Doris
Mann
[pictured right, played by Shirley MacLaine]: “So you
said you have a ranch?”
Jack
Faulkner [played by
Dennis Quaid]: “Yeah, out in Malibu.”
Doris:
“If all ranchers looked like you, there wouldn't be many crops.”
Jack:
“Depends on what you're raising.”
Doris:
“Certainly not doubts!”
[Both laugh.
Doris’ daughter, Suzanne Vale—pictured left, played by Meryl Streep—enters.]
Doris:
“Oh, I was just coming to get you—your little friend is here.”
Suzanne:
“Can I speak to you for a moment in private?”
Doris:
“Excuse me, my daughter wants to speak to me.”
[Both step
into the alcove.]
Suzanne:
“I would really just like a few people of my own without them having to like
you so much!”
Doris:
“I was just being friendly. And I don't care if he likes me or not, your friend
in there with the bedroom eyes.”
Suzanne:
“Right. And the living room nose, the kitchen forehead and den ears.”—Postcards From the Edge (1990), screenplay by Carrie Fisher based on her novel,
directed by Mike Nichols
The deaths of Carrie Fisher and Debbie Reynolds within
24 hours of each other are, as virtually everyone on social media would tell
you, poignant, stunning, and dramatic. But I bet that in Heaven right now, Fisher
is eyeing her mom drolly before saying, “Never wanted to be upstaged, did you?”
At least some of that exasperated hypercompetitive
feeling, along with generous amounts of sass, surfaces in the above scene from Postcards
From the Edge, which is, by
common agreement, semi-autobiographical.
For Fisher, comparisons with a show-business legend such as Reynolds—not to mention claiming her attention and love in childhood—had to have been, at best, like living in a gilded cage. And, when the times weren’t so good, it could not have come as a surprise that, like other Hollywood offspring, she would be left dizzy and disoriented in adolescence and young adulthood.
For Fisher, comparisons with a show-business legend such as Reynolds—not to mention claiming her attention and love in childhood—had to have been, at best, like living in a gilded cage. And, when the times weren’t so good, it could not have come as a surprise that, like other Hollywood offspring, she would be left dizzy and disoriented in adolescence and young adulthood.
If you want a sense of what it must have been like
to live like Tinseltown royalty, only to be rudely expelled from the kingdom, I
urge you to read Darcy O’Brien’s 1977 coming-of-age novel, A Way of Life, Like Any Other. From
the 1930s well into the Forties, George O'Brien, a star of Westerns and a member of John Ford’s stock
company, and his wife, the former actress Marguerite Churchill, led a posh
life, and their son Darcy was cosseted: “I had an electric car, a starched
white nanny, a pony, a bed modeled after that of Napoleon’s son, and I was
baptized by the archbishop of the diocese. I wore hats and sucked on a little
pipe.”
Suddenly it was all over: “Life turned round on
Mother and Dad…. Everything had changed.” Hollywood (save for the loyal Ford)
forgot they ever existed; the jobs dried up after WWII; George and Marguerite
divorced; and Darcy, a young pasha no more, was left to his own devices as his
mother indulged in love affairs with bad men and the bottle.
For a sense, then, of what life was like for Carrie
Fisher and brother Todd, take the O’Brien family, multiply by the megawattage
of the Debbie Reynolds-Eddie Fisher union, and imagine the collateral damage to
the offspring. First Carrie had to share her mother with fans. Then, maybe just
as bad, the cheering drifted off for Reynolds. By that time, the relationship became even more complicated: Now Fisher was the one finding fame in her late teens, first in Shampoo, then, far more widely, in Star Wars.
“What the scary thing about it, though, is
watching celebrities fade," Fisher said in a 2011 appearance on Oprah. "Celebrity is just
obscurity, biding its time. Eventually all things will disappear."
But as frustrating as competing with her mother for
public attention was, being the daughter of Debbie Reynolds also gave Fisher
the quality she would need after years of bad choices in men and mind-altering
substances, not to mention mental illness and neglect by Hollywood: the will to
survive. Striving so long for a measure of distinction and personal autonomy,
she became the quintessential survivor, and, in that respect, her mother’s
daughter in the end.
Reynolds, “America’s Sweetheart” in the 1950s, was
far tougher than her ingénue image led the public to believe. At age 19, she
not only had to endure one grueling take after another ordered by Gene Kelly
while filming Singin’ in the Rain, but
also fend off the advances of this director-choreographer-star at the height of
his power and influence. Later in the decade, she recovered from the betrayal
of husband Eddie Fisher with best friend Elizabeth Taylor.
As the golden age of the Hollywood movie musical
came crashing down in the late Sixties, Reynolds was forced to reinvent herself
for television and the stage. It didn’t help that her taste in men was as
abysmal as her talent was transcendent: her second husband, Harry Karl, not
only had prostitutes in their home while she was away but ended up swindling
her. By her own admission, she “married idiots”—yet she remained, like the
title of the film she made about Titanic
survivor Molly Brown, “unsinkable.”
Six years ago, I wrote a post about Fisher’s one-woman show, Wishful Drinking. At
that time, it was possible to discuss the star of one generation apart from the
other. Now, their deaths have underscored the symmetry of their lives:
19-year-olds cast in industry-defining movies, then forced to shift for
themselves through the years, irritated by their closest relative’s eccentricities and
weaknesses before finally relying on and admiring each other’s fate-defying
moxie.
Though I'm probably one of three folks in the USA (or the world for that matter) who have never seen a Star Wars film, I was struck by the recent Rolling Stone magazine's "The Last Word" interview with Carrie Fisher:
ReplyDelete"Do you fear death?" (asked by RS interviewer Andy Greene)
Carrie Fisher answers, "No. I fear dying. Anything with pain associated with it, I don't like. And I've been there for a couple of people when they were dying, and it didn't look like fun. But if I was gonna do it, I'd want someone like me around. And I will be there!"
Rolling Stone Issue # 1276/1277 December 15-29, 2016
Phil