Saturday, April 22, 2006



Glamour Starter --- Norma Shearer --- Part Two


Part of Shearer's campaign was to marry MGM production head  Irving Thalberg, Norma blessed with saintly patience toward that end. Here was where iron discipline bore fruit. Thalberg was gifted, many said a genius, but withal a man with judgment enough to see wedded future with Shearer as much a benefit for him as for her. Thalberg had uncanny story sense. You could take an insurmountable script problem to his throne room, and emerge quick time with a solution. Thalberg oversaw a repair bench for everything Metro released during the early thirties. Any employee who thought he/she was last leaving the lot at night would look up and see Thalberg’s office light burning. When he finally get home, Mother would have his pajamas laid neat upon the marital bed, her dominance continued even unto residence with Thalberg and his wife. Mrs. Thalberg would have preferred her son marry Carl Laemmle’s daughter Rosabelle, to her mind a more useful alliance, or perhaps Constance Talmadge, which would have netted in-law status with Joseph Schenck, Norma Talmadge, and Buster Keaton, among industry-connected others. Shearer proved a best choice, as what was value in Rosabelle Laemmle once her father sold out and was gone from Universal, let alone Constance Talmadge, her star blinkered out with the arrival of talkies.
Norma Shearer knew dialogue would require a heightened realism in her screen portrayals, and so arranged (furtively, it was said) to have 
sexed-up portraits taken by freelance ace George Hurrell, then flung the sizzling portfolio into Thalberg’s lap one morning at the breakfast table. Torrid pre-code Norma Shearer is more or less agreed to have arrived that day, this a bracing intro for whatever audience we introduce The Divorcee or Strangers May Kiss to, and who knows, there may be truth in it. The trade ad shown here confirms her status. Actress rivals at MGM included Greta Garbo and Joan Crawford, Crawford the more so because hers was a bitter run-up, mutual antipathy doubtless borne of the fact that Shearer and Crawford were cut from similar bolts of cloth, gentility on the surface, ferocious ambition within. Today’s workplace tensions would seem prosaic beside such ongoing struggles at Metro.



Kitty Carlisle rented Shearer’s former beach house one summer and availed herself of an attic search one rainy afternoon. This was some years after Norma’s retirement, and what Kitty found was a Solomon Mine of Shearer ephemera --- dresses, scrapbooks, more dresses, many more scrapbooks --- all hidden behind a locked door and no doubt left to fate after she sold the place. What becomes of a star’s treasures once stardom is gone? If they make it to old age, are there even fans left to care? Shearer may have asked herself that question over the forty years that followed her final screen appearance (here she is with Dick Powell and June Allyson on a mid-fifties skiing holiday). Thalberg had died in 1936 when he was only thirty-seven, leaving Shearer to tender mercies of Louis Mayer . He and fellow execs tried to hoodoo her out of the percentage deal Irving had made with Loew’s/MGM a few years before. This is where Norma’s steely resolve asserted itself, and her very public battle with studio brass ultimately yielded the lifetime of gravy she had coming (forty years later, she’d still harass Metro bookkeepers --- even chiding them for failure to mount a 70's re-issue of that "sure money-maker," the silent Ben-Hur!).



















If you’d been a Nibblers patron during the seventies, chances are you saw Norma and her second husband (the ski instructor) having lunch at the counter. Up until then, they were fairly active socially. Norma even got down with the latest dances --- imagine her doing the twist in a sixties club --- yet there she was,  Shearer sightings around town not uncommon. She had aged, not alarmingly so. Still, she was consumed with a dread of aging, and of sharing her sister’s emotional breakdown. Friends who showed Norma home movies in which she appeared were later asked to edit out unflattering footage. Sister Athole (pronounced "Ethel") found relief through recently available medications, but Norma had less success battling depression. Brother Douglas Shearer, longtime sound engineer at Metro, seems to have been spared the family curse, and lived into a peaceful old age (died 1971). Norma became increasingly addled in later years, some good days, more bad ones. She wrote angry letters to MGM when they included but a glimpse of her in 1974’s That’s Entertainment, and regularly drove dinner guests over to Culver City for yet another screening of Marie Antoinette, her favorite of the Norma films. She took to calling her husband "Irving," and finally was placed in the Motion Picture Country Home. She died there in 1983. Shearer was at least eighty, maybe more, depending on which account you believe. She died too soon to enjoy the Norma pre-code renaissance that would come in the following decade, joining that circle of greats, including Bela Lugosi, Oliver Hardy, and a few others who just missed the applause of a whole new generation of fans. Gavin Lambert wrote a stellar biography in 1990, and most of the Norma Shearer would happily become available on DVD.

7 comments:

  1. The most interesting fact about Norma Shearer is that she was George Raft's lover.

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  2. Anonymous8:38 AM

    ...and (until Mayer got wind of it) Mickey Rooney's!

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  3. Anonymous7:12 PM

    John, As follow-up to my earlier letter on Ms. Shearer, how do you know about "Nibblers"? It sure was very-popular, and sooner or later you'd see everyone there! Funny, I must have sat at that counter a million-times, and it was not uncommon to suddenly look next to-you and there would be a familiar-face! Norma aand her-husband might have been seated-there many-times through the years, when I would be present, and I probably just didn't even realize who it was! You'd see EVERYONE in Beverly Hills in those days -- it was a fun place! Over on Rodeo Dr. was a popular club at that time called "The Daisy", and that may-well be the spot you're referring-to where Norma would go dancing. (On the other-hand, it might have been a place my parents' liked to frequent called "P.J.'s" in West Hollywood. One-more word about "Nibblers": Before it was "Nibblers", it was a much-better place that went-back, oh, to the early 30's, at least, called Armstrong-Schroders. Great little old-fashioned place with a a terrific menu. Of course, I was really small when it was still operating, but a favorite-memory for me would be when Dad would take me there for breakfast before dropping-me at school. To this day, I can still remember their "silver dollar hotcakes", which I still claim are the best I've ever tasted! Those were really the days! I've become a huge fan of Ms. Shearer's work in recent-years (I always liked "The Women") but I think she is sensational in "Antoinette", and even in her next-to-last, the kind-of-hokey "Her Cardboard Lover", with Bob Taylor. But one you must seek-out, which by chance I only found recently, and have a video of, is one called "Riptide", directed by Edmund Goulding, with Robert Montgomery, Herbert Marshall, and the legendary Mrs. Patrick Campbell! Out of this world! R.J.

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  4. Anonymous1:20 PM

    Dear John: (July 14, 2008) Happy "Quatorze Julliet"! How appropriate that I would be leaving this on your post for the lady who played Marie Antoinette! Just wanted to leave you a quick-P.S. thought you might find interesting: I thought of you last evening. My associate from our office, and I, were driving throgh Bev. Hills and going down Wilshire Blvd., I suddenly remembered my writing you about "Nibblers".So, as we passed-by, I looked for it. There was the building -- now just an empty(and no-doubt, expensive) store-front on the corner of Wilshire & Spaulding Dr. I do remember a night, seated at the counter (it was actually a double-counter, facing each-other, so one oould have a view of whoever was sitting across from you) when I sat watching Joe Sawyer (remember him?),wearing his glasses, pacing back and forth,across from me, while waiting for an empty seat! ("Serves you right", I thought, "for the way you treated Victor McLaglen in "The Informer"!)Right around the corner was a hotel called The Beverly Crest. They had numerous regulars of "old Hollywood-types" who would hang-out at the small, dimly-lit intimate bar in the restaurant. Leonid Kinsky was a regular, and we became rather friendly for awhile. Oh, and there were others I've probably forgotten (I'm going-back here a few years). One night, my mother, her girlfriend and myself were going there for dinner. As we walked-into the bar area there was a white-haired distingushed-looking man at the bar, looking very morose, and frighteningly-similar to Spencer Tracy. Spence had just died only a few days-before (having just finished the Kramer-pic, you'll recall). We all commented on how much he resembled Spence. Suddenly, the bartender says to this man, "Another, Mr. Tracy?" We all-three almost screamed out-loud! It turned-out it was Spences' brother, Carroll! All best. R.J.

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  5. More great anecdotage, RJ, and I really appreciate your sharing it with us!

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  6. Anonymous12:09 AM

    Johnny, 'Anecdotage?" Never heard that term before. However, I will differ to my betters! And, keep-out of the Bastille! R.J.

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  7. Oscar, that's hardly the most interesting thing about Norma. I've always found her cavorting in her "Marie Antoinette" dressing room with Mickey Rooney most intriguing, and even more so was Mayer's wrath, since he had briefly been Norma's lover (and old enough to be her father) before she hooked up with Irving.

    Ginger, Norma did not end her days in a sanitarium, but in the very comfortable Motion Picture Country Home in Woodland Hills, CA, where many great stars (and bit players) spend their twilight years.

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