Sunday, December 20, 2015

Miracle on 34th Street, starring Maureen O'Hara, John Payne, Edmund Gwenn, and Natalie Wood (1947)



A skeptical Natalie Wood tries to figure out if Edmund Gwenn is really Santa Claus as her mother Maureen O'Hara looks on in Miracle on 34th Street, 1947.


Natalie Wood and Edmund Gwenn in Miracle on 34th Street, 1947.

Original 1947 poster for Miracle on 34th Street. Notice how it doesn't give any indication that it's a Christmas movie.
Natalie Wood began her career as a child actress at the age of 5. After appearing in a couple of uncredited bit parts, she played her first credited role in 1946’s Tomorrow is Forever. Natalie’s most famous role as a child actress was as a little girl who doesn’t believe in Santa Claus in the 1947 Christmas classic Miracle on 34th Street. Natalie starred as Susan Walker, whose mother Doris (Maureen O’Hara) has instilled in her a realistic attitude towards life. Susan doesn’t like playing pretend with the other children, and she certainly doesn’t believe in Santa Claus. When Doris hires a new Santa Claus (Edmund Gwenn) for Macy’s department store who actually believes he is Santa Claus, Susan doesn’t believe him. The plot of Miracle on 34th Street deals with people’s reactions to Santa, and whether or not they think he’s actually Santa. One person who believes Santa is Doris’ neighbor, Fred Gailey, (John Payne) a handsome young lawyer. 

Miracle on 34th Street is an excellent Christmas movie, and it’s easy to see why it has retained its magic over the years. It’s interesting to see Natalie Wood as a little girl. She’s an excellent child actress, and you can definitely see traces of the adult she grew up to be. 

On the set, Wood was already a serious actress, and her biographer Suzanne Finstad wrote, “One-Take Natalie, her new nickname, impressed everyone. If the adult actors forgot their lines, she cued them. George Seaton, the director, was amazed at how businesslike she was.” (Natasha: The Biography of Natalie Wood, by Suzanne Finstad, p.57) Wood was also filming The Ghost and Mrs. Muir at the same time as Miracle on 34th Street, and sometimes she would film scenes for one movie in the morning and the other in the afternoon. By February of 1947, Wood was making three films at 20th Century Fox, as she had also been cast in a movie called Summer Lightning, which would eventually be released in 1948 as Scudda Hoo! Scudda Hay! That movie marked the film debut of a young actress named Marilyn Monroe.

Miracle on 34th Street was a happy set, as Maureen O’Hara told Finstad, “Every day, it was magic. We had a wonderful, happy, magical time making the movie. Edmund Gwenn was Santa Claus. I mean that literally. He believed he was Santa Claus.” (Finstad, p.56-7) Wood also believed that Gwenn was Santa Claus. She said in an interview, “I still vaguely believed in Santa Claus. I guess I had an inkling that maybe it wasn’t so, but I really did think that Edmund Gwenn was Santa. And I had never seen him without his beard-because he used to come in early in the morning and spend several hours putting on this wonderful beard and mustache. And at the end of the shoot, when we had a set party, I saw this strange man, without the beard, and I just couldn’t get it together.” (Finstad, p.63)

In an odd move for a Christmas movie, Fox released Miracle on 34th Street in May. Despite the strange timing, the movie became a hit, and made Natalie Wood one of the most popular child stars in Hollywood. Miracle on 34th Street is full of excellent performances, including Edmund Gwenn’s turn as Kris Kringle, which won him the Oscar for Best Supporting Actor, Maureen O’Hara, who does an excellent job as a modern divorcee trying to raise a sensible daughter, and John Payne is very good as the handsome young lawyer trying to woo Doris. And of course Natalie Wood is superb, as she delivers a naturalistic performance that previews the success she would have in the future.  

Wednesday, November 18, 2015

Bombers B-52, starring Natalie Wood, Karl Malden, and Efrem Zimbalist, Jr. (1957)

Poster for Bombers B-52. The poster says it's Natalie Wood's, "most exciting role!" It's lying.

Natalie Wood and Efrem Zimbalist, Jr. make a cute couple in Bombers B-52, even if he is twice her age.

Natalie Wood and Karl Malden as father and daughter in Bombers B-52, 1957.
Natalie Wood’s only movie release of 1957 was Bombers B-52, a movie in which she received top billing, but played a supporting role to the Air Force’s latest long-range bomber. Wood stars along with the always excellent Karl Malden as her father, an Air Force engineer, and Efrem Zimbalist, Jr., as a flashy pilot. It takes a while for Bombers B-52 to figure out exactly what kind of movie it’s going to be. At first it seems like an elongated sitcom episode, as the plot involves Malden’s character going on a television quiz show and winning $4,000 by answering questions about baseball. (He buys his daughter a beautiful yellow Ford convertible with the winnings.) There’s conflict between Wood and Malden, as she tries to convince him to take a job in the private sector. Then Zimbalist shows up and gets put in charge of the base where Malden works. Malden is not happy about this. Malden and Zimbalist encountered each other in Korea, and Malden thinks Zimbalist is just a glory-seeking hot shot. But Zimbalist keeps Malden from resigning by showing him the new B-52 Stratofortress planes that the base will get. That’s enough to keep Malden happy. But he’s less happy once Zimbalist starts dating Wood. There’s some drama about test flights of the B-52, but it all ends well. Unfortunately, Bombers B-52 just isn’t a very exciting movie, although it does feature some great aerial photography of the B-52. The unintentional comedic highlights of the film are the mid-air refueling scenes, which just made me think of the opening credits for Stanley Kubrick’s Dr. Strangelove, in which the sexual symbolism is played up as a B-52 is refueled to the romantic strains of “Try a Little Tenderness.” The most unintentionally funny line of dialogue in the movie is at the end of the refueling scene, when someone says, “Tanker to receiver-you’ve got it all.” Wink wink, nudge nudge. 

I would guess that Bombers B-52 was not a fun movie for Natalie Wood to make, as her character really doesn’t have much to do. Wood was trying to become a serious actress, and Bombers B-52 did not put any strain on her acting talents. It must have been a letdown for her after making great dramas like Rebel Without a Cause and The Searchers. Wood certainly looks beautiful in Bombers B-52, but she’s just window dressing.

We don’t see enough of the romance between Wood and Zimbalist to really care about it, or be invested in their relationship. And while Efrem Zimbalist certainly looks more than capable of piloting a B-52, he’s a little old to be romancing an 18 or 19 year old Natalie Wood. Zimbalist was 19 years older than Wood! A more age appropriate love interest would have been Tab Hunter, who had already made two movies with Wood, but Hunter turned the role down. 

Zimbalist does a fine job in one of his early movie roles. Zimbalist is most well-known for his television work in the 1950’s, 1960’s, and 1970’s, on the long running series 77 Sunset Strip and The FBI. He was a handsome man, with good hair, a strong jaw, and an air of authority. You’d trust him to pilot a B-52. Zimbalist’s father, Efrem Zimbalist Sr., was a classical violinist, and his mother, Alma Gluck, was a soprano who made several popular records in the 1910’s. Both Efrem Zimbalist Sr. and Jr. lived to be 95 years old. Karl Malden made it to 97 years old, which means that Bombers B-52 starred two of the longest-lived leading actors ever. 

Karl Malden was one of the great film actors, as even in a potboiler like this, he gives every line his complete dedication as an actor. Malden’s rather ordinary looks, and his formidable talent, allowed him the versatility of moving between leading roles and character roles. Malden later starred with Wood in two more movies, 1962’s Gypsy and the 1979 disaster flick Meteor. Malden got along well with Natalie Wood, and Wood biographer Suzanne Finstad writes about an interesting anecdote during the filming of Bombers B-52: “Malden glimpsed the loneliness underneath Natalie’s surface gaiety when he discovered she had never been on a family picnic, and arranged to take her on one. She told him, afterward, that it was one of the happiest days of her life, which Malden found desperately sad.” (Natasha: The Biography of Natalie Wood, by Suzanne Finstad, p.237) Like many child stars, Natalie really didn’t have much of a childhood, and thus she missed out on a lot of life experiences. 

The screenplay for Bombers B-52 was written by Irving Wallace, who wrote many popular novels, and was also one of the editors for The Book of Lists, which makes him a hero in my eyes, since that was my favorite book when I was 13 years old. Yay for books of random trivia!

Bombers B-52 was directed by Gordon Douglas, who has a lot of “second movies in a series” among his credits. He did 1967’s In Like Flint, the second Flint spy movie with James Coburn, and the second movie in which Sidney Poitier played detective Virgil Tibbs, 1970’s They Call Me Mister Tibbs! He also directed Frank Sinatra in five movies. 

Perhaps the best summation of Bombers B-52 was written at the time it was released in November, 1957, when Time magazine called it a “$1,400,000 want ad for Air Force technicians.” It’s no surprise when at the end of the movie there’s a credit expressing the filmmaker’s thanks towards the Air Force. Without the cooperation of the Air Force, there wouldn’t have been a movie. 

Sunday, November 15, 2015

This Property is Condemned, starring Natalie Wood and Robert Redford, directed by Sydney Pollack (1966)

Robert Redford and Natalie Wood make a gorgeous couple in This Property is Condemned, 1966.

Director Sydney Pollack talks things over with stars Robert Redford and Natalie Wood, while Charles Bronson relaxes in the background.

The stunningly beautiful Natalie Wood in This Property is Condemned, 1966.
A Southern accent lets you get away with a lot. If you’re a movie character from the South, you can be as weird and eccentric as you want, and people will just write it off. If you acted the same way, but were from the North, people would instantly think you’re crazy. That thought came to me as I was watching This Property is Condemned, starring Natalie Wood and Robert Redford. It’s based on a one-act play by Tennessee Williams, who virtually trademarked Southern eccentrics. Early on in the movie, Redford’s character has a short speech where he says, “Do you know there was a cat once who fell asleep in the sun and dreamt that he was a man who fell asleep and dreamt he was a cat. When he woke up, he didn’t know if he was a man or a cat.” What the hell does that mean? Because that speech is delivered in Redford’s Southern accent, it sounds vaguely poetic, as though there’s a deeper hidden meaning in that story. Had that same speech been delivered in a Northern accent, I would have quickly come to the conclusion that Redford’s character was a deranged serial killer, and I would have been shouting at the TV, telling Natalie Wood’s character to get out of his room.

This Property is Condemned plows the same fields as much of Williams’ other work, and it’s not one of his major works. As Gore Vidal wrote of Williams in his excellent 1976 essay, “Some Memories of the Glorious Bird and an Earlier Self,” “Tennessee is the sort of writer who does not develop; he simply continues. By the time he was an adolescent he had his themes. Constantly he plays and replays the same small but brilliant set of cards.” (United States: Essays 1952-1992, p.1146) This Property is Condemned is set in a small town in Mississippi during the Great Depression, and it focuses on Alva Starr, (the luscious Natalie Wood) her domineering mother Hazel (Kate Reid) and Alva’s younger sister Willie (Mary Badham). Hazel runs a boarding house, and she’s basically pimping out the beautiful Alva for dates with men in order to make some extra money. Ironically, Kate Reid was only 7 years older than Natalie Wood, which shows the difference between being a leading lady and a character actress. Things get shaken up when handsome stranger Owen Legate (the super handsome Robert Redford) takes a room at the boardinghouse. Legate is in town to hand out pink slips to some of the railroad men, who all seem to also live at the boardinghouse. (Look for the always creepy Robert Blake in a small part as Sidney.) Legate is at first dismissive of the flirtatious Alva, but he eventually realizes his attraction to her. 

Owen and Alva spend a passionate night together after he’s beaten up by some of the angry railroad workers he laid off. (Being a super handsome guy like Robert Redford means that you get the shit kicked out of you a lot on screen. See also: Tom Cruise.) Alva wants to leave her annoying mother and move to a big city, so Owen buys her a train ticket to New Orleans, where he lives. But then he overhears Hazel telling someone about their plans to move to Memphis with a rich older gentleman and angrily confronts Alva and leaves town in a huff. Knowing she’s lost Owen, a drunken Alva confronts her mother, her mother’s sleazy boyfriend J.J. (Charles Bronson) and Mr. Johnson, (John Harding) the rich older gentleman who wants the Starrs to move to Memphis. It’s one of the best scenes in the movie, and Wood delivers an exquisite performance as she demolishes their hypocrisy. Unfortunately, Alva drunkenly demands that J.J. should marry her that night if he really loves her. Her behavior doesn’t really make much sense, as it’s been clear throughout the movie that she despises J.J.’s attempts to flirt with her. Anyway, they get married, spend the night together, and the next morning Alva steals his money and takes a train to New Orleans. Fortunately, she finds Owen again, and it looks like things will end happily for them. The movie seems to go through a tonal shift once we get to New Orleans. It suddenly feels like the 1960’s rather than the 1930’s, as Alva moves into Owen’s apartment and happily waits for him to come home from work. But then Mother shows up and ruins everything. She tells Owen of Alva’s marriage to J.J., Alva runs out into the rain, catches a cold, and dies. 

The acting in This Property is Condemned is superb, as Wood delivers an amazing performance. I suspect that she probably identified with Alva’s situation, as Wood’s real-life mother was basically the stage mother from hell, and closely controlled Wood’s life as a child actress. Wood was enthusiastic about playing the role of Alva, saying it was “probably the closest I’ll ever get to playing Blanche DuBois.” (Natasha: The Biography of Natalie Wood, by Suzanne Finstad, p.304) Wood is beautiful, sexy, and touching as the hopelessly romantic Alva. Wood’s wardrobe is amazing, and the dresses that Edith Head created for her show off her beauty very well. Wood and Redford make a stunningly attractive screen couple, and their chemistry is obvious. Although the film was not a hit when it was released in August, 1966, Wood was nominated for a Golden Globe for Best Motion Picture Actress in a Drama, but she lost to Anouk Aimee, who won for her role in A Man and a Woman

Wood had previously starred with Robert Redford in 1965’s Inside Daisy Clover, and during the shooting of that film she approached him about pairing with her again in This Property is Condemned. At that point in his career, Redford had done a lot of TV work, but he wasn’t yet a big movie star, as his breakthrough roles came in 1967’s Barefoot in the Park and 1969’s Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. Redford said yes to Wood, and he pushed for his friend Sydney Pollack as director, even though Pollack had only directed one movie. This Property is Condemned was the first movie directed by Pollack that Redford starred in, and they would go on to make seven movies together. I always like Robert Redford’s confidence on screen. Of course, I’d be confident too if I looked like Robert Redford. Redford seems to have that confidence in every role he plays, and it works especially well for Owen’s character. If someone else were playing Owen, he might seem like a real jerk. 

The supporting cast is excellent as well, particularly Mary Badham as Willie. Badham is best known for playing Scout Finch in To Kill a Mockingbird and This Property is Condemned is one of her only other acting roles. Pollack’s direction is very good, and he’s helped out by the legendary cinematographer James Wong Howe, who gets to do several of his trademark long tracking shots from helicopters. Perhaps the most impressive tracking shot is the one as Alva is riding the train to New Orleans. The camera starts outside the train, focusing on Natalie Wood’s face, and then pulling back to reveal the entire train as it crosses a bridge. It’s a beautiful shot.

If you’re a fan of the beautiful and talented Natalie Wood or the handsome and talented Robert Redford, or you just need a Tennessee Williams fix, check out This Property is Condemned.

Sunday, October 25, 2015

Splendor in the Grass, starring Natalie Wood and Warren Beatty, directed by Elia Kazan, written by William Inge (1961)

Poster for Splendor in the Grass, 1961. I like how Warren Beatty is described as "a very special star!"

Warren Beatty and Natalie Wood as Bud and Deanie in Splendor in the Grass, 1961. Don't go too far, you kids!

Director Elia Kazan on the set of Splendor in the Grass, with Warren Beatty and Natalie Wood. You know, just directing shirtless, like you do.

Warren Beatty and Natalie Wood, circa 1962. Natalie Wood had such great style, and she was so incredibly beautiful.

This is such a cute picture of Warren and Natalie. Unfortunately, they weren't this happy all of the time.
The first time moviegoers got a glimpse of Warren Beatty, he was making out with Natalie Wood in a car. It was a fitting entrance for Beatty, who became known as a legendary ladies’ man. 

Beatty made his movie debut in 1961’s Splendor in the Grass, starring opposite Wood in a story about a teenage romance. In Splendor, set in Kansas in 1928 and 1929, Beatty played Bud Stamper, a standout athlete, and Wood played Wilma Dean “Deanie” Loomis. Bud’s family is very rich, thanks to oil, while Deanie’s father is a grocer. Unfortunately, both Bud and Deanie get terrible advice about sex and relationships from their parents. Although Deanie’s mother (Audrey Christie) wants Deanie to have the financial security that Bud can give her, she is horrified at the thought that Deanie and Bud might be going too far. As she says to Deanie at the beginning of the movie, “Boys don’t respect a girl they can go all the way with. Boys want a nice girl for a wife.” Deanie asks, “Is it so terrible to have those feelings about a boy?” Her mother’s tart response is “No nice girl does…She just lets her husband near her in order to have children.” Yikes. 

In the Stamper household, Bud can barely get a word in edgewise with his overbearing, Babbitt-like father Ace (Pat Hingle). Ace is worried that a girl like Deanie is only interested in Bud for his money, and will try to trap him into marriage by letting Bud get her pregnant. Ace’s solution to that problem is telling Bud that he should continue to date Deanie, but get his rocks off with slutty girls. 

Splendor in the Grass is full of sexual tension, as both Bud and Deanie want to have sex, but they know that “good” boys and “nice” girls don’t have sex before marriage. The temptation leads to turmoil and illness, as Bud stops seeing Deanie, and she attempts to drown herself, which leads to her parents sending her to a psychiatric hospital. Bud and Deanie marry other people, and they are left with the memory of “the hour of splendor in the grass, of glory in the flower.”

Splendor is a superb movie, written by William Inge, one of the major American playwrights of the 1950’s, whose other works include Come Back, Little Sheba, Picnic, and Bus Stop. Inge captured the passion of young love, and also the stultifying small town that Bud and Deanie inhabit, with its rigid behavioral expectations. Splendor was directed by Elia Kazan, one of the major American directors of the 1950’s, whose other films include A Streetcar Named Desire, On the Waterfront, and East of Eden. There was a lot of talent assembled for Splendor in the Grass, and they all did remarkable work. Warren Beatty gave an excellent performance as Bud, and Natalie Wood delivered one of her definitive performances as Deanie. 

The supporting cast of Splendor was marvelously talented. Pat Hingle was great as the annoying Ace Stamper. Hingle had recently survived a terrible accident, as he had fallen fifty feet down an elevator shaft in 1959, breaking many bones and nearly dying. His limp as Ace Stamper was no actor’s affectation-that was how Hingle walked after the accident. As you watch the movie, you’ll notice that Hingle doesn’t seem old enough to be Warren Beatty’s dad, and he wasn’t. Hingle was just thirteen years older than Beatty. But Hingle was twenty three years older than Joanna Roos, who plays his wife in the movie! Barbara Loden played Bud’s older sister, a wild flapper who is in full rebellion against the family. Loden was having an affair with Elia Kazan, and they eventually married in 1967. Look for Phyllis Diller at the end of the movie as a nightclub hostess-she even gets to tell a few jokes. Also be on the lookout for William Inge in an uncredited cameo as the Reverend. 

How did Warren Beatty get to be so lucky to make his first film with Natalie Wood, Eliza Kazan, and William Inge? The story that usually gets told is that Warren Beatty’s acting career was jump-started when the director Joshua Logan saw him at the North Jersey Playhouse in in a production of Compulsion in December of 1958. Logan was a noted theater director who co-wrote the book for South Pacific. Logan was a good friend of the playwright William Inge, and had directed the movie versions of Inge’s plays Picnic, starring William Holden, in one of his best roles, and Bus Stop, starring Marilyn Monroe. Inge thought that Beatty would be perfect for one of the lead roles in Splendor in the Grass, a screenplay he was writing for director Elia Kazan. The story of Beatty being discovered by Joshua Logan is repeated in Peter Biskind’s biography of Beatty, but Suzanne Finstad’s Beatty biography has a different tale to tell. Finstad’s book states that William Inge saw Beatty on an episode of an NBC TV show called True Story. Inge thought that Beatty would be perfect for Splendor in the Grass. (Warren Beatty: A Private Man, by Suzanne Finstad, p.174) Inge refuted the story that he or Logan saw Beatty on stage, and he said in 1967, “Just for the record, neither Josh Logan nor I even knew that Warren had played in Compulsion.” (Finstad, p.180) I couldn’t find any reference to Beatty appearing on an episode of True Story on imdb.com to confirm Inge’s story, but that doesn’t mean it didn’t happen.

Before Beatty made Splendor, he was briefly under contract to MGM, but he bought himself out of the contract in the summer of 1959, before he had ever accepted any roles at the studio. Even then, Beatty was highly selective about the parts he played. At this point in time, if Warren Beatty was known to anyone in the show business world, it was most likely for being Shirley MacLaine’s little brother, or for being Joan Collins’ boyfriend. But William Inge believed in Beatty’s talent, and he gave Beatty the lead role in his new play, A Loss of Roses, which opened on Broadway in November, 1959. It closed after just three weeks. It is, to date, Beatty’s only appearance on the Broadway stage. However, Beatty was nominated for a Tony Award for Best Actor. A Loss of Roses was eventually filmed as The Stripper, released in 1963. Richard Beymer, most famous for playing Tony in West Side Story, played the role that Beatty played on stage. And, in another connection to Natalie Wood’s most famous roles, Gypsy Rose Lee had a role in The Stripper. 

Beatty’s screen credits at the time he began filming Splendor in the Grass included appearances on 5 TV shows, plus 2 episodes of a TV show called Look Up and Live, and 5 episodes on the teenage sitcom The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis, playing Milton Armitage, a rich kid who vied with Dwayne Hickman for Tuesday Weld’s affections. It was not exactly an overpowering body of work. But Beatty did very well in Splendor. Of course, it helped that Inge tailored the role to fit Beatty. Beatty’s acting style was highly reminiscent of the late James Dean, and working with Kazan and Wood only reinforced the connection to Dean. Beatty’s performance in Splendor is much better than his performances in his other early movies, like The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone, All Fall Down, and Lilith. Part of the reason might be that Splendor is just a better movie than Beatty’s other early movies. 

At the time Splendor was filmed in 1960, Natalie Wood was having a difficult time finding the kind of roles she wanted to play. Wood had started out as a child star, appearing in the Christmas classic Miracle on 34th Street when she was just eight years old. Wood had made the difficult transition to adolescence with her fantastic performance as Judy, opposite James Dean in 1955’s Rebel Without a Cause. But five years after Rebel, her career seemed stuck. Off-screen, Wood was married to handsome young actor Robert Wagner, and they were one of young Hollywood’s most popular couples, who gathered headlines wherever they went. 

Wood longed to play Deanie, and in the words of her biographer Suzanne Finstad, “She saw Splendor, and its director, Kazan, as her last best hope to restore her integrity as an actress.” (Natasha: The Biography of Natalie Wood, by Suzanne Finstad, p.254) Kazan said of Wood’s reputation at the time, “People said generally that she was finished, washed up.” (The Sexiest Man Alive: A Biography of Warren Beatty, by Ellis Amburn, p.35) Kazan had always had Wood on his short list of actresses to play Deanie, but he was wary of her reputation as a pampered movie star. Once he met her in person, he knew that she would be excellent as Deanie. Kazan said later of Wood, “She worked as if her life depended on it.” (Natasha, p.256) 

As excited as Wood was to play Deanie, there were also parts of the script that made her nervous. Wood was very frightened at the thought of filming the scene where Deanie attempts to kill herself by throwing herself into a reservoir where she and Bud used to park and neck. Wood had been terrified of water since she was a child, and insisted that Kazan hire a double to film the scene. Wood claimed that Kazan hired a double, but the double couldn’t swim at all, forcing Wood to perform the stunt herself. Kazan claimed that he didn’t hire a double for Wood. Regardless of the truth, Wood had to confront one of her deepest fears, and the scene is wrenching not only because of Deanie’s emotional state, but because of the way it echoes Wood’s own tragic death by drowning in 1981. (Natasha, p.261-2 has more information about the filming of the scene.)

Another difficult scene for Natalie Wood to film was the one in which Deanie has an emotional argument with her mother while taking a bath. Her mother tries to get more information about how far Deanie went with Bud, and asks her, “Did he spoil you?” Deanie yells back “I’m not spoiled!” Natalie had to perform the scene nearly naked, and she also did it without an accessory that she always wore. For the bathtub scene, Natalie took off the bracelets that she wore on her left wrist. She had broken her left wrist at a young age, and it never healed properly, so her wrist bone stuck out a bit. Natalie was always very self-conscious about her wrist, so she wore bracelets to hide it. But for the bathtub scene, Natalie isn’t wearing anything on her left wrist. Wood’s biographer Suzanne Finstad wrote the following about the bathtub scene: “The combination of Kazan’s wizardry, Natalie’s emotional connection to the mother/daughter conflict in the scene, the panic of dousing her head under the bath water, and the vulnerability she felt at being seen ‘naked’-without her bracelet-produced a hysteria in Natalie that may be her most powerful moment as an actress.” (Natasha, p.260)  

Together Natalie Wood and Warren Beatty made a very pretty pair. Beatty was an extremely handsome young man, with a thick head of dark brown hair, full, sensual lips, a cleft chin, and clear blue eyes. Women didn’t seem to care that his ears stuck out a little bit. Natalie Wood was simply stunning. She was a very attractive woman who had lots of sex appeal. Wood was petite, with reports of her height varying from 5’0” to 5’3”. Wood had beautiful big warm brown eyes, dark brown hair, and an inviting smile. And no man ever cared that her left wrist stuck out a little bit. 

On the set, Wood and Beatty had a somewhat frosty relationship. Wood bestowed on Beatty the nickname “Mental Anguish,” for the way he overanalyzed every nuance of the script. (Natasha, p.258) In an unfinished memoir from 1966, Wood wrote of Beatty: “After he got the role, a few misunderstandings crept in. Warren had heard rumors that I didn’t want him in the film, that he was too much of an unknown, that we needed an established male star to carry the picture at the box office. None of this was true. But Warren believed it…Warren acted quite aloof.” (Warren Beatty: A Private Man, by Suzanne Finstad, p.235) Finstad describes Wood’s memoir in more detail: “In July of 1966, Wood submitted her ‘life story’ to Peter Wyden, then the executive director of Ladies’ Home Journal, and a book publisher. It was written by hand, and in typescript with Wood’s handwritten corrections.” (Finstad, p.260) 

 Beatty’s romantic relationship with Wood almost certainly did not start on the set of Splendor, but rather a year later, in 1961, after Wood separated from Robert Wagner. During filming of Splendor Beatty was still dating Joan Collins, and Collins and Wagner were frequently on the set. Splendor began filming in New York City on May 9, 1960, and it wrapped on August 16, 1960. Just two days later Wood started rehearsals for West Side Story. (Biskind, p.38) Ironically, Beatty had tested for the role of Tony in West Side Story, but he lost out to the dull and colorless Richard Beymer. (Finstad, p.228) 

In his book Pieces of My Heart, Robert Wagner wrote, “Beatty had nothing to do with our breakup, and Natalie didn’t begin to see him until after we split.” (Wagner, p.136, quoted in Biskind’s biography of Beatty) In an interview with Peter Biskind, Beatty also says that nothing happened between him and Natalie during filming. “There’s a lot of apocrypha about Natalie and I having something going on during Splendor in the Grass. It’s utterly untrue. In fact it was a fairly distant relationship.” (Biskind, p.37) 

Natalie Wood’s account of how her relationship with Beatty began also squares with what Beatty and Wagner said. Wood wrote, “I have suffered in silence from gossip about my walking away from my marriage to go with Warren. There was gossip and speculation that Warren was in some way responsible for the end of the marriage. It is totally untrue. Warren had nothing to do with it. We began our relationship after, not before, my marriage collapsed.” (Finstad, p.268, source is Wood’s 1966 “life story”) 

Wood and Wagner announced their separation on June 21, 1961, and a month later, on July 27th, Beatty was Wood’s date at a preview screening of West Side Story. Even though Robert Wagner said Beatty didn’t have anything to do with their breakup, he was still pissed off at Beatty. “I wanted to kill the son of a bitch. I was hanging around outside his house with a gun, hoping he would walk out. I not only wanted to kill him, I was prepared to kill him.” (Wagner, Pieces of My Heart, p.142, quoted in Biskind bio) If Wagner had really wanted to kill Beatty, he probably should have just hung around outside the house that Natalie Wood was renting. 

Both Wood and Beatty were pilloried in the popular press at the time they started dating, because the assumption at the time was that their relationship had precipitated the disintegration of Wood and Wagner’s marriage. Beatty, who has long had a contentious relationship with the press, was accused of being a homewrecker, and he said in an interview with Peter Biskind: “The press has beat the shit out of me since 1960. Nobody gets beat up like a twenty-two-year-old pretty boy.” (Biskind, p.49) 

Wood and Beatty’s relationship was anything but calm, and they eventually broke up in 1963. But for a while they were one of the hottest Hollywood couples, a sort of junior version of Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton. Wood wrote of their relationship, “Neither Warren nor I was ready for a permanent relationship…at bottom, we both knew it was only an interim relationship. Both of us were not only immature but moody…we were both so confused that we thought fighting and hostility meant real emotional honesty.” (Finstad, p.273, source is Wood’s 1966 “life story”)

Splendor was released on October 10, 1961, and Beatty was given a big press buildup before the film’s release. That buildup, combined with his new romance with Wood meant that millions of people had seen Warren Beatty’s face and name before they had ever seen him on screen. Which begs the question: why was the post-production period for Splendor so long? In those days, it was extremely rare for a movie to be released 14 months after it had finished filming, especially a property that the studio actually had faith in. A more normal post-production period for Splendor would have meant a release in early 1961. If Kazan had really been under pressure from Warner Brothers, it could have even come out in December of 1960. Another odd thing about the release of Splendor is that it came out just before West Side Story, which premiered in New York City on October 18, 1961. West Side Story would assuredly be one of the major releases of 1961, so why release Splendor at the same time and have two films starring Natalie Wood competing at the box office? But it doesn’t seem as though the competition hurt either film, as they both did very well. According to Wikipedia, West Side Story was the highest-grossing movie released in 1961, earning $43 million. Splendor in the Grass was number 10, earning $11,000,000. Annoyingly, there’s no link to where the total for Splendor comes from. IMDB says Splendor made $8.7 million, which was still a huge total, and would put it at 14th for the year. 

Wood and Beatty both received glowing reviews for their performances in Splendor, and they were both nominated for Golden Globes. They both lost, Beatty to that year’s Oscar winner, the handsome German actor Maximilian Schell for his role in Judgement at Nuremburg, and Wood to Geraldine Page for Summer and Smoke. (Ironically, one of Wood’s fellow nominees was Beatty’s sister Shirley MacLaine, who was nominated for The Children’s Hour.) However, Beatty did win the Golden Globe for “Most Promising Newcomer-Male,” which he shared with the singer Bobby Darin. 

Splendor in the Grass was nominated for two Oscars, William Inge for his original screenplay, and Wood for Best Actress in a Leading Role. Beatty and Wood attended the Oscars together, and Life magazine was so sure Natalie would win the Oscar that they hired a photographer to follow her on the day of the ceremony, April 9, 1962. (Natasha, p.282-3) Inge won the Oscar, but Wood lost to Sophia Loren, who won for her role in Two Women. Meanwhile, West Side Story won 10 Oscars that night. Later that week, after losing the Oscar, Wood filed for divorce from Robert Wagner. According to Beatty biographer Ellis Amburn, part of the reason Beatty wasn’t nominated for an Oscar for Splendor was because Warner Brothers was trying to push for Beatty to be nominated as Best Supporting Actor for The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone, which was a foolish idea, as anyone who has seen Beatty’s performance in that film can attest. 

An interesting postscript to Beatty and Wood’s relationship is that in 1966, three years after they broke up, Beatty tried to persuade Wood to star in Bonnie and Clyde with him. It was one of the few times when Beatty was not able to get what he wanted from a woman, as Wood turned him down. Beatty said, “I guess I wasn’t too persuasive; at that point I wasn’t getting a lot of offers and Natalie was riding the crest of her career.” Wood said in a 1969 interview, “I loved the script and I loved the part, but I had personal reasons. I didn’t want to go to Texas on location and well, Warren and I are friends, but working with him had been difficult before.” (Both quotes from Natasha, p.313) It’s fascinating to think what Bonnie and Clyde would have been like with Natalie Wood instead of Faye Dunaway.

Splendor in the Grass is a fantastic movie, and I would highly recommend it for any fans of Warren Beatty, Natalie Wood, William Inge, and Elia Kazan.

Intro to the Films of Natalie Wood


The beautiful and talented Natalie Wood.

Hello, readers. My name is Mark Taylor, and I’m the author of the blog Mark My Words. I also just started a blog about the Films of Warren Beatty. Natalie Wood is one of my favorite actresses. She was a very beautiful and talented woman, and I’m starting this blog to pay tribute to her. This blog won’t cover all of her movies in chronological order like my Warren Beatty blog, but I will review Natalie’s movies here when I see them. Wood had a fascinating career, as she started out as a child star, and was able to transition successfully to teenage and adult roles. 

Thanks for reading; I hope you enjoy learning more about the films of Natalie Wood.