WEIRDLAND

Monday, August 20, 2012

Johnny O'Clock (1947) directed by Robert Rossen (Full Movie)

In her book "Scarlett O'Hara's Younger Sister: My Lively Life In and Out of Hollywood", co-star Evelyn Keyes wrote about her experiences on the film: "...Rossen was rewriting as we went along, handing out new pages seconds before we did almost every scene." Regarding a scene she had with supporting actor Lee J. Cobb, Keyes said that "although he was quite helpful and worked hard with me on it, he then tried to steal it from me by chewing on a cigar and noisily spitting out pieces of it over my lines." Source: www.tcm.com


Johnny O'Clock, directed by Robert Rossen in 1947

JOHNNY O’CLOCK: This erotically offbeat noir gave Dick Powell his most vividly hard-boiled role since his re-invention as tough guy Philip Marlowe three years earlier in Dmytryk’s “Murder My Sweet.” As the darkly suave proprietor of an illegal gambling den, Johnny walks a deadly tightrope between doom and redemption. A nearly forgotten gem of sizzling noir brilliance, beautifully photographed by the legendary Burnett Guffey. Also in the top-notch cast: Evelyn Keyes, Lee J. Cobb, Thomas Gomez and Ellen Drew. Written and Directed by Robert Rossen. Source: roxie.com

Sunday, August 19, 2012

Dick Powell and Dorothy Malone in Four Star Playhouse episode

Dorothy Malone


Four Star Playhouse 1952: Dick Powell and Dorothy Malone


Dick Powell as Willie Dante in The Stacked Deck (1956) part 1

The Stacked Deck - An ex-con forces Dante to take part in a blackmail scheme. This episode includes some double entendre dialogue and even a funny dig at Powell's actress-wife June Allyson!


Dick Powell as Willie Dante in The Stacked Deck (1956) part 2

Thursday, August 16, 2012

Ginger Rogers on June Allyson: "She's the girl every man wants to marry and the girl every woman wants as a friend"

Ginger Rogers as Ann Lowell in "42nd Street" directed by Lloyd Bacon and Busby Berkeley for the musical numbers. 42ND STREET (1933). The definitive backstage musical, complete with the dazzling newcomer who goes on for the injured star. Director: Lloyd Bacon. Cast: Warner Baxter, Bebe Daniels, George Brent, Ruby Keeler, Ginger Rogers, Dick Powell, Guy Kibbee, Una Merkel, Allen Jenkins, Ned Sparks, Edward J. Nugent, Robert McWade, George E. Stone, Louis Beavers, Patricia Ellis. Black and white, 89 minutes. Source: www.altfg.com Ginger Rogers scored her first leading role in a major film in the breezy 1934 musical Twenty Million Sweethearts. The slender tale of two radio singers, Buddy Clayton (Dick Powell) and Peggy Cornell (Rogers), whose romance sends their managers, particularly Buddy's fast-talking agent (Pat O'Brien), into a tailspin, provided Powell with more musical numbers, but Rogers proved that she didn't need to rely on her trademark wisecracking to hold the audience's attention.  
Dick Powell and Ginger Rogers sing "I'll String Along With You" in the movie "Twenty Million Sweethearts" (1934) directed by Ray Enright. In the beginning of the song Dick Powell's character suffers from a case of the nerves. The loan-out (to Warner Bros. for Twenty Million Sweethearts) was hardly a problem for Rogers. After all, her supporting performances in Warner's 42nd Street and Gold Diggers of 1933, had helped bring her to the attention of RKO management.

  In addition, the film provided a reunion with Powell, whose talent and good looks had impressed her when he played banjo as part of the orchestra for a singing engagement she had in Indianapolis. [One columnist wrote, "Dick wants all of Ginger's time. And gets it... so that looks serious on Dick's part. As for how serious it is on Ginger's part - she's been obeying her new boyfriend implicitly."]

  At the time, she had thought his good looks and youthful charm were a natural for the movies and was happy to find her prediction come true when Powell quickly hit the big time as the star of several lavish Busby Berkeley musicals at Warners. Source: www.tcm.com

Ginger Rogers once said of June Allyson (Dick Powell's third wife): "She's the girl every man wants to marry and the girl every woman wants as a friend."

  Dick Powell reinvented himself from the crooning hoofer of '42nd Street' and 'Footlight Parade' to private eye Philip Marlowe in 'Murder My Sweet' in 1944.

  "Philip Marlowe, though, is particularly impossible to replicate. Parker’s efforts were laughable, but even the movies have not had much better luck. Bogart was OK in The Big Sleep, but he completely misses Marlowe’s really rather weird “Cotton Mather in a trenchcoat” moral outrage. Chandler himself thought Dick Powell at least looked the most like Marlowe." Source: www.thedailybeast.com

Dick Powell, Lizabeth Scott and Raymond Burr in "Pitfall" (1948) directed by André De Toth Powell recreates his screen persona again in 'Pitfall' playing a distinctly disreputable businessman who puts his career, his family and eventually his own life on the line after getting a midlife sweet tooth for Lizabeth Scott. Miss Scott, who remains hale and hearty, burnished her noir chops as a loan out from Hal Wallis who had her under contact. It is one of her favorite pictures and arguably the best performance of her career. Lizabeth Scott's recollections about 'Pitfall': "The whole experience of making Pitfall was delicious! Dick Powell was gracious and kind. His attitude inspired me. He was a pleasure to work with. Andre de Toth was exceptional. We were a compatible group." Source: alankrode.com

The 1950's proved to be a golden era in the Powell marriage. June slowly became comfortable with Hollywood society and even gained the most coveted of Hollywood invitations — dinner with Mary Pickford at her fabled estate, Pickfair. Among the Powells’ most frequent guests were James and Gloria Stewart, George Murphy and his wife, Ronald Reagan, and Jane Wyman. While June taught herself to be a mother, hostess, and Mrs. Dick Powell, she became America’s favorite wife. Journalist Bob Thomas wrote in 1954: “June Allyson is the doll who has inherited Myrna Loy’s apron as the ideal spouse of the movies.”

  She was so convincing as Jimmy Stewart’s wife in “The Stratton Story”, “Strategic Air Command”, and “The Glenn Miller Story” that many reporters jokingly claimed she had two husbands — Dick and Stewart. June said good-naturedly that she saw more of Stewart than of Dick. She may have said this with a smile on her face, but the truth was that her marriage with Dick was moving downhill.

  John Wayne, director Dick Powell and editor Stuart Gilmore during the filming of "The Conqueror" (1956) Powell spent nearly every spare minute at RKO where he worked as a director for Howard Hughes. In addition, he helped found Four Star Television and was active in producing and performing for the small screen. June sadly said that “Richard was so tied up with business that the children kept asking ‘Where is Daddy’?”

June once admitted to Henry Scott: “I never did feel quite right about the roles I was called upon to portray —the gentle, kind, loving, doting wife who will stand by her man through anything!” In 1961, June reluctantly filed for divorce. It was a step she took with no pleasure; she spoke no harsh words against Dick throughout the hearings. In the 1950s, Powell was one of the founders of Four Star Television, with Charles Boyer, Ida Lupino and David Niven. Ida Lupino decided to make her television debut in the highly acclaimed Four Star Playhouse (1951). Dick Powell and Charles Boyer had been the original duo, with Joel McCrea nearly the third star. But McCrea lost interest, and David Niven took his place. During her separation from Howard Duff in 1960, Ida received a telephone call trom Dick Powell. Once a boyish crooner in the thirties, Powell had matured into a shrewd businessman, still handsome and quite wealthy. He and his wife, June Allyson, lived close to the Duffs in Mandeville Canyon. Allyson had begun an odd romance with Alan Ladd. Powell telephoned Ida one evening, despondent over the collapse of his marriage. He suggested that they meet, but Ida hesitated. A few years later, both were again in marital difficulties. 

In fact, June Allyson had gone to court to divorce Powell. He again telephoned Lupino and asked her to come to his Four Star office, ostensibly to discuss Ida's outline for a television series called A Matter of Minutes. But the conversation soon turned personal. He asked how she and Duff were getting along. Ida said they were separated. He said he and June were fighting like mountain lions. "We're a fine pair, aren't we?" Ida asked. "Yes, I think we'd make a damn fine pair," Powell replied. But it took virtually no time at all before June and Dick were seeing each other again.
  In 1962, they remarried. Dick also told the press: “June isn’t happy when she’s acting and neither am I.” In a cruel twist of fate, Dick and June’s newfound happiness was cut short after less than a year. Dick was diagnosed with cancer, which he had developed as a result of exposure to radiation left over from atomic testing done in the area he had filmed “The Conqueror.” For the next ten years, June fell into the depths of depression and alcoholism. She rarely left the house, and when she did, she donned wigs to conceal her identity. She confessed in her memoir: “I drank, and that along with a string of nervous breakdowns and my bad rebound marriage, almost finished me off… I wanted to die and I was too much of a coward to commit suicide. ”
  June Allyson’s dependence on a man for her happiness and her screen image as the perfect wife may not be politically correct today. However, in post-war America, she embodied the ideal woman and became a successor to Mary Pickford as America’s sweetheart. Privately, she survived a nearly debilitating childhood injury and recovered from depression and alcoholism. Publicly, she endeared herself to audiences more so than her glamorous contemporaries such as Hedy Lamarr or Lana Turner by becoming a symbol of American values.

  Her underlying vulnerability and self-consciousness makes introverts identify with her while her outspokenness and confidence appeal to extraverts. June summed herself up best when she said: “In truth, I was an introvert in training to be an extravert.” Source: fan.tcm.com

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Dick Powell ("I'm In Love With You"/"You Can't Stop Me From Dreaming") video

Dick Powell and June Allyson in "The Reformer and the Redhead" (1950) directed by Melvin Frank and Norman Panama


Dick Powell ("I'm In Love With You"/"You Can't Stop Me From Dreaming") - a video featuring pictures of Dick Powell and his co-stars: Claire Trevor, Anne Shirley ("Murder, My Sweet"), Linda Darnell ("It happened tomorrow"), Lucille Ball ("Meet the People"), Lizabeth Scott ("Pitfall"), Evelyn Keyes ("Johnny O'Clock", "Mrs. Mike"), Gloria Grahame ("The Bad & The Beautiful"), Rhonda Fleming ("Cry Danger"), Madeleine Carroll ("On The Avenue"), Ellen Drew ("Christmas in July", "Johnny O'Clock), Debbie Reynolds ("Susan Slept Here"), Priscilla Lane, Lola Lane ("Cowboy from Brooklyn", "Varsity Saw"), Micheline Cheirel, Nina Vale ("Cornered"), Signe Hasso ("To the Ends of the Earth"), Peggy Dow "("You Never Can Tell"), Ginger Rogers ("Twenty Million Sweethearts"), Marion Davies ("Hearts Divided"), Olivia de Havilland ("Hard to Get"), Jane Greer ("Station West"), Mary Martin ("Happy Go Lucky"), Ann Sheridan, Gale Page ("Naughty but Nice"), Kay Francis ("Bar Wonder"), Ruby Keeler ("Footlight Parade", "Dames", "Colleen"), and his wives Joan Blondell and June Allyson.

Songs performed by Dick Powell: "If I Knew You Were Coming", "I Will Remember You", "All For You", "I'll String Along With You", "I'm In Love With You", "How About You", "You Can't Stop Me From Dreaming" and "I Cried For You".

Monday, August 13, 2012

When June Allyson met Dick Powell (June Allyson's autobiography)


Dick Powell and Rosemary Lane in the film 'Hollywood Hotel' (1937) directed by Busby Berkeley

At that point Rosemary [Lane] called up to me - "Come on down and meet Dick Powell, honey." I guess I came down pigeontoed -Joan Blondell said so later and it's true I still walk that way. Rosemary said, "Junie, this is someone who asked to meet you -Dick Powell." I looked up, way up, and put out my hand and he held it, grinning down at me, "So here's the little girl with the funny voice." I just continued looking up at him as he held my hand. My mouth was open, but nothing was coming out. I was not uncomfortable, though, and broke into a smile. Vaguely I became aware that his wife, Joan Blondell, was also there, but no one introduced us and quickly the moment passed and someone else was grabbing Dick and talking to him.


Joan's account of this meeting -in 'Center Door Fancy', a fictionalized autobiography- is loaded against me. Most of the names have been changed, but the true identities are painfully obvious. Blondell is Nora, David is first husband George Barnes, Jim is Dick Powell, Amy is me, Teresa is Marion Davies, and Jeff is Mike Todd. She wrote that I simpered and came down the steps pigeon-toed and cooed that I slept with his letter under my pillow every night. I had no letter. I never wrote a fan letter. I had no picture or letter from him or any star. It was ridiculous, but then, so was her charge that I had stolen her husband away -starting that night. Dick Powell recorded his own account of our first meeting in his diary, and it differs substantially from Joan's: "Why I bother to put this down I don't know except that she certainly is the cutest thing anybody ever saw. Last night, I went to catch 'Best Foot Forward' and there was this little blonde character named June Allyson who sang so loud that the veins stood out on her neck like garden hose. I sat and guffawed through the whole routine. Really a funny act although I don't know if the producer meant it that way. Anyway, this afternoon I had to attend a formal luncheon and I got stuck with the most stubborn hunk of chicken I've ever had the displeasure of eating. It took all my attention and I was struggling with it until I guess my face turned red. Then, suddenly, I felt someone's eyes on me and I looked up. And there was this same cute little character from the show last night and she was convulsed with laughter. Laughing at me! I don't know whether or not I particularly like that girl -but she sure is cute."


Dick Powell, Benny Goodman and Rosemary Lane relax between takes of "The Hollywood Hotel" (1937)

The backstage visit of Dick Powell certainly raised my status in the company. Suddenly Rosemary Lane drew closer to me, sharing many confidences about her dear friend Dick Powell -how nice he was, how unlike the usual arrogant movie star. She was fascinated that he had singled me out from everyone and insisted on meeting me. So was I.

One night, between acts of Best Foot Forward, I heard the cast talking excitedly about Hollywood -"Have you heard the news?" "We're all going to Hollywood. Best Foot Forward is going to be made into a movie by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer." Sadly, Rosemary Lane was left behind. Instead MGM was using the sexy, tall, redhead Lucille Ball.

Dear Rosemary Lane of the famous Lane Sisters - she treated me with kindness and never with the condescension other stars reserve for chorus and featured players. I would miss her. I would miss everyone. And New York. And Broadway. And Willoughby's, where I'd emoted for hours trying to pick the right camera for my dear Tommy. I was going to Hollywood and he was going to war. Who knew where he would be going, but this was 1943 and as he put it, "Nothing lasts forever." As I sat in the train, excited yet fearful about the future, I realized that I knew two people in Hollywood and wondered if I would ever see them again. The first, I had just barely met -Dick Powell. The second, I had dated and he had gotten to Hollywood a year ahead of me -in 1942- Van Johnson. Of course they hadn't been what you would call romantic dates. I told him, "People are always thinking there's something wrong with my voice, that I have a sore throat or something." Van predicted my voice would help me make it big and called it my "million dollar laryngitis." I'd have settled for a half million.


Gloria DeHaven, June Allyson and Van Johnson in "Two Girls And A Sailor" (1944) directed by Richard Thorpe

Gloria DeHaven and I would eventually become very good friends, but the person who was most important to me in that critical year was a tall, slightly tough talking but glamorous redhead who would be in three movies with me before the year was up. In 1943, when I met Lucille Ball, she had not yet turned herself into the wacky wife of I Love Lucy fame but was dressed and coiffed and turned out as a dazzling showgirl type in her role as the haughty motion picture star.

I remember telling Lucille Ball "I'd like to recognize where I'm going. I think it's nowhere." Next to Judy Garland, Lucy had become my best friend, and she would not let me leave Hollywood in 1943, when I was beginning to fear I might never be anything more than a bit player, singing a song and throwing up with nervousness afterward. "You can't go," Lucy told me. "You've worked too hard to get here and you're going to make it. Look at me." Then she launched into stories of her past, how she had been a stagestruck kid like me who had come to New York at fifteen to study drama. "The school wouldn't take me because I was too much of a shrinking violet to be an actress," she said, adding, "Yeah, yeah, it's hard to believe and look at me now. And once I got to Hollywood nobody could make me go home."


The way she had gotten to Hollywood was that she became a model and was discovered by a Hollywood agent who spotted her in a Chesterfield cigarette ad. She had been told she could be a chorus girl in Roman Scandals if she would leave for Hollywood immediately; she was on the next train. The 1933 Eddie Cantor musical was her start. We were sitting on the sidelines that day, watching Kathryn Grayson sing. Lucy turned and fixed me with a hard stare. "Are you crazy? You just settle down and dig your toes in. Don't you dare run away. Where would you go, anyway?" "Back to New York," I said, "Well, you can't jump back and forth. You're here now and you're going to stay. I won't let you go back. You're going to laugh at this someday."


I was watching my friend Lucille do a scene from Meet the People one day when I became aware of someone I had seen before. Dick Powell. There was a box on wheels about fifteen feet away with a telephone mounted on it and he was standing there talking on the phone and smiling at me. I had to get a closer look. I walked over and stood nearby, staring at those incredible blue eyes. He put his hand over the receiver and said, "What's the matter? Is something wrong?" "Oh no. I'm just waiting to use the phone." I was crushed. He seemed he hadn't even recognized me. He didn't remember he had wanted to meet me backstage in New York? All right, he didn't know my name so I pretended I didn't know his. Should I remind Dick Powell that he had asked Rosemary Lane to introduce us? I was too shy to. I soon found out why he was at MGM. He was going to be the star in the upcoming 'Meet the People'. Dick suddenly invited several starlets and young actors from the People cast to his home for a barbecue. He was just being kind. He knew we had no money. I learned it was typical of Dick Powell to befriend beginners. Jane Powell, he told me, had taken both his advice and his name -for luck. Her real name was Suzanne Bruce and she had asked him if he'd mind if she took his name. "Jane Powell is a fantastic talent," he said. "I was happy to advise her." Eventually I told Dick how hurt I'd felt when he hadn't recognized me at the portable phone and he just laughed, implying he had been kidding me. There was still no romance. I had been planning to leave Hollywood, but that was all behind me now that I had Dick Powell as my mentor.



Joan Blondell had been a vaudeville brat, traveling as a child with her touring parents through Europe, Australia and the Orient. Her father, Eddie Blondell, was one of the original Katzenjammer Kids. Joan had been Miss Dallas when she was only seventeen. I guess I made a mistake when I called Dick Powell at home. Joan answered and she seemed to be in a bad mood. I said Dick had given me his number to call if I needed help. She did not seem interested in what my trouble could be and irritably called Dick to the phone. Then she came back on and said, with biting sarcasm, "You want my husband? Well, you can have him." Dick was on the phone and I tried to hide my embarrassment as I said, "I've got a script from MGM and they want me to do this picture called 'Two Girls and a Sailor.' He was like a god to me, someone who knew everything. He was older and wiser. I was in awe of him. He called me on Thursday and said, "I'd like to talk to you about this part." I said, "Okay," thinking he meant to talk at the studio. He suggested the Brown Derby for lunch. As we sat down he startled me. "I don't want your feelings to be hurt," he said, "but you can't play the part they want you to play. You have to play the plain sister." "I can't believe what I'm hearing," I said, poking at my Cobb Salad. 'Gloria is a real beauty. So what I want you to do is go in and tell Mr. Mayer that you want to test for the role of the plain sister." I was terrified. Me go in and tell Papa Mayer what to do? Richard was going merrily along, ignoring the dismayed look on my face. "And when he agrees, which you will make him do, I want you to go home and cut off your hair. Just straight across bangs and straight sides and don't use any makeup in the test." It was hard to cut my hair but I did it and again Dick Powell had been right. Papa Mayer saw the test and called me in. "You are absolutely right," he beamed. "We are switching the roles."


Joan Blondell was convinced that I was after her husband. I wasn't, even though Dick Powell gave me palpitations and shortness of breath just to look at him. I tried not to think of him -except as my mentor. Every major actress gets whispered about, usually at about the time she first hits it big. With me it was the nymphomaniac thing. "She's not Goody Two Shoes, she's Goody Round Heels," said the malicious rumors. Someone had to explain to me what "round heels" meant -a girl easily toppled backward into bed. This kind of thing hurts but it goes with the territory of being a celebrity. If Papa Mayer heard this rumor, he dismissed it.

Van Johnson and I went out on a series of official dates -to premieres and industry functions -arranged by the studio. Eventually we were to see the phenomenon of joint Van Johnson-June Allyson fan clubs. Van was a national craze and teenage heartthrob and I had my first taste of mass hysteria as his frequent date -his fans waited in the hundreds wherever we went. Some nights were so bad we didn't dare leave the studio-there was that kind of unruly crowd outside the gates at Culver City. I was always amused at the irony of our big romance which MGM manufactured. While all the intimate details were fabricated by the publicity department, Van and I continued our platonic friendship. The fan magazines especially liked the combination of Van Johnson and me and were panting for a marriage. After 'Two Girls and a Sailor' Van Johnson and I did so many war movies together that the studio joke was that no one would ever know how many missions Van had flown over my dressing room. But the only man who really made my heart flutter was, of course, Dick Powell.

For a short time I dated Jack Kennedy. I didn't know his father was an ambassador and I certainly didn't know I was being pursued by a future President of the United States. He was just a very thin, tall fellow with a boyish grin and nice eyes. My impression was that he was under contract to Metro or wanted to be. We had seen each other around the studio and one day he asked me to dinner and took me to a nice place. It wasn't even Dutch treat, he paid all the expenses. And we laughed a lot. He reminded me of Peter Lawford -both had the same charm and fun-loving ways.


The headline said, JOAN BLONDELL AND DICK POWELL SEPARATE. That was the way Richard told me that he and Joan were through. I suddenly remembered the phone call when Joan had answered. But I said nothing. I was walking on air. He took me to Sardi's and a lot of people looked at us rather strangely, having seen the headlines, too. I noticed Dick didn't seem nervous when Walter Winchell stopped by our table to chat. So began our courtship. When I got back to Los Angeles, he started taking me to many parties. He wasn't hiding anything but it was a delicate situation. People at the studio stopped smiling at me, registering their disapproval without saying anything. I was madly in love with Richard -by now I was calling him Richard though I was the only one who ever did. Now we were even more careful of where we were seen in public -I knew I shouldn't appear to be flaunting my love in the disapproving face of Papa Mayer. One place that became our refuge was Lucy Ball's home. She welcomed me into her inner circle of friends.


Richard presented me with my first gift-a book, 'Messer Marco Polo' by Donn Byrne. He had owned it for many years -it was copyrighted 1921- and treasured it and he wanted me to read it and be inspired by it too. Richard made a little speech about how the great Venetian adventurer had amazed the world by sailing to China in the thirteenth century. "Make only big plans," he told me. I kept it beside my bed and when I got to page 44, I saw that he had written my name in the margin and was deeply touched as I read: "She is not a cold beautiful princess... she is warm as the sun in early June, and she may be beautiful and a princess, but we all think of her as Golden Bells, the little girl in the Chinese garden." I realized I had a take-charge guy. Soon after I started dating Richard, I found my whole lifestyle changing. He insisted I move to a larger apartment -one with a bedroom- and hire a housekeeper to look after me. And he was determined to protect my reputation.


Now that I was a star, I was wondering what had taken me so long, but others were saying "meteoric rise" and "overnight success." It didn't matter. The main thing was I finally felt I belonged. I loved the premieres, the parties, the role of the movie star, even if I couldn't believe it had happened to me. Richard warned, "Believe me, it wears off. Honey, I've been through it -and not just once."


Dick Powell, Miles Mander and Anne Shirley in "Murder, My Sweet" (1944) directed by Edward Dmytryk

Richard had helped me with my career and now he wanted my thinking on something important to him. "I have a script I want you to read," he said. "I really want your opinion of what you think of it." "The title is Murder, My Sweet. Isn't that great?" "Yeah, it sounds pretty sinister." I read the script and loved it. "It couldn't be more exciting," I told Richard the next night. "Who's supposed to play in it?" "Me," he said. "Can you see me as the tough private eye?" "Heavens, never. That would be terrible. That isn't you at all. Don't do it. You'll be ruined. Everybody will laugh at you." Richard didn't argue with me. Instead he just took back the script. Soon afterward I read in the trades that he had been signed to star as detective Philip Marlowe. It was a good thing that he hadn't taken my advice because 'Murder, My Sweet' was a smash hit and marked the start of a new career for Dick Powell in tough-guy roles.


Dick Powell and Ginger Rogers in "Twenty Million Sweethearts" (1934) directed by Ray Enright

I borrowed a scrapbook from his dad and learned about Richard's early career; his romantic triumphs were also featured. Glamour and sophistication were obviously what he was used to. Richard had been linked romantically with his co-star in '20 Million Sweethearts', Ginger Rogers. Then there was his co-star in 'Dames', Ruby Keeler. When Ruby was separated from Al Jolson, she stirred up a minor scandal by moving to a house near Richard's bachelor pad. And then there was Rosemary Lane. They had been a continuing romantic saga in the press. Richard had snatched another beauty from the arms of Buddy Rogers, the actor who later married Mary Pickford. That was actress Mary Brian, whom he had started to date when he was master of ceremonies at the Stanley Theater in Pittsburgh and she had been booked as a visiting Hollywood star. Richard had certainly given Lew Ayres a run for his money when he was dating Ginger Rogers. One columnist wrote, "Dick, they say, wants all of Ginger's time. And he gets it. He doesn't even want Ginger to see Lew, so that looks serious on Dick's part."

And hadn't he married glamour gal Joan Blondell? Obviously he preferred sophistication. I went to Bullock's and bought a slinky black gown, long false eyelashes and other paraphernalia and I put my hair up. Richard was taking me to Ciro's and I was ready. But when he saw me, he was speechless. He slumped on a couch in the living room. He pulled me down on his lap. Richard grabbed me and started smooching. "Whew, you scared me this time," he said. "If I want sophistication I know where to find it. I'm here because being around you is like being in a fresh breeze. So don't go dramatic on me, right?" "Yes, sir," I said. "Goody Two Shoes reporting for duty." "Let's go," he said. "No, wait a minute." He kissed me again. "Monkeyface, I love you."


Dick Powell and Humphrey Bogart get a few pointers on operation of a roulette wheel from John Barrett, technical adviser on Dick Powell's Columbia picture "Johnny O'Clock". Bogart was working on an adjoining sound stage in "Dead Reckoning" (1947)

Richard and I and Bogie and Betty Bacall were courting at the same time -and on boats- and that brought the four of us together. Richard and Bogie became close friends and Betty and I became friends but not exactly intimates. We were just too different. I admired Lauren Bacall for the way she had stormed Hollywood. We had one enormous thing in common besides boats, in that both Lauren and I were overshadowed by our men and let them run the show and our lives. One day on the Santana, Bogie looked over at Betty and me sitting on the deck and said to Richard, with his slightly sardonic smile, "Look at them. We had to pick the two babes with the croakingest voices in Hollywood."

They sounded like they hated each other but all you had to do was look at Bogie to see he worshiped Betty. When he looked at her he seemed to be feeling "This is my world." And her love for Bogie was a beautiful thing to see. Later, when Humphrey Bogart became so ill with cancer, Betty was great and never pampered him. We went over to visit when Bogie could no longer walk downstairs and an elevator had been installed. Bogie rode down for his cocktail hour and Betty talked just as tough to him as ever- "Damn it, get your own drink." She never made him feel like an invalid -she never stopped being the Betty he loved. She seemed so calm and collected, but she didn't fool me.


I had seen the real Betty when we filmed "Woman's World" together and were doing a scene in which we each had to pick up a champagne glass and turn and survey the room. I looked at Betty's glass and her hand was shaking -I couldn't believe it. She saw my look and whispered, off camera, "I'm so nervous." That was when I realized Lauren Bacall did not have the inner security she displayed to the world. Inside, she was very vulnerable. When Betty wrote her memoir I found it so painful I had to keep putting the book down -it was too much like my own story.


Lana Turner and June Allyson, co-stars in "The Three Musketeers" (1948) directed by George Sidney

The Hollywood gossips were persisting in their notion that I was a hot number. There were so many rumors by now that I was the playgirl of the western world that I simply gave up denying anything. I confided in Lana Turner at MGM and she consoled me by saying, "After reading about the twentieth new romance I'm supposed to be having this month, all I can say is I only wish I had the time." Papa Mayer summoned me to his office in the middle of my misery and shingles and pointed an accusatory finger at me. "You are still dating Dick Powell." I nodded yes. "I want it to stop," he said, I nodded no. "I love Richard. I really do." Richard and I went into hiding. I spent more time on the boat and at Lucille Ball's house. I wanted to blurt out, "Look, fellah, you're divorced and you're not talking about marriage and I demand to know why."

We danced a little to the music of a small band. His kisses seemed unusually sweet that night. I knew that if we kept on this way I was either going to be very hurt or what was currently called "a fallen woman." That night Richard opened the car door and started to get out. He always came around to help me out, but this time I stopped him before his foot hit the ground. "Wait a minute," I heard myself saying. "I just want to ask you something." He slammed the door. "I knew something was wrong. What is it?" "Well, I would like to know what your intentions are." Richard nodded then and said, "You want to know about marriage." "Yes, I do." Richard said, "Oh, honey, I love you very, very much but I have no intention of ever getting married again." "Well, in that case I don't think we should see each other again." I got out of the car by myself and bid him a cavalier goodnight with a wave of my hand. My back was turned so he couldn't see the front view of that lighthearted wave. "Do you have any better offers?" he called out the window. "Two," I said defiantly and stumbled up the porch steps with tears streaming down my face. I had one -Tommy- but two seemed the least a girl should have at a time like this. The phone rang at the usual time and I said with a tearful voice, "Helllllooo." He said, "It's me. Have you got home safely?" And still sobbing, I said, "Ffffine. That's ffffine." "Are you crying?" His voice sounded a little disgusted and I said, "Certainly not." He said, "Oh, for God's sake," and hung up. Later there was a pounding on the door. When I opened it, Richard came in like a tired man who has had it. He plopped himself on the couch and said, "All right. If you want to get married, we'll get married." Wearily, he added, "You know I love you." I threw my arms around him. "I love you too, Tommy." Richard pulled away from me and gave me a dirty look. "Who the hell is Tommy?" I started to explain but suddenly Richard was roaring with laughter and so was I. "When would you like to get married?" he said, sobering up. It was late July. I said, "Is August too soon?" That broke him up completely.

We planned to be married August 19, 1945, and Bonnie and Johnny Green generously insisted we use their home in Holmby Hills for the big event. John was MGM's musical director and Bonnie had become like family to me. They would have to serve as family for both of us. Richard's father was now in a nursing home and my mother had just remarried and said she couldn't make the trip West. Oddly, I seemed to be having second thoughts about marrying Richard. "I feel so strange," I told him. "You know, everybody is saying you left Joan for me and I'm the home-breaker. The villain." "I know it and I'm sorry," Richard said, "but I can't go around shouting that it isn't true and that she left me first for Mike Todd. I hope they'll be very happy together but I doubt it." He was right about that.

When Joan Blondell and Mike Todd finally married in 1947, it turned out to be a stormy relationship riddled with financial problems and lasting only three years. The day I met Mike Todd years later -the only time I saw him- I really put my foot in it. There was a whole group standing around at a party and Mike was with Elizabeth Taylor and when I was introduced to him, I wanted to say something friendly. "Oh, Mike," I purred. "You and I have so much in common. We're practically family, you know." He was looking at me so blankly that I felt compelled to forge on. "You used to be married to my husband's wife, Joan Blondell." His eyes turned to steel and he gave me the dirtiest look I'd ever seen and turned away without a word. I felt terrible. Mike Todd must have forgotten that for a moment in the '40's he and Joan Blondell had made each other happy.

June Allyson as Jo in "Little Women" (1949) directed by Mervyn LeRoy

In 'Center Door Fancy', Joan gave me the name of Amy, possibly after the selfish sister in 'Little Women' who steals Jo's boyfriend and marries him. How bitter she must have been to have written about me: "Doesn't he know about his Amy? Everybody else does. Her reputation is in the public domain. She's a tramp dressed like a little kid. She was a call girl in New York -exhibitions her specialty." I could not believe it. How untrue, and how cruel.

Richard's best man was A. Morgan Maree, who handled Richard's money -and who, by now, also handled mine, though what it was being invested in only Richard knew. Of course no Hollywood wedding is complete without one's agent and so my agent, Johnny Hyde, was there. He wasn't just my agent, he represented a lot of stars including Linda Darnell. But he would become famous as Marilyn Monroe's boyfriend, who wrecked his own frail health over her career. I loved having tiny Johnny there, not just because he was a friend but because he made me feel tall in comparison. I was proud to be on the arm of Papa Mayer, head of the whole studio, from whom all blessings flowed. I looked around at all these people dear to me and I almost choked up. Jane Wilkie, my maid of honor, Richard in his business suit; Bess, a very proper lady in black hat and dress with old-fashioned white collar, and Bonnie and John, who had even lent their home. The judge was saying something but I was confused- "Do you take this man... "Who?" There were chuckles around me. "Oh yes, yes," I said.


After a reception at the LaRue restaurant, we were at last going home -to our home. We got to the apartment -the big apartment that would be home for a while -and I spent as much time as I could in the bathroom getting ready. I had bought a knockout wedding nightgown -white satin with a filmy white robe and satin slippers. I was not a virgin but I still was a bundle of nerves, so I suggested to Richard if he wanted a biscuit snack. He just said: "Honey, jump to bed now. Forget the biscuits." The next day he took me to the Santana, and there we had our second wedding night in broad daylight. What had I been afraid of? This was truly the gold at the end of the rainbow. I didn't want to get off the boat, ever. But in three days, we got an urgent call from the nursing home. We arrived to find doctor and nurses frantically working over his father, and the doctor hitting him over and over in the chest. Richard took me outside and said, "I don't want you to see this." Two hours later Richard came out and said, "He's gone." And so was our honeymoon. I'd prayed: "Don't let this happen to me with Richard." Something was telling me that there was nothing I could do about it and this was the shadow of other things to come. -from the autobiography "June Allyson" by June Allyson (1983)