In The Light Of Hearing
About A Recent Book Expose About Old Hollywood-Karina Longworth’s “Sex, Lies,
And Stardom: Exploitation In Howard Hughes’ Hollywood”-Confessions Of A Junkie
Film Reviewer
Link to the Terry Gross NPR Fresh Air interview with author Carina
Longworth:
https://www.npr.org/2018/11/13/667391184/sex-lies-and-stardom-exploitation-in-howard-hughes-hollywood
By Sam Lowell
The #MeToo movement has
opened many cans of worms although the revelations in the Fresh Air NPR interview by Terry Gross with Carina Longworth about
her new book Sex, Lies, And Stardom: Exploitation
In Howard Hughes’ Hollywood predate those revelations. Nevertheless, and the
author states so herself, without #MeToo
this might just be another interesting book about the mores of Hollywood, old
Hollywood her specialty and that would be that. The revelations about Hughes’ sexual
appetites were well known to me back in the day, well known back then although
I could never get close enough to anybody who had any real details to put those
ideas into print.
Partially in those days
when I first worked for American Film Gazette as a stringer and then with my own
by-line we did not print anything, or everything, fit to print especially
without back-up verification. And it wasn’t solely because I, we would have
been sued for some kind of defamation by individual actors or the studios, studio
bosses where most of the hush-hush got its start or because we had a super fidelity
to the truth and nothing but the truth. Far from it. I was more worried in
those pre-historic Neanderthal days about being shut-out of the interviewing process
by the studios, not invited to galas and special events where I could mix with
people who might become sources and that kind of thing. Not good, not good at
all.
Here is where reality hit the
road. This sex for career advancement, even to just get in the door as the Hughes
case points out was widespread, pervasive, on-going well before the revelations
of the past few years. It was the way things operated and young women, and men,
remember Hollywood was also a hotbed of closet homosexuality top to bottom,
accepted that situation as the overhead cost of getting ahead. I will always remember
my first vivid example. I was in the room back in the 1970s when Laura Lane,
that gap-tooth beauty, was touting her memoirs and made no bones about the fact
that she had slept her way to the top. She became sort of persona non grata after
that breath of fresh air because that was breaking the rules. Big time.
To finish up this sordid
story of my own conduct I knew plenty, people told me plenty and if I had
decided that a good expose would have helped out then that would be what was
what. I didn’t, didn’t even come close to thinking about such a thought. Jesus
what those poor, benighted young women and men must have had to put up with.
#MeToo thanks for the spring cleaning-thanks a lot.
No comments:
Post a Comment