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Joan Crawford: Motion Picture magazine, 1950
<html> <head> <title> Joan Crawford: Motion Picture magazine, 1950</title> <meta name="GENERATOR" content="Namo WebEditor v5.0"> <meta name="description" content="Joan Crawford: Motion Picture magazine, 1950"> <meta name="keywords" content="Joan Crawford, Motion Picture"> </head> <body bgcolor="#999999" link="black" vlink="black" alink="black"> <P style="MARGIN-TOP: 0px; MARGIN-BOTTOM: 0px" align=center><B><FONT face="Book Antiqua" color=#993366><SPAN style="FONT-SIZE: 14pt"><I>The Best of Everything</I></SPAN></FONT></B></P> <P style="MARGIN-TOP: 0px; MARGIN-BOTTOM: 0px" align=center><B><A href="menupage.htm"><FONT face=Arial color=black size=1>Main Menu </FONT></A><FONT face=Arial color=black size=1> </FONT><A href="magazines.htm"><FONT face=Arial color=black size=1> Magazines Main</FONT></A></B></P> <p style="margin-top:0px; margin-bottom:0px;" align="center"> </p> <table align="center" border="5" cellpadding="25" cellspacing="0" width="55%" bgcolor="white" bordercolor="#993366" bordercolordark="#993366" bordercolorlight="#993366"> <tr> <td> <p align="center"><FONT face="Arial,Helvetica" color="black"><span style="font-size:18pt;">To Have and Have Not</span></FONT></p> <CENTER><P style="margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0;"><FONT face="Arial,Helvetica" color="black"><span style="font-size:12pt;">There's a reason why Joan Crawford hasn't found enduring love...<BR>and we believe this is it</span><B><span style="font-size:10pt;"><BR><BR>by Kolma Flake </span></B></FONT></P> </CENTER> <p style="margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0;" align="center"><FONT face="Arial,Helvetica" color="black"><I><span style="font-size:10pt;">Originally appeared in </span></I><span style="font-size:10pt;"><b>Motion Picture</b></span><I><span style="font-size:10pt;">, June 1950</span></I></FONT></p> <p style="margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0;" align="center"><font face="Arial"><span style="font-size:10pt;"> </span></font></p> <hr style="margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0;"><P><FONT face="Arial,Helvetica" color="black"><span style="font-size:10pt;"><IMG height=583 src="motionpic0650a.jpg" width=288 align=right border="1" style="border-color:black;">No Hollywood actress is as synonymous with glamor and excitement as Joan Crawford. None is more delightful to be with; none more democratic or generous. There is no other star whose beauty has so increased, who has exhibited more expansion intellectually or artistically.</span></FONT></P> <P><FONT face="Arial,Helvetica" color="black"><span style="font-size:10pt;">Yet Joan has obviously missed lasting love.</span></FONT></P> <P><FONT face="Arial,Helvetica" color="black"><span style="font-size:10pt;">This puzzles everyone -- her fans, her friends and acquaintances and even her three ex-husbands: Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Franchot Tone and Phil Terry. People who talk to them are impressed by the genuine affection, admiration and concern they express for her. No taint of that friendly-after-divorce bromide creeps into their words.</span></FONT></P> <P><FONT face="Arial,Helvetica" color="black"><span style="font-size:10pt;">So what goes on and why?</span></FONT></P> <P><FONT face="Arial,Helvetica" color="black"><span style="font-size:10pt;">Some stoutly maintain there's no man who can match Joan's tremendous capacity to live and to give. That may be true. Someone suggests that she is one of the few women in whom the achievement ego seems to be stronger than the need for love. "Not," that person adds quickly, "that love isn't as important to her as most women. Just that achievement is even more important."</span></FONT></P> <P><FONT face="Arial,Helvetica" color="black"><span style="font-size:10pt;">A thoughtful person must wonder if that isn't the more factual answer.</span></FONT></P> <P><FONT face="Arial,Helvetica" color="black"><span style="font-size:10pt;">Tracing the pathway of some of Joan's outstanding romances, there seems to be a pattern which bears that statement out. She is deeply devoted to her first beau, Ray Sterling, who, incidentally, has never married. A successful Florida businessman, he has carried on an affectionate correspondence with her for many, many years. Probably more than anyone else, he knows and understands her.</span></FONT></P> <P><FONT face="Arial,Helvetica" color="black"><span style="font-size:10pt;">"He was my first friend," Joan says again and again. "I met him at a college dance in Kansas City when I was only 13. I wore cheap, exaggerated clothes. I used so much make-up trying to look older I suspect I looked cheap and tough. My only happiness was dancing." </span></FONT></P> <TABLE cellSpacing=3 cellPadding=0 width=75 align=left border=0> <TBODY> <TR> <TD><font face="Arial" color="black"><span style="font-size:10pt;"><IMG height=389 src="motionpic0650b.jpg" width=216 border="1" style="border-color:black;"></span></font></TD></TR> <TR> <TD><FONT face="Arial,Helvetica" color="black"><b><span style="font-size:8pt;">Doug Fairbanks, Jr. ... husband...still greatly admires Joan Crawford</span></b></FONT></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><FONT face="Arial,Helvetica" color="black"><span style="font-size:10pt;">Dancing to Ray was pure relaxation from the strenuous and exciting pathway he was cutting for himself through serious study, not only in his chosen profession but in cultural pursuits inspired by his good background.</span></FONT></P> <P><FONT face="Arial,Helvetica" color="black"><span style="font-size:10pt;">A strange one to be attracted to Billie Cassin, as Joan was known then -- a kid whose background was one to make her understandably mistake the gaudy glitter and excitement of carnivals for real beauty and real living.</span></FONT></P> <P><FONT face="Arial,Helvetica" color="black"><span style="font-size:10pt;">But there was something about Billie! Something to make him feel strongly that someday she would be somebody and that nothing or no one should stand in her way. He gave his belief to her, taught her much and encouraged her to believe in herself. When she broke away from her early background, he saw her off. His affectionate and confident letters sustained her during the sordid hall-bedroom hours she knew as a chorus girl in Chicago, Detroit and New York. Lonely hours they were, too.</span></FONT></P> <P><FONT face="Arial,Helvetica" color="black"><span style="font-size:10pt;">Joan says now, "The happiest off-stage moments of those days were when Jack Oakie (then a chorus boy in the same New York show) took me window-shopping where only the wealthy can afford to buy. When I would say, confidently, that some day I'd be able to walk in and buy whatever I wanted there, Jack would boom with certainty, 'You betcha!' "</span></FONT></P> <P><FONT face="Arial,Helvetica" color="black"><span style="font-size:10pt;">This is quite a revelation of that achievement ego, isn't it?</span></FONT></P> <P><FONT face="Arial,Helvetica" color="black"><span style="font-size:10pt;">Her first few months in Hollywood were in many respects disappointing and unrewarding. She makes no bones about how Ray's confident letters again sustained her.</span></FONT></P> <P><FONT face="Arial,Helvetica" color="black"><span style="font-size:10pt;">Then the pattern seems to break for awhile. She had a crush on Mike Cudahy, the playboy son of a wealthy meat packer. Joan says she enjoyed lecturing him on wasting his life at play. Examining that period, we notice that he took her to the night spots where Charleston contests were the vogue. Becoming a champion, as she did, in a town where talent abounds, must have been a great satisfaction to that dominant ego.</span></FONT></P> <P><FONT face="Arial,Helvetica" color="black"><span style="font-size:10pt;">As Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. enters the picture, you wonder how much she confused him with Ray Sterling. They both made her believe she could make up for the good background she'd missed. They both were serious students of the intellectual and artistic fields. </span></FONT></P> <TABLE cellSpacing=3 cellPadding=0 width=75 align=right border=0> <TBODY> <TR> <TD><font face="Arial" color="black"><span style="font-size:10pt;"><IMG height=323 src="motionpic0650c.jpg" width=216 border="1" style="border-color:black;"></span></font></TD></TR> <TR> <TD><FONT face="Arial,Helvetica" color="black"><b><span style="font-size:8pt;">Franchot Tone. ... husband...still greatly admires Joan Crawford</span></b></FONT></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><FONT face="Arial,Helvetica" color="black"><span style="font-size:10pt;">Joan and Doug were very happy until Doug ceased being the shy, eager student and entered the sophisticated social whirl. It was then their troubles began and ended in divorce, with Joan insisting marriage was not for her.</span></FONT></P> <P><FONT face="Arial,Helvetica" color="black"><span style="font-size:10pt;">Franchot Tone inspired her with confidence on two scores: that she could achieve a successful marriage despite one failure, and that she could act before live audiences -- something which scared her. As they studied seriously together to make the latter possible, their marriage seemed sound. Teacher Franchot succeeded in giving her the confidence to appear on a few live radio shows. But the teacher-pupil relationship strained under the handicap of teacher playing second, professionally, to his pupil. Again Joan was in the divorce court. Again she emphatically stated marriage was not for her.</span></FONT></P> <P><FONT face="Arial,Helvetica" color="black"><span style="font-size:10pt;">Three years later she astounded Hollywood by marrying Phil Terry, an ambitious young actor. He's somewhat of a puzzle in the pattern, especially as Joan is not as articulate about him as her other husbands. At the time of her marriage, she said, "He's the kindest person I've ever met."</span></FONT></P> <P><FONT face="Arial,Helvetica" color="black"><span style="font-size:10pt;">It seems now that he convinced her a successful marriage was possible if... So she stressed that she was Mrs. Phil Terry. So much so that interviewers found themselves interviewing him, with Joan throwing in only a few polite wifely words. But she was trying the impossible for a woman with her achievement ego: to make Mrs. Phil Terry a more important name than Joan Crawford.</span></FONT></P> <P><FONT face="Arial,Helvetica" color="black"><span style="font-size:10pt;">The long and final illness of Phil's father caused him to interrupt his motion picture career to take over his parent's business affairs. During this time it's possible that Phil found himself happier as a businessman than as an actor. It's quite likely he decided then to leave Hollywood. If so, he bumped up against his wife's ego at the worst possible time.</span></FONT></P> <P><FONT face="Arial,Helvetica" color="black"><span style="font-size:10pt;">Joan was experiencing the agonies of being called a "has been." She makes no bones about that being the worst three years of her life. She hates failure in any form, big or small. She and Phil ended their marriage just before she won the Academy Award for Mildred Pierce, which put her smack up on top of the big league again. </span></FONT></P> <TABLE cellSpacing=3 cellPadding=0 width=75 align=left border=0> <TBODY> <TR> <TD><font face="Arial" color="black"><span style="font-size:10pt;"><IMG height=285 src="motionpic0650d.jpg" width=360 border="1" style="border-color:black;"></span></font></TD></TR> <TR> <TD><FONT face="Arial,Helvetica" color="black"><b><span style="font-size:8pt;">At first it seemed that Joan's third husband, Phil Terry, would change her views on marriage</span></b></FONT></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><FONT face="Arial,Helvetica" color="black"><span style="font-size:10pt;">Since then Phil has left Hollywood and remarried and Joan has had and has terminated a long romance with Greg Bautzer, whom many consider the most eligible bachelor in Hollywood. Again Joan isn't particularly articulate. But Greg is one who really enjoys big parties. Joan dreads them. He gave her the courage to attend more social gatherings than ever before in her life.</span></FONT></P> <P><FONT face="Arial,Helvetica" color="black"><span style="font-size:10pt;">But marry him? Joan says, "Marriage wasn't for us. We're no good for each other." Note she said "us" -- not "me" as so emphatically she has said in the past.</span></FONT></P> <P><FONT face="Arial,Helvetica" color="black"><span style="font-size:10pt;">The pattern was beginning to change.</span></FONT></P> <P><FONT face="Arial,Helvetica" color="black"><span style="font-size:10pt;">Today, she's a successful mother of four devoted adopted children. She's a mother having a whale of a time -- a mother who for the first time is sharing the happy childhood she missed herself.</span></FONT></P> <P><FONT face="Arial,Helvetica" color="black"><span style="font-size:10pt;">You can see Joan far more relaxed, shining with added self-confidence. Things aren't so "do or die" with her. She can even laugh when asked if it isn't true she once thought she'd rather have success than love. She admits, "I used to think that but I don't any more."</span></FONT></P> <P><FONT face="Arial,Helvetica" color="black"><span style="font-size:10pt;">A new romance?</span></FONT></P> <P><FONT face="Arial,Helvetica" color="black"><span style="font-size:10pt;">"None," she insists.</span></FONT></P> <P><FONT face="Arial,Helvetica" color="black"><span style="font-size:10pt;">Marry again?</span></FONT></P> <P><FONT face="Arial,Helvetica" color="black"><span style="font-size:10pt;">"Maybe," Joan smiles warmly, as though that might be a good idea.</span></FONT></P> <P><FONT face="Arial,Helvetica" color="black"><span style="font-size:10pt;">When a woman nightly tucks four loving children into bed, she should have a much-loved and loving husband to achieve perfect personal happiness. Joan must know that. And now that she has achieved everything else a woman could possibly want, we're willing to wager her very will to succeed, plus the wisdom brought on by the years, will lead her to a safe matrimonial path. </span></FONT><font face="Arial" color="black"><span style="font-size:10pt;"> </span></font></P> </td> </tr> </table> <p align="center"> <B><FONT face="Book Antiqua" color=#993366><SPAN style="FONT-SIZE: 14pt"><I>The Best of Everything</I></SPAN></FONT></B></p> </body> </html>