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Authors: A Hundred or More Hidden Things: The Life,Films of Vincente Minnelli

Tags: #General, #Film & Video, #Performing Arts, #Motion Picture Producers and Directors, #Minnelli; Vincente, #Entertainment & Performing Arts, #United States, #Motion Picture Producers and Directors - United States, #Biography & Autobiography, #Individual Director, #Biography

BOOK: Mark Griffin
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E. Y. Harburg (whom everyone called “Yip”) was outgoing, a deep-dyed socialist and an inveterate ladies’ man. Though he was a dreamer like Vincente, Harburg was in many ways Minnelli’s polar opposite. Despite their distinctly different personalities, Yipper and Vincente became fast friends. In October 1934, when Minnelli was given an opportunity to direct his first show at Radio City, he invited Harburg to contribute an original song, “Jimmy Was a Gent,” to
Coast to Coast
. Billed as a sophisticated revue in four scenes, the production transported audiences to several exotic locales. It would serve as something of a blueprint for Minnelli’s first Broadway spectacular,
At Home Abroad
.
It was Harburg who introduced Vincente to two people who would become his closest friends: Ira and Leonore Gershwin. With a gentle, self-effacing demeanor similar to Vincente’s, Ira Gershwin was accustomed to
letting others hold court. He never seemed put out by the fact that both professionally and socially, he was overshadowed by his younger brother George. When Minnelli stepped out with the Ira Gershwins, Lee inevitably took charge—which wasn’t too difficult, as both her husband and Vincente were certified introverts. Through the years, Lee would become something of a surrogate mother to Minnelli—fussing over him, introducing him to all the right people, and ribbing him about his confirmed bachelor status.
Vincente found another lifelong friend in the form of eccentric pianist and professional hypochondriac Oscar Levant (whom Bosley Crowther dubbed “the gifted vulgarian”). Levant was a fixture at Gershwin parties, always at the ready with a blistering wisecrack or a self-deprecating one-liner. Oscar was every bit as rabbity and nervous as Minnelli. But unlike the eternally tight-lipped Vincente, Levant tended to narrate the finer points of his neurosis, constantly complaining about ailments, both imaginary and all too real.
It was at the Gershwin’s apartment on 72nd Street that Vincente would meet and mingle with some of the brightest talents on the New York scene. Minnelli and composer Harold Arlen would reminisce about their days with Earl Carroll. Vincente would bring dramatist Lillian Hellman up to speed on all the latest backstage gossip. The delightfully witty “Prince of Broadway,” Moss Hart would keep Minnelli entertained with some side-splitting theatrical anecdote that would turn up in one form or another in one of the devastating comedies Hart wrote with collaborator George S. Kaufman. As with Minnelli, there had been “a lot of speculation about Hart’s sexuality.”
14
And just like Vincente, Hart would end up tying the knot at the age of forty-two. Marriage—even so late in the game—would put an end to all of the whispers.
IN 1932, LESTER GABA packed a clean shirt and his lucky penknife and headed off to New York. Considering everything that Gaba and Minnelli already had in common—Marshall Field, the Chicago Art Institute, Balaban and Katz—was it yet another uncanny coincidence that they both moved to Manhattan around the same time? Or had Minnelli gone on ahead and smoothed the path for his uniquely talented friend? Whatever the case, once they were reunited, Minnelli and Gaba were closer than ever. Or at least as close as two fiercely ambitious, career-driven artistic types could be.
Although Gaba’s career would never ascend to the same heights at Minnelli’s, throughout the latter half of the ’30s, he seemed to be everywhere at once. His clever soap sculptures turned up in ads for Ivory Snow detergent;
he staged fashion shows, wrote magazine articles, and designed a successful line of costume jewelry; and his one-of-a-kind Gramercy Park apartment was featured in
House Beautiful
. The dining room, with its “mad” Venetian mural and “an honest-to-goodness canopy,” looked like a set piece straight out of a Minnelli-designed Music Hall number. If the name of the game was publicity, then Lester Gaba was one skilled competitor.
15
“He preceded Andy Warhol in knowing how to bring attention to himself,” says designer Morton Myles. “Just being a painter or just writing about fashion, he realized would not do it. And so, he had to do all of these unusual things to create attention.”
16
Lester Gaba: soap sculptor, mannequin designer, and “the Andy Warhol of his day.”
Esquire
referred to Gaba as “one of Minnelli’s closest friends.” WESTERN HISTORICAL MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION, UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI-COLUMBIA
If Gaba was looking for attention, he found plenty of it, courtesy of one of his most bizarre creations. “The Gaba Girls” were a series of mannequins that were so incredibly lifelike that shoppers who breezed by the fashionable figures in the windows of Best and Company or Saks Fifth Avenue invariably did double takes. The most famous of the Gaba Girls was a tall, statuesque blonde named Cynthia who possessed an “eerie, almost human quality” that was both fascinating and unnerving.
17
Cynthia quickly became a society column staple. Harry Winston loaned her diamonds for an evening out. The press had a field day spotting Cynthia at El Morocco, in the balcony of the Broadhurst, or having her hair done at Saks Fifth Avenue’s Antoine salon. Lester Gaba relished the attention but resented the fact that he was being upstaged by his own creation. When Cynthia fell out of a beauty parlor chair and shattered, Gaba wasn’t exactly prostate with grief. He told a reporter: “Cynthia had become a Frankenstein to me, and I was rather relieved that she decided to—retire.”
18
After her untimely “passing,” Cynthia was replaced by a real-life surrogate—Gaba’s own mother. As Morton Myles recalls, “People used to say, ‘He gave up “The Girls” and now he’s got his mother.’ . . . I remember attending a party when I first moved to Fire Island and when Lester arrived, he was pulling his mother Mamie in the type of little express wagon that we used for hauling groceries on the island. That’s an image you don’t forget. She immediately
became the center of interest arriving that way. I remember she once said, ‘I’m really like the Queen of Sheba, I suppose.’”
19
The beautiful Marion Herwood Keyes. Minnelli’s devoted secretary was also known as his “unkissed fiancée.” PHOTO COURTESY OF PETER KEYES (PHOTOGRAPHER UNKNOWN)
Between toting around Cynthia and Mamie, Gaba somehow managed to work in a relationship with Minnelli. If Vincente was knee-deep in preparations for the latest Radio City extravaganza, Gaba would patiently wait for him to finish his backstage duties. In 1934, the two went on a cruise to Bermuda together. When
Esquire
profiled Minnelli in 1937, Gaba (whom the magazine described as “one of Minnelli’s closest friends”) recalled that everything they did and saw throughout the trip was “so much fodder for Minnelli’s brain, [as he was] constantly attempting to twist everything into an idea for a stage show.”
20
Just as Vincente’s relationship with Lester Gaba had everybody guessing, so did his association with a striking, modishly attired young woman named Marion Herwood. As Minnelli recalled, “The work at the Music Hall was getting so involved that it was decided that I should have a secretary. I hired Marion.”
21
They were always together, often working late into the evening. Always at her right elbow was Marion’s Titan-sized notebook, in which she jotted down Minnelli’s latest inspirations. But was their relationship all just strictly business? After a Walter Winchell item appeared suggesting that Vincente and Marion were “that way about each other,” Minnelli’s mother phoned from St. Petersburg, Florida (where the Minnelli family had relocated in the late ’30s), and inquired about his intentions. Vincente assured her that he and his dutiful secretary were just good friends—though it seems that even Herwood thought otherwise.
“I’ve come to assume that they practically got married,” says Marion Herwood’s son, Peter Keyes. Each time Minnelli made the move from Broadway to Hollywood (first for a brief stint at Paramount in the late ’30s, then with MGM for keeps), Herwood went with him. It was during Vincente’s second attempt at breaking into the movies that his faithful assistant was dealt a devastating blow. Without explanation, Vincente suddenly shifted his attention from Herwood to MGM’s resident showstopper. “I think [Minnelli] may have broken things off around the time he went after Judy Garland,” says Peter Keyes. “At that point, my mother indicated that she had a nervous breakdown out in California and that one of her brothers was terribly important in supporting her through a very difficult period and helping her out of the depression.”
22
Friends of the costume designer Irene, whom Herwood assisted on Minnelli’s 1945 movie
The Clock
, remembered that Marion considered herself a Minnelli fiancée despite the fact that Vincente’s embraces were at best polite and that he had never so much as kissed his intended. After Herwood recovered from her broken engagement and the breakdown that followed, she would resume her work as a costumer on such MGM classics as
The Picture of Dorian Gray
and
The Postman Always Rings Twice
. And she would eventually marry an investment banker.
m
4
“A New Genius Rises in the Theater”
Oh, what wouldn’t I give for
Someone who’d take my life
And make it seem gay as they say it ought to be,
Why can’t I have love like that brought to me?
My eye is watching the noon crowds,
Searching the promenades, seeking a clue . . .
1
ALTHOUGH BILLY STRAYHORN had written the lyrics to “Something to Live For” in Pittsburgh in 1939, they may well have applied to Minnelli during his New York years. Vincente had achieved so much professionally by the time he was in his early thirties that, Lester Gaba and Marion Herwood aside, there hadn’t been much time to cultivate significant relationships. For the man who had once said, “Creating magic for my audience is all that I live for,” romance was really an afterthought—though for Vincente, “searching the promenades” wasn’t always about looking for love.
“When I was very young and exploring New York City, Minnelli was working at Radio City Music Hall,” recalls designer Jack Hurd, who in later years served as a set decorator on such MGM productions as
It’s Always Fair Weather
and
Butterfield 8
:
Next door to Radio City, at Rockefeller Center, there’s a skating rink. That’s what they call a cruising spot for gay pick-ups. Well, he picked me up there one evening and brought me back to his apartment. He showed me models
of sets and things, which he had around the apartment. Then he wanted to have sex but I didn’t find him attractive. He had make-up on. He was too feminine. So, I left. . . . Years later, after the war, I ran into him between the sound stages at MGM, where I was then working on sets. I reminded him of what took place years ago and oh, god, . . . he went to L. B. Mayer and he wanted to get me fired. He didn’t want me around. And he was still freakish, wearing make-up—lipstick and eye stuff. He was married to Judy Garland by then and everybody would say, “What the hell does she see in him?”
2

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