Cary Grant and Peter Bogdanovich were very good friends, despite the age difference, and also their wildly different ways of handling celebrity status.
Cary Grant kept as low a profile as he possibly could, and did his best to avoid scandal and bad publicity. He kept his personal life as hidden as he was able, although inevitably people were interested in his marriages, divorces, etc. But he never willingly opened up his personal life to the tabloids.
Peter Bogdanovich, while certainly an incredible director, kind of went off the deep end with the personal publicity- and he courted it (during his romance to Cybill Shepherd). Shepherd broke up his marriage (to his long-time creative partner – many people credited much of his success to her – so it wasn’t just an anonymous wife he dumped. She was a part of the industry, people knew her, respected her, worked with her … Bogdonavich made a lot of enemies when he dumped her). So Cybill Shepherd (barely out of her teenage years) had an aura of “the other woman” around her through the whole thing, and scandal swirled about the pair, and there they were – out at every party, at every awards show, grinning, and gushing, and laughing at the camera.
Cary Grant, with his sense of propriety, etc., thought it was unseemly. While Bogdonavich and Shepherd were doing the talk-show circuit, and flaunting their happiness, Cary Grant pulled Bogdonavich aside and said something like: “Peter, nobody cares that you are happy. Stop telling everyone how in love you are and how happy you are. It will make people hate you, because in general, people are NOT in love and people are NOT happy.” And very soon, that publicity onslaught crashed, and inverted, and Bogdonavich sunk down into a morass of his own making, when the circumstances of his life went catastrophically bad. (The whole Dorothy Stratten thing. Awful.)
Bogdonavich related this story much later in his life, saying that only with time passing could he realize how right Grant was. Grant always held stuff back from the public, knowing how fickle the public was, and how easily tired the public got. Grant was completely open and available in his acting, and then was reserved and withdrawn about his private life.
Cary Grant stuck by Bogdonavich through his troubles, and at one point, Grant shared with Bogdonavich an analogy he came up with for how Hollywood operated. I love it. And I also love the very end of it. Typical Cary Grant humility.
Check it out:
Becoming a movie star is something like getting on a streetcar. Actors and actresses are packed in like sardines.
When I arrived in Hollywood, Carole Lombard, Gary Cooper, Marlene Dietrich, Warner Baxter, Greta Garbo, Fred Astaire, and others were crammed onto the car. A few stood, holding tightly to leather straps to avoid being pushed aside. Others were firmly seated in the center of the car. They were the big stars. At the front, new actors and actresses pushed and shoved to get aboard. Some made it and slowly moved toward the center.
When a new “star” came aboard, an old one had to be edged out the rear exit. The crowd was so big you were pushed right off. There was room for only so many and no more.
One well-known star, Adolphe Menjou, was constantly being pushed off the rear. He would pick himself up, brush himself off, and run to the front to fight his way aboard again. In a short time he was back in the center only to be pushed off once more. This went on for years. He never did get to sit down.
It took me quite a while to reach the center. When I did make it, I remained standing. I held on to that leather strap for dear life. Then Warner Baxter fell out the back, and I got to sit down.
When Gregory Peck got on, it was Ronald Colman who fell off.
The only man who refused to budge was Gary Cooper. Gary was firmly seated in the center of the car. He just leaned back, stuck those long legs of his out in the aisle, and tripped everyone who came along.
When Joan Fontaine got on, she stood right in front of me and held on to one of those leather straps. I naturally got to my feet, giving her my seat. Joan sat down and got an Academy Award!
HA!
I love that Bogdonavich kind of bounced back and found his footing after it was all said and done. I think his contributions as a writer and observer have been invaluable to film. I can’t think of anyone else shose commentary I’d be interested in listening to for a movie he had nothing to do with. Okay, maybe Francois Truffaut, but that would be kind of hard because he’s dead.
This story reminds me of Johnny Depp telling about some interview where he gave details about his private life. Marlon Brando called him up and gave him this stern lecture. You NEVER talk about your personal life. You can’t. It will hurt your career. People won’t want to see you in movies. Don’t be the “duke in your domain” (ha! I will forever be in your debt for directing me to that article. I’ve probably read it about 50 times in the last two weeks). I love the way Brando saw something in Depp and wanted to keep him from making some of his own youthful mistakes. That seems to be what it was like with Grant and Bogdonavich as well.
I love that story about Brando calling up Depp! I read it in some interview Depp gave recently – and it just made me laugh. And Marlon just launching right in: “What the fuck were you doing in that interview? Don’t tell people that shit!”
And yes. I love Bogdonavich. I just so value his opinion, his books, his movies … a real survivor.