lost the person that I love the most alongside my dad.” My dad lived long enough to see me become a star. But my mother was the one who gave me the inspiration and she barely got to see any of it.

It wasn’t fair. But it wasn’t fair about Joey dying, either. Or Pearl Harbor being attacked. “Fair” just isn’t on life’s menu.

When I got home I felt better. I saw Mom in her coffin, and the last thing that my sister and I did was something my mother had actually discussed with her. My mother loved whipped cream. We used to take a little bottle of heavy cream and we’d whip it up for her. She would just adore it.

One day she had said, “When I pass away some day maybe you could put a bottle of whipped cream in my coffin so I’ll have it when I get up to St. Peter’s gate.”

Evie and I were both standing by the open coffin and I looked at her and she looked at me and I didn’t have to say a word. My little smile said it all.

“No,” she insisted. “We shouldn’t do that.”

I said, “Why not? You know she’ll be happy.”

But my sister insisted it was disrespectful and I yielded to her wishes. To this day I kick myself in the behind for not having done it.

I stayed in Connecticut for a week. After making sure that my sis and Dad were okay, I returned to Virginia ready to honor my mother’s faith in me. During that next year I acted more and painted less. I was in fourteen different shows. Then, thanks to a rave review that somehow made its way to an agent’s desk in New York, I got the call to go to Broadway. Brock Pemberton, the theatrical producer, had seen me in Virginia and offered me the part of Wilson, the attendant in the mental hospital in Mary Chase’s hit comedy
Harvey.
I would be replacing Jesse White (the original Maytag repairman on those commercials), who was leaving.

I finished in Virginia and flew that night to New York. I figured Broadway was worth the extravagance. Plus, there wasn’t time to take the train.

I reported to the theater as instructed. Mind you, this was opening day for previews. The director was busy, so the stage manager took me to his small office, walked me through the play, a comedy, and after a few scenes said, “You’ll do.”

That wasn’t a rousing commendation, but it was enough to get me the gig. I didn’t believe it would always be so easy. But they were up against an opening date, I’d gotten good notices in a similar part, it was a small role, and the tumblers had just fallen into place.

The stage manager gave me the script and told me to learn the lines. Boy, did I cram. All those nights sitting in the balcony of the Barter, memorizing what the actors said onstage, had paid off. The first time I met the cast was when I walked onstage in front of the audience.

You know that
super-reality
I mentioned that comes from being onstage? Not this time. The whole thing was a blur. I was nervous and perspiring and living from moment to moment as I tried to keep the lines in my head and respond to what the other actors were giving me. In other words, to act.

After the show, still in a daze, I got myself a hotel room—I didn’t know where else to stay—and walked up to a place at the end of 48th Street and Broadway. I hadn’t eaten and I was starving. As I sat at the counter, I was finally starting to relax.

I thought,
“Goddamn, Borgnine, you did it! You’ve conquered the Great White Way!”
It seemed like yesterday that I was here on in-shore duty for the navy and didn’t know what I wanted to do with my life. Now I was a Broadway actor. It was amazing.

I was in another world, but I came back to this one fast. Some woman walked by who had just seen the show and she said, “There’s that jerk who was talking between the laughs. What a bore!” (She obviously had no idea that’s how the play was written, but that didn’t make me feel any better.)

Well, it burst my bubble. So much for being a conqueror.

The director gave me a few notes and that night I really tried to get in there and do it right. I did better, of course, and the reviewers were eventually pretty kind. After about a month, though, I realized I wasn’t happy. Something just wasn’t clicking and I knew what it was: I didn’t have enough experience, yet, for the big time. I’m not being unduly modest; it just takes more confidence than I had at the time. I went back to Brock Pemberton—our producer, and one of the founders of Broadway’s famed Tony Awards—and said “Sir, I’ve got to leave.”

“What d’ya mean you got to leave?” he said. “Where you going?”

“Back to the Barter Theatre.”

“Leave Broadway for regional? What the hell for?”

I was too embarrassed to tell him the real reason, so I gave him another—which was also true. “Well, you know, Mr. Porterfield gave me my first break and did so much for me and I feel I owe him a debt of gratitude.”

Mr. Pemberton said, “Gratitude, my ass! He never paid you anything. I’m giving you $150 a week and you feel you got to go back there for gratitude?”

“Yes, sir.”

He grinned. “Well, okay. Good luck and I hope we’ll see you again.”

He was a wonderful guy. I don’t know what actor got my part, but I hope it did better for him than it did for me!

I went back to Virginia with a vengeance, determined to learn my craft. As it happened, no sooner had I returned than I was put into
Hamlet
, of all things—the ultimate theatrical man killer. Fortunately, I wasn’t playing the Dane.

I didn’t let Shakespeare faze me, not even when I heard that the State Department was interested in sponsoring the troupe on an overseas engagement. They wanted us to perform
Hamlet
at Kronberg Castle in Elsinore, Denmark—where the play supposedly had its historical roots.

A deal was worked out where Uncle Sam would cover our expenses and handle all the publicity. Okay, I guess you could call it propaganda: Washington wanted to help repopulate the war-weary world with culture as well as food and industry.

The reviews weren’t the most glowing in the history of theater. Seems the Danes didn’t like Brits playing Danes, and they appreciated Americans even less. But what the heck. I sure didn’t come out of the experience empty-handed. I got to channel historical people—figuratively, of course—and it was a valuable acting lesson about opening myself up to the environment. I also got to see some of Europe. The Air Force took us around to all these different places. I got to see Hitler’s Eagle’s Nest. We also saw Dachau, where this sergeant reached into an oven and pulled out something charred. I looked at it and said, “What is it?” Mind you, there had been some stories written about the concentration camps, but not a lot.

He said, “A human bone. They burned people in here.” He handed it to me. “Take this back and show it to the people at home. This will prove what these bastards were doing.”

I didn’t take it, of course, but gently replaced the bone in the oven. I was assured the remains were going to be interred with respect.

When we walked through the yard there, it seemed like the sun became clouded over. Maybe it did, or maybe it just felt that way. It was a terrible experience. It reminded me of one of the reasons we had fought this war, why it was sometimes necessary to go to such lengths to remove despots and genocidal maniacs.

I learned a lot during our monthlong run in Denmark, and then back in Virginia. I gained the confidence I felt I had lacked the first time I was on Broadway. At the end of that season, I said, “Mr. Porterfield, I’m going back to New York.”

He said, “I’m not surprised. You’re a talented kid, Ernie. Do you have any idea what you’re going to do?”

I said, “I’m going to try to get into theater and into this new thing they’ve got up there, television.”

He said, “Good luck.” I knew he meant it.

And I knew something else: I’d need it.

Chapter 11

Escape to New York

W
hen I hit Penn Station, I wasn’t alone. I had a wife.

Her name was Rhoda Kemins and she was a Navy Wave and a hospital corpswoman. She made an impression on me in 1945 when I was in the naval hospital with a cyst on my backside. And I made an impression on her. She figured she’d seen the worst part of me already and everything else would be uphill. We had a date when I got out of the hospital and then a few more until I went home. My mother hadn’t met her, but she heard the way I talked about her and was convinced that we’d end up together.

I said, “No, Ma. She won’t marry me. She’s Jewish and she can only marry a Jewish man.”

My mother just shook her head and said, “You keep her in mind.”

I did. Her family lived in Brooklyn. When the war was over she moved back with them and started writing to me.

My mother read her letters. She said, “You should propose to her. She’s going to make a good wife for you.”

I went to New York to see her, and we carried on a long-distance romance for four years. Finally, when I decided to try my luck on Broadway, we tied the knot.

We stayed for a while with her folks and then we moved to our own place in Queens. It was a thirty-minute subway ride to Times Square and it was all we could afford.

I was thirty-three years old and, in many ways, I was starting from scratch. An agent got me in to see a few casting directors, but mostly I went to open calls, things you’d read about in
Back Stage
and other trade papers. These are the infamous “cattle calls” where you and every other actor in town would sign in, then stand around in a theater or loft waiting to be seen. The typical wait time was two or three hours. The length of the typical audition was one minute or under. The shortest audition I ever had was about ten seconds: I walked in and they didn’t even hand me the script. The director just looked me up and down and said, “Next!”

Meanwhile, I had to earn money, so I took any work I could get. Washing dishes, unloading trucks, working in baggage rooms at the train terminals.

I began to miss the Barter Theatre, where you always knew what you’d be doing next. You had a little part in this one, or a little part in that one. You were always working and learning. Then suddenly, you’re in a world where you’re constantly being told, “No, nothing today.”

Fortunately, theater wasn’t the only place where a New York actor could find work in those days. There was a new kid in town, television. Not a lot of “legitimate” actors wanted to play there because it was rushed, crude, and only a handful of people even had TV sets. But I wasn’t picky, and when I went to audition for a director, Robert Mulligan—he later went on to direct the movies
To Kill a Mockingbird
and
Summer of ’42
—at NBC, I caught a break. He looked at me and said “Here, take this script. Take it home and read it. Come back tomorrow morning .”

I said, “Sir, I’d like to read it for you right now.”

He said, “I’m busy.”

I don’t know what possessed me to say, “Me, too,” but, luckily, he didn’t take offense. He grinned and said, “Take five minutes, go out here on the fire escape, read this thing, then come back.” So I went out for five minutes, read, and came back and we went through it.

When we finished he looked at me and he threw the script on the floor. “Goddamn it!”

I said, “Did I do something wrong?”

“No. You just gave me a whole new way to do this show.”

Well, I ended up teaching Mark Twain how to pilot a boat up the Mississippi on the
Goodyear Television Playhouse.
That was my first show on television. I tried hard and they were very happy with me.

One thing led to another. Mulligan introduced me to Delbert Mann, one of the hot young directors in this new medium. Delbert took me under his wing. Every time you worked with Delbert it was like learning a whole new way of acting. He was resourceful, unpredictable, creative, and articulate. I’ve been fortunate to have a number of mentors in my life, but Delbert was without a doubt the most important.

As much as this was a time of personal growth and change, it was also a time of change in the country. We’d gone from a hot war to a Cold War. This new struggle wasn’t kind to many in my industry.

That buddy of mine, Bart Burns, who had been a captain in the Marine Corps, went up and was interviewed for a part in a show. He got the part. By the time he got home they called him and said, “Bart, we’re sorry, but we can’t use you.”

He said, “Well, I’d like to know why.”

They said, “Well you just didn’t meet the requirements.”

He said, “What requirements are those?”

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