Read The Man Who Saw a Ghost: The Life and Work of Henry Fonda Online
Authors: Devin McKinney
Tags: #Biographies & Memoirs, #Arts & Literature, #Actors & Entertainers, #Humor & Entertainment, #Movies, #Biographies, #Reference, #Actors & Actresses
“I pride myself”:
Waterloo Evening Courier,
2/24/1926.
He sees, by his account:
FML,
35;
PB,
104.
Bette Davis:
FML
, 35–36. Davis relates the incident in Charlotte Chandler,
The Girl Who Walked Home Alone: Bette Davis, A Personal Biography
(New York: Simon & Schuster, 2006), 117–19, though curiously not in her autobiography,
The Lonely Life
(New York: Putnam, 1962).
The Barker
: Ross and Ross, 86.
“a high, strangulated sob”: Logan, 21.
“some odd human animal”: ibid.
Elmer: ibid., 27–28.
“Several years ago”: Houghton, 109.
“[Now] he was aware”: ibid., 120.
He spends the winter months: Sweeney, 169–74;
FML,
54–55, 58–59.
“stimulating plays”:
New York Times,
1/8/1935.
“She intrigued me”: Hayward, 185. See also Houghton, 84.
The Devil in the Cheese
: Hayward, 185–86.
“By the time I am thirty-five”: Collier, 31.
“cream”:
FML
, 91.
“Hank was much in love”: Houghton, 161.
“Fonda”: Brough, 43.
marriage license: Brooke Hayward Papers, Billy Rose Theatre Division of the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts.
Fonda initially objects: Houghton, 240.
“They fought so terribly”: Brough, 37.
the two marry: rector’s receipt, Brooke Hayward Papers.
Jed Harris: Martin Gottfried,
Jed Harris: The Curse of Genius
(Boston: Little, Brown, 1984), 145–46.
divorce proceedings: unedited transcript of HF’s 1975 interview with Brooke Hayward (hereafter given as Hayward interview transcript), Brooke Hayward Papers.
stranger in a Christian Science reading room:
FML,
66–67.
“unable to give the role”:
New York Times,
1/2/1960.
Death comes: ibid.
She dies only nine months:
New York Times,
10/19/1960.
His first sex had been:
FML
, 29.
“is made to look delighted”: Haskell, 150.
head shot: Brooke Hayward Papers.
“Casa Gangrene”:
FML,
70–71; Brough, 52.
“stooging”: Hayward interview transcript.
Inspector Enderby:
Portsmouth Herald,
9/6/1932.
“a sentimental romance”:
Barnard Bulletin,
10/21/1932.
Forsaking All Others
:
www.ibdb.com/production.php?id=11729
.
Love Story
: Sweeney, 176.
All Good Americans
:
FML,
77;
www.ibdb.com/production.php?id=11804
.
Mr. Goldfarb:
FML,
73.
“a potpourri”:
New York Times,
2/22/1985.
“Finances had to be pooled”:
Piqua Daily Call
, 5/4/1934.
“lacks pace”: “The Theatre: New Play in Manhattan,”
Time,
3/2/1934; available at
www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,747250,00.html
.
“a fairly witty”:
San Antonio Daily News,
4/1/1934.
March through July 1934:
http://www.ibdb.com/production.asp?ID=11849
.
Dwight Deere Wiman:
FML,
84–85.
Henry introduces Hayward: Hayward interview transcript.
“Hayward has the agent’s habit”: Margaret Case Harriman, “Profiles: Hollywood Agent,”
The New Yorker,
7/11/1936, 24.
“It wasn’t my ambition”:
FML,
85; Hayward, 134–35.
Walter Wanger: Bernstein.
Wanger would introduce Siegel: Bernstein, 163; David Weddle,
“If They Move … Kill ‘Em!”: The Life and Times of Sam Peckinpah
(New York: Grove, 1994), 109, 116.
“a fine and daring producer”: Bernstein, 123.
“a daring experimenter”: ibid., 128.
“one of the fanciest”: Otis Ferguson,
The Film Criticism of Otis Ferguson
(Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1971), 265.
“I could go back”: Hayward, 135.
Henry will not recall him warmly:
PB,
118.
Joel McCrea or Gary Cooper: Cole and Farrell, 21.
loan-out fee:
FML
, 95.
star gets approval: Bernstein, 112.
“I had no ambition”:
PB,
118.
The President Vanishes
: Bernstein, 97.
“Wouldn’t he be wonderful”: Roberts and Goldstein, 44.
“He was patently ideal”: Brough, 58.
the good sense to compliment Connelly:
FML,
87.
“a manly, modest performance”: Cole and Farrell, 21.
“an extraordinarily simple”: ibid.
“will be transferred”:
Syracuse Herald,
11/8/1934.
warned by the director, Victor Fleming:
FML
, 97–98.
dies in Omaha:
Lincoln Star
, 10/8/1934. To make it worse, the notice identifies Herberta’s son as “Harry Fonda of New York.” See also FML, 88–89.
Henry rents a bungalow with Jimmy Stewart:
FML
, 99–102; Michael Wilmington, “Small-Town Guy,”
Film Comment
, March–April 1990, 52.
Martin bomber:
FML,
99.
Ross Alexander and Aleta Freel: ibid., 96.
Freel shoots herself:
San Antonio Express,
12/8/1935.
“The day following”:
Waterloo Daily Courier,
12/10/1935.
Ronald Reagan: Ronald Reagan,
Reagan: A Life in Letters
, ed. Kiron K. Skinner, Annelise Anderson, and Martin Anderson (New York: Free Press, 2003), 30–31.
“a generation of favorites”: Thomson,
The Whole Equation,
154.
“Youth is a time”: Houghton, 259.
4. THE BIG SOUL
“The only actor of the era”: Baldwin, 21.
“first conscious calculation”: ibid., 28.
Shirley Ross:
Middlesboro Daily News
, 10/31/1935;
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0743841/
;
FML,
98.
“Henry Fonda says it is”:
San Mateo Times,
3/21/1936.
“One of the most personable”: Cooke, ed., 72.
He lodges at: HF to Sullavan, 7/1/1936, Brooke Hayward Papers.
She is related by marriage:
New York Times,
8/24/1936.
“an alcoholic”: Andersen, 23.
“a part-time poet”: Guiles, 4.
paranoid schizophrenic:
MLSF,
25.
She claimed to have been molested: ibid., 26.
Clare Boothe: Andersen, 24.
“descend on Wall Street”:
MLSF,
28.
an impatient Frances suggesting to Brokaw: Guiles, 4.
cash bequest:
FML,
119.
yearly income in excess:
New York Times,
11/9/1935.
“When a woman”: Guiles, 4.
“I’ve always gotten”:
MLSF,
37.
“Dearest Peggy”: HF to Sullavan, 7/1/1936, Brooke Hayward Papers. (Dating contradicts sources that say HF did not leave for England until 7/10.)
“THEY’LL BE MARRIED”
:
Lowell Sun,
8/24/1936.
a reception:
New York Times,
9/9/1936;
FML,
118.
“blundering fool”: HF to Sullavan, 9/9/1936, Brooke Hayward Papers.
The wedding:
New York Times,
9/17/1936.
“Mrs. Robert Kane”:
Waterloo Sunday Courier,
10/4/1936.
Fonda admits that he has begun to secede:
FML,
120.
“expressed certain feelings”: Kael,
Kiss Kiss Bang Bang,
49–50.
“I was barely aware”:
PB,
102.
“In a way”: Baldwin, 25.
“And because they were lonely”: Steinbeck,
The Grapes of Wrath
, 264.
“The right to be let alone”: Samuel Warren and Louis Brandeis, “The Right to Privacy,”
Harvard Law Review,
12/15/1890, 193.
“the America of the murders and rapes”: Wilson,
Literary Essays and Reviews of the 1930s and 40s
, 519.
Blockade
(1938): Bernstein, 129–32.
“The story does not attempt”: John Walker, ed.,
Halliwell’s Film Guide 1994
(New York: HarperCollins, 1994), 137.
“I have read a book”:
Port Arthur News,
1/21/1940.
was sold, days after publication:
Fresno Bee,
4/21/1939.
“The shadow”: Steinbeck,
The Grapes of Wrath
, 187.
“Maybe all men”: ibid., 33.
“an organization of the unconscious”: ibid., 135.
“They’s stuff”: ibid., 236–37.
“people in flight”: ibid., 166.
5. WAYS OF ESCAPE
“Death in the guise”: Percy, 313.
she especially wants a boy: Andersen, 28;
MLSF,
41.
leaping with excitement:
FML,
121.
provision written into:
FML,
122–23.
“Dad was so emotionally distant”:
MLSF,
50.
“Protestant rages”: ibid.
“We were all afraid”: Brough, 80.
“children, operations”: Kiernan, 20; Anderson, 28–29.
“quarantined”:
FML,
124.
Bell Telephone: Hayward interview transcript.
purchase the property:
FML,
133;
MLSF,
49.
“in increments”:
DTD,
8.
“a bare hill”: Hayward interview transcript.
“In those days”: Hayward, 138.
“Probably the most carefully planned home”: Marva and Lloyd Shearer, “The Fondas’ Formula for Successful Living,”
House Beautiful
, July 1948, 40.
the styling of the house: Ross and Ross, 93.
she retreats for three weeks: Andersen, 32;
FML,
134.
he left his virginity: Gussow, 11.
“a little melodrama”: ibid., 57.
“would transform himself”: Custen, 227.
“divided allegiance”: Gussow, 21.
“Henry Fonda is fast becoming”:
Syracuse Herald,
11/20/1939.
“We intend to follow”: Gussow, 84.
“one casting decision”: Custen, 233.