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
HUAC hearings: Stephen E. Ambrose,
Nixon: The Education of a Politician, 1913–1962
, vol. 1 (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1988), 157–60.
“she had spurned”: ibid., 209.
antilynching bill: Zoe Trodd, ed.,
American Protest Literature
(Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2006), 279–80.
Gahagan, Downey, Boddy: Ambrose, 209–10.
symphony of smear: Herbert S. Parmet,
Richard Nixon and His America
(Boston: Little, Brown, 1990), 186.
“Long after Watergate”: ibid.
“Such fuckin’ lies”:
PB,
136.
“can be seen”: Feeney, 52–53.
“If you ever saw”: ibid., 92.
“It is the sum”:
Barnard Bulletin,
10/27/1952.
cross-country fund-raiser:
Charleston Gazette,
10/7/1956;
Austin Daily Herald,
10/17/1956.
“Henry Fonda looked”:
Butte Montana Standard,
10/28/1956.
“intimately”:
PB,
136.
“is withdrawn”: Vidal,
United States,
799.
Puerto Rican houseboy:
Syracuse Post-Standard,
7/31/1963.
high campaign gear:
Provo
Daily Herald,
7/14/1960;
Oxnard Press-Courier,
6/28/1960;
Long Beach Independent,
9/17/1960;
Oxnard Press-Courier,
9/30/1960;
Hayward Daily Review,
10/27/1960;
Florence Morning News,
11/2/1960. Fonda’s PT-109 ad is at
http://www.livingroomcandidate.org/commercials/1960/henry-fonda
.
The Ed Sullivan Show
:
Syracuse Post-Standard,
2/11/1961.
National Cultural Center: Alice Goldfarb Marquis,
Art Lessons: Learning from the Rise and Fall of Public Arts Funding
(New York: Basic Books, 1995), 55.
the president will thank him:
New York Times,
5/20/1962.
“a registered Republican”: Sarris,
Confessions of a Cultist,
52.
Alger Hiss trial: Fiedler,
An End to Innocence,
3–24; Whitfield, 27–31; Allen Weinstein,
Perjury: The Hiss-Chambers Trial
(New York: Knopf, 1978).
Ronald Reagan: Edward M. Yager,
Ronald Reagan’s Journey: From Democrat to Republican
(Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield), 98.
“There is something a bit wicked”: Andrew Sarris, “Film Fantasies, Left and Right,”
Film Culture
(Fall 1964): 34.
based on Stevenson and Nixon:
Burlington Daily Times-News,
10/24/1963.
“a couple of lines”:
Auburn Citizen-Advertiser,
8/30/1963.
will likewise vanish: Marcus, 61.
“Gentlemen, the president”: John Baxter,
Stanley Kubrick: A Biography
(New York: Carroll & Graf, 1997), 189–91.
“I’m beginning to
feel
”:
San Antonio Light,
3/19/1963.
sitting in a dentist’s chair:
FML,
284.
The courage of life:
John F. Kennedy, Profiles in Courage
—
50th Anniversary Edition
(New York: HarperCollins, 2006 [1956], 225.
“What makes it a ‘Western’”: Kael,
Kiss Kiss Bang Bang,
42.
“Long before he even suspected”: Joseph Heller,
Catch-22
(New York: Dell, 1974 [1961]), 85.
Democratic Study Group: Julian E. Zelizer,
On Capitol Hill: The Struggle to Reform Congress and Its Consequences, 1948–2
000 (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2004), 104.
Paulsen special:
Ogden
Standard-Examiner
, 10/21/1968.
“a reasonably tall”: Norman Mailer,
Miami and the Siege of Chicago
(New York: Signet, 1970 [1969]), 122.
“There is a poverty”: Norman Mailer,
St. George and the Godfather
(New York: Signet, 1973 [1972]), 22.
“an absence of rich greeting”: ibid., 107.
read by JFK: Hoberman, 66–67.
“more muted”: Greil Marcus,
Invisible Republic: Bob Dylan’s Basement Tapes
(New York: Holt, 1997), 207.
10. HE NOT BUSY BEING BORN
“I’ve made lots of westerns here”:
Fort Walton Beach Playground Daily News,
9/19/1966.
“
running in the streets
”: Vincent Bugliosi and Curt Gentry,
Helter Skelter
(New York: Norton, 1994 [1974]), 392 (italics in original).
a party is held:
Syracuse Herald-Journal,
6/28/1966.
“Were he never”: Peter Bogdanovich, “Homage to Hank,”
New York Times,
7/3/1966. See also Bogdanovich’s
Who the Devil Was in It: Conversations with Hollywood’s Legendary Actors
(New York: Random House, 2005), 300–317.
Louis Jean Heydt:
Fresno Bee,
1/30/1960.
“You’re going to fall behind”: Kiernan, 120–21.
The Country Girl
:
FML,
238–39.
she pretends that her father: Brough, 127.
Lee Strasberg: Ross and Ross, 99;
The American Weekly,
2/19/1961.
“such a panic”: Kiernan, 89.
She has spent:
MLSF,
99, 107–8.
“a bit of a romp”: Ross and Ross, 95.
“counter-need”: ibid., 99.
“somewhere inside yourself”: ibid.
“Difficult and very sensitive”: Al Aronowitz, “America’s Answer to Bardot: The Young Jane Fonda,” at
http://www.blacklistedjournalist.com/column63index.html
. This is a forty-thousand-word expansion of Aronowitz’s profile “Lady Jane,”
The Saturday Evening Post,
3/23/1963.
“a no-good”:
DTD,
93–94.
his certainty of adult conspiracy: Reed, 208.
“not part of this system”:
DTD,
99.
“a rare combination”: “Life Guide,”
Life,
12/1/1961, 27.
Susan Brewer:
DTD,
120–21.
unknown Warren Beatty: David Thomson,
Warren Beatty and Desert Eyes: A Life and a Story
(New York: Vintage, 1988 [1987]), 70.
“I don’t know what the Method is”: Aronowitz, “America’s Answer to Bardot.”
“will
act out
”: Norman Mailer,
Marilyn: A Biography
(New York: Grosset & Dunlap, 1973), 108.
“Analysis”:
New York Times,
7/16/1967.
“a Kafkaesque nightmare”:
MLSF,
128.
She persuades him: Kiernan, 138.
PT 109
:
DTD
, 160–61; Hoberman, 57–58.
“a parasite”:
FML,
287.
“the five worst plays”: Guiles, 112.
“neurotic drive”:
Pasadena Independent,
2/13/1961.
“more neurotic and selfish”: ibid.
“are not likely to be”: ibid.
“It breaks his heart”: Aronowitz.
“Natalie Wood didn’t want”: Joseph Heller, “
Playboy
Interview,”
Playboy
, June 1975, 72.
Get Yourself a College Girl
: Springer, 212.
“It’s like working”:
Aniston Star,
12/14/1969.
“a camera-viewing of strange festivals”:
Des Moines Register,
9/18/1966.
“perverse” and “hateful”: Thomas Thompson, “A Place in the Sun All Her Own,”
Life
, 3/29/1968, 72.
request for threesomes:
MLSF,
154–55.
“I’m much more relaxed”:
Kingston Daily Gleaner,
2/1/1965.
they marry:
Burlington Daily Times-News,
8/16/1965.
Times Square billboard:
Lowell Sun,
3/10/1965.
Playboy
publishes nude photos:
Albuquerque Journal,
8/27/1966.
“I’d so much wanted”:
MLSF,
211.
Peter meets Eugene McDonald III:
DTD,
130. In
FML,
Peter claims they met at Westminster, the boarding school Peter attended in Connecticut (256).
“a complicity”:
San Mateo Times,
2/26/1965.
Brothers in romance and rebellion:
Arizona Daily Star,
2/12/1965;
Cedar Rapids Gazette,
3/5/1964;
DTD,
188, 190.
Peter feels he knows the truth:
DTD,
195.
“I know where I am”: Reed, 205.
“The sun was shining”: G. Barry Golson, ed.,
The Playboy Interviews with John Lennon and Yoko Ono
(New York: Playboy, 1981), 152.
“morbid and bizarre”: Steve Turner,
A Hard Day’s Write: The Stories Behind Every Beatles Song
(New York: HarperCollins, 1994), 111.
“the movie business”:
FML,
283.
“They’ve gone too far”:
Lowell Sun,
8/5/1967.
“all sorts of sleazy”: Renata Adler,
A Year in the Dark: A Year in the Life of a Film Critic 1968–1969
(New York: Berkley, 1971 [1969]), 147.
Bonnie and Clyde
and
Rosemary’s Baby
: Kiernan, 208.
“My father is a fantastic”:
San Antonio Express,
12/19/1969.
earns $6 million:
Oakland Tribune,
10/1/1967.
“Well I have seen”: E. L. Doctorow,
Welcome to Hard Times
(New York: Random House, 1960), 22.
“didn’t come off”:
Hayward Daily Review,
8/25/1966;
Oakland Tribune,
10/27/1967.
In 1966, Peter is involved:
DTD,
227–36. See also
Albuquerque Tribune,
6/21/1966;
Syracuse Post-Standard,
11/28/1966;
Tucson Daily News,
11/28/1966.
takes the stand to testify:
Long Beach Independent,
12/3/1966;
Fresno Bee,
12/13/1966.
“Make the most”:
Syracuse Post-Standard,
12/28/1966.
“without all the big-studio shit”: Reed, 216.
pornographic concepts: ibid., 217.
“Nobody told me”: ibid., 208.
“My father was never”: ibid., 219.