OUT ON THE TOWN

Mansfield's image was always of pair-a-mount importance.

And people think movie stars are bold today. This is of course Jayne Mansfield hanging out next to Sophia Loren at a Paramount publicity event that took place today in 1957 at Romanoff’s in Beverly Hills. We shared a couple of shots of the moment several years back, but we ran across them again while poking around the website and they made us laugh so much we resolved to circle back to that momentous night. What amused us—well, a couple of aspects of the photo amused us—but what largely amused us was thinking about how Loren probably dressed that night thinking she was garbed rather smolderingly, then saw Jayne—mother of a six-year-old, by the way, and doing just fine—and felt reality recalibrate. Loren wasn’t comfortable with displays of skin, though she’d been topless in an early career film called Era lui… sì! sì! Being faced by the full Jayne must have sent Loren home pondering where smoldering ended and combustible blew it out the revolving doors. Some might think Jayne’s display a bit over-the-top, but what a Hollywood moment. We tried to resist posting a zoom of the photo. We really did. We really, really did. But it’s historically significant, and so below… Mansfield—you gotta love her.

Now that I've ditched the wedding band, I'm gonna go out first thing and get properly laid.

A few days ago we commented that mid-century photo-journalists documented many sad moments that took place in police stations and courthouses, so we thought we’d flip the script and share some happy shots. Above you see a woman who’s just been granted a divorce in Los Angeles County Superior Court. Note the smile. That’ll happen when you drop two-hundred pounds of dead weight. She has a name. It’s Vicki Richards, according to the photo data, and she’s got great expectations today in 1958. She’s nobody famous, but newspaper photographers, those parasites (that we love for having documented all this, but still parasites) routinely made shots of women who’d just severed the matrimonial bonds. We have some examples below, mostly from 1957 and 1958, with a couple from 1951, all culled from the University of Southern California’s digital archive. At the very bottom we also have, accessible via links, more divorce shots, including several featuring celebrities.

“I’m going to find a man who’ll make an absolute rat’s nest of my hair when we fuck.”
 
“I feel like an animal on the prowl suddenly. I feel like… I dunno, like a cougar! Hey, that’s pretty catchy.”
 
“I just want to be happy. Happy in a very public way that I can shove in my ex-husband’s ugly face.”
 
“It’s nice to be single again. And it’s self evident, wouldn’t you agree, that I’ll have a date before I even get out of the courthouse?”
 
“So, I’ve heard that what men really like is a lady in the street but a freak in the bed. I’m going to give that duality a whirl.”
 
The petitioner will please stop eye-fucking the bailiff!
 
“I know I look nervous, but it’s because there’s so much I don’t know. For example, during the ménage à trois I’ve set up for later do we start with sixplay?”
 
“That’s it? It’s over? I’m free? I might cry tears of joy with my vagina.”
 
“Trust me—underneath this demure white doily beats the heart of an unrepentant sex degenerate.”
 
“Heh. One of the other divorcées just told me that there are penises considerably larger than five inches. Women exaggerate so.”
 
“Who, me? I’m sorry, I can’t—I’m a married woman. But ask me again in about forty minutes.”
 
“I’ve been unfulfilled for a long time. I plan to become filled.”
 
“Maybe at home I’ll make some mint tea, run a bath and— Whoa! Look at the bulge on that hunk of man meat! Evening plans—ka-ching—changed!”
 
“My friends here have convincingly argued that I don’t need a man at all.”
 

We’ve been sharing divorce court photos for a while. If you want to see our other examples, they’re at these links and they feature: Francesca de Scaffa, Barbara Payton, Donna Mae Brown, Ava Gardner, unknown (but must-see), and Lili St. Cyr.

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America’s self-proclaimed top satire and humor weekly is back. We’ve now shared an even dozen issues of this tabloid. We’re proud to have enriched your life. Or at least given you a few smiles. This issue was published today in 1973, and promises to take readers “inside a whore,” reveal how to “make it with a ski bunny,” and use its daily horoscope to make better lovers.

All these stories are dumb as hell, though the prostitute story—featuring a Hamburg professional allegedly named Hilda Repp—tries to be serious. Rampage journo Heine Heinrich (sure, sure) discusses government regulations within the industry, details the workings of brothels where women are employed, and reveals that Hilda’s fee is the equivalent of $30 for sex, $20 for oral only.

Rampage also treats readers to a profile of Elizabeth Taylor, who had split from Richard Burton and was dating singer Tom Jones. The editors detail every relationship she ever had, then wish her luck with Jones. She married a total of eight times, so maybe the editors’ wishes had the opposite effect. We have more than a dozen scans below.

Early deaths usually leave unanswered questions.

Above are two of the more famous death scene photos from Hollywood’s golden era, showing film star Thelma Todd inside her luxury convertible, where she was found today in 1935. She was only twenty-nine. Her car was parked in the garage of her friend Jewel Carmen, who was the estranged wife of Roland West, who was a friend, business partner, and paramour. Todd and West had opened, on the Pacific Coast Highway in the northwestern suburbs of Los Angeles between Santa Monica and Malibu, a hotspot known as Thelma Todd’s Sidewalk Café. The place was a smash success. Some websites claim it was a speakeasy, but it actually opened in 1934, after the repeal of Prohibition.

Todd was extravagantly famous at the time she died. She had the nicknames, “The Ice Cream Blonde” and “Hot Toddy,” and had accumulated more than one hundred film credits, including roles supporting the Marx Brothers, Charley Chase, Laurel and Hardy, and Zazu Pitts. The LAPD ruled her death accidental, caused by carbon monoxide poisoning from warming up her car to drive or, alternatively, using the heater to stay warm. A coroner and grand jury agreed, but the cops did leave open the possibility of suicide. Others demurred, and today on some websites you’ll see Todd’s death labeled an “unsolved murder.” Well, could be. But probably not. You can read an excellent account of the event here.

We’ve had the misfortune to learn early, and have had reinforced repeatedly, that questions around premature deaths are the norm. You probably won’t have questions if you’re in the room as someone breathes their last in bed, but how often does that happen? We’ve dealt with a surprise suicide, a COVID-era death under circumstances the family still refuses to divulge, been stunned by an Asian tsunami drowning that’s a total black box, had a relative somehow go out a health clinic window, and more. Add a helping of fame and fortune to the normal unanswered questions around early deaths and you have the ingredients for many a Hollywood mystery. Todd. Murder? Could be. But probably not.

Hello there, pumpkin. It's Halloween again.

Pumpkins are squashes, in case you ever wondered. And if you’ve ever wondered, we think Halloween is the most giving of U.S. holidays, because unlike Christmas your gifts go to strangers. We’ve cobbled together a collection of seasonal shots featuring Hollywood stars posing with jack-o’-lanterns, that yearly tradition we discussed a bit last year in another Halloween post. These pumpkins range from real, to plaster, to papier mâché, to paint, to shadows. There’s even a jack-o’-lantern house.

The stars are posted in the order of the keywords at bottom. Of special note are the last three: Peggy Ryan sitting on the identical pumpkin used by Ellen Drew for her Halloween shots (same prop department, we guess), Ava Gardner being her usual notable self, and finally, Gloria Saunders posed as if she’s about to let a scarecrow go doggy on her. Don’t judge us—you’ll think the same thing. Of all our previous posts along these lines, our favorite is at this link. Happy Halloween. Don’t eat too much candy.

There was no shame in her game.

Barbara Payton’s 1963 autobiography I Am Not Ashamed is a Hollywood tell-all detailing her meteoric plummet from stardom to the gutter. We touched on it a while back when we posted a 1963 issue of Confidential. Such falls from grace are nothing new in Hollywood—in fact they’re almost banal. Only a rare few stars stay on the heights for a very long time, and those that fall often do so turbulently. So in that respect Payton didn’t go through anything new. That’s why when you read these types of books there’s always a little voice in your head that says: “Countless other people saw fame trickle through their fingers without slipping their moorings over it.”

Even so, I Am Not Ashamed is an amazing book. Allegedly ghost-written by Leo Guild, which brings into question much of what’s on its pages, it describes Payton’s youth in Texas, how she became aware of the transactionality of feminine power by age twelve or so, how she married at sixteen after an unexpected pregnancy, and how she rolled into Hollywood at eighteen. From the beginning she was different. She had her first interracial relationship when she was twenty, and her first lesbian affairs shortly thereafter.

What definitely isn’t Guild-generated hyperbole is that Payton’s lifestyle always presented danger to her career, but it wasn’t until she met problematic actor Tom Neal that things took a hard right turn for the worse. Neal was an ex-boxer who had acting success with 1945’s Detour, but by the time Payton met him was a bit player barely hanging on in Tinseltown. Payton got into a love triangle with Neal and debonair actor Franchot Tone that led to a fistfight and irreparable damage to Payton’s public persona. We talked about it in that Confidential post.

Payton’s roles dried up, her friends dwindled, and she ran through all her money. At some point she began accepting cash from dates. At first these were gifts—or she thought of them that way—starting at hundreds of dollars, but they slowly diminished as her profile faded and her weight increased. Eventually she was accepting five dollars to have sex. Reading all this, her rise and fall feels as if it took many years, but it was incredibly rapid: she debuted in 1949, reached her zenith in the film noir Trapped the same year, and began to decline in 1951 with Bride of the Gorilla. In the end she made only fifteen films.

I Am Not Ashamed scandalized people back then, and some episodes raise eyebrows even today. An incident where she submits to rape but claims she enjoyed it stands out, as does another where she admits to deliberately provoking a jealous Neal into beating her up. Also noteworthy was her attraction to black men. One of her famed affairs was with

black actor Woody Strode. Obviously, back then her career minders didn’t like it, and had no compunctions about threatening her. We should note, though, that Guild was somewhat obsessed with interracial matters, as we discussed previously. Some liberties may have been taken, not with facts, probably, but possibly with some of the sensational related sentiments expressed.

There are some amusing moments. Payton revealing that she and Tom Neal were both cat lovers and would dress up as cats for sex comes to mind. We were surprised by her descriptions of the lengths she—and other actresses—went to when chasing screen roles. She says she secured a couple through blackmail, leveraging embarrassing dirt that her studio didn’t want known, and she once donated a thousand dollars to a producer’s church to score a part. She also claims Fay Spain once sent a producer nude photos to land a role. All of this brings the same caveat—Guild or Payton? Since Spain gets name dropped we’ll assume that episode is true. Sex dressed as cats? Hmm… maybe not.

One aspect of the book that surprises is that, except for Spain, Neal, Tone, and a select few others, Payton doesn’t drop many names, which in turn means many of the famous stories about her aren’t fully acknowledged by the party in question. We’re thinking, for example, of the rumor that Tone hired a detective who caught her in bed with Strode on the set of Bride of the Gorilla. Tinseltown lore says it was a final straw leading to her divorce from Tone; Payton doesn’t mention it. Nor does she mention alleged affairs with George Raft, Bob Hope, or Steve Cochran.

Despite these omissions, as Hollywood tell-alls go I Am Not Ashamed is worth a read, as it runs the gamut from pathetic to shocking to uproarious to bizarre. Payton reportedly received a thousand dollars from publishers Holloway House for the manuscript. Some sources say two thousand, but that she asked for it in booze so it wouldn’t be garnished due to her debts. We’re dubious of that claim. She was paid, we’re sure, but whatever the amount, it was undoubtedly lowball. But even if she’d been paid the ten or fifteen grand she deserved no amount of money would have helped her reverse course, and sure enough she was dead four years later, done in by liver and heart failure.

It’s a sad way to go, but I Am Not Ashamed has its joys. When Payton talks about how it felt to be a bright light in the Tinseltown firmament the book is a pleasure to read. Only a select few people ever get to see their names on Hollywood’s glittering marquees, and Payton achieved it. Even if she was a spark rather than a sustained flame, there’s no doubt at all that she enjoyed the ride, that she reveled in setting Hollywood on its ear. The title, if taken at face value, is uplifting, in our view. It’s defiant: “I am not ashamed.” Ghostwriter or not, it feels as if that phrase had to come from Payton herself.

Bogart and Astor stand ready to defeat all comers.

This majestic promotional photo featuring Humphrey Bogart and Mary Astor was made for the 1942 film Across the Pacific. It isn’t one we’ve watched yet, but we’ll get to it, because this shot hints at high adventure of the best kind. Yes, we’re aware that the movie was not well reviewed in its day, but we’ll see about that.

Take it aaalllll in, people. I know it's a lot, so I'll give you whatever time you need.

Humphrey Bogart goes way beyond in this promo image made for his 1936 drama The Petrified Forest. At this point he was on the precipice of widespread fame, but even he couldn’t have known he would become one of the biggest stars in the history of Hollywood. Or actually, looking at the photo again, maybe he did know.

If I could take 25% of each ex-husband and combine them into one man I think I'd really have something.

Above: Three shots of actress Barbara Payton in Los Angeles County divorce court today in 1958 as she bade farewell to husband number four, furniture executive George Provas. In some accounts he’s described as twenty-three, but those accounts are wrong. The photos we found of him show a middle-aged man. The two had married only a year earlier. Payton’s name gets dropped often when the subject of fallen Hollywood stars comes up, but because the stories differ we finally tracked down and read her autobiography. It’s supposed to be the source of a lot of disinformation, but we figured we couldn’t get a complete picture without it. It was ghostwritten by schlockmeister supreme Leo Guild—or rather than ghostwritten, he allegedly plied Payton with booze while recording her on tape. The rambling final product ended up published by cheapie imprint Holloway House as a seventy-five cent paperback. These shots show Payton during what is considered to be her decline, but she doesn’t look it. We’ll get back to her soon.

Every successful woman has a great support system.

Actually, a great woman often has nothing but her own sheer will, but a little support never hurts. This photo shows Ava Gardner getting a boost from Burt Lancaster somewhere on Malibu Beach in 1946. It was made while they were filming The Killers, and there are several more shots from the session out there if you’re inclined to look. We’ve shared a lot of art from The Killers, which you can see here, here, here, here, and here. And, of course, you should watch the movie. 

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HISTORY REWIND

The headlines that mattered yesteryear.

1939—Holiday Records Strange Fruit

American blues and jazz singer Billie Holiday records “Strange Fruit”, which is considered to be the first civil rights song. It began as a poem written by Abel Meeropol, which he later set to music and performed live with his wife Laura Duncan. The song became a Holiday standard immediately after she recorded it, and it remains one of the most highly regarded pieces of music in American history.

1927—Mae West Sentenced to Jail

American actress and playwright Mae West is sentenced to ten days in jail for obscenity for the content of her play Sex. The trial occurred even though the play had run for a year and had been seen by 325,000 people. However West’s considerable popularity, already based on her risque image, only increased due to the controversy.

1971—Manson Sentenced to Death

In the U.S, cult leader Charles Manson is sentenced to death for inciting the murders of Sharon Tate and several other people. Three accomplices, who had actually done the killing, were also sentenced to death, but the state of California abolished capital punishment in 1972 and neither they nor Manson were ever actually executed.

1923—Yankee Stadium Opens

In New York City, Yankee Stadium, home of Major League Baseball’s New York Yankees, opens with the Yankees beating their eternal rivals the Boston Red Sox 4 to 1. The stadium, which is nicknamed The House that Ruth Built, sees the Yankees become the most successful franchise in baseball history. It is eventually replaced by a new Yankee Stadium and closes in September 2008.

1961—Bay of Pigs Invasion Is Launched

A group of CIA financed and trained Cuban refugees lands at the Bay of Pigs in southern Cuba with the aim of ousting Fidel Castro. However, the invasion fails badly and the result is embarrassment for U.S. president John F. Kennedy and a major boost in popularity for Fidel Castro, and also has the effect of pushing him toward the Soviet Union for protection.

Horwitz Books out of Australia used many celebrities on its covers. This one has Belgian actress Dominique Wilms.
Assorted James Bond hardback dust jackets from British publisher Jonathan Cape with art by Richard Chopping.
Cover art by Norman Saunders for Jay Hart's Tonight, She's Yours, published by Phantom Books in 1965.

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