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#BornThisDay: Actor, Barbara Stanwyck

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Barbara Stanwyck

July 16, 1907Barbara Stanwyck. When queried about my favorite male & female stars of Hollywood’s First Golden Age, I have no hesitation in announcing Barbara Stanwyck as my female choice (with apologies to Irene Dunn & Myrna Loy).

Stanwyck, born Ruby Catherine Stevens in Brooklyn, possessed an unusual beauty, distinctive husky voice, & she was an extremely versatile actor, easily moving between melodrama, thrillers, westerns, & comedies. The buzz in the industry has always been that she was wonderful to work with, professional, fun on the set, noted for being especially kind to the crew & the extras, & she never behaved like the big star that she was.

Stanwyck had a career that lasted 6 decades, bringing film fans a strong, realistic screen presence. She was a favorite of directors Cecil B. DeMille, Fritz Lang & Frank Capra. After a short but notable career as a stage actress in the late 1920s, she made 93 films before smartly turning to TV with The Barbara Stanwyck Show (1961), The Big Valley (1966) & The Thorn Birds (1983), where she made-out with the very gay Richard Chamberlain.

As an actor Stanwyck could be, by turns, salty or sweet; vulnerable or tough; funny or tragic; but always totally unique & uncommonly intelligent. She brought madcap comedic glamour to The Lady Eve (1941), played a tough-minded feminist in the weepy Stella Dallas (1937), & a dangerous femme fatale in film noir classic Double Indemnity (1944). She could even sing & dance, appearing in 1922 & 1923 versions of The Ziegfeld Follies.

I appreciated so many of her films, but one is special to me & The Husband, certainly in my top 10 of all time, Ball Of Fire (1941), with my male choice for Best of the First Golden Age, Gary Cooper. I am also fond of her husband killer in Double Indemnity; her columnist caught up in white lies in the holiday romantic comedy Christmas In Connecticut (1945); & the her terrorized wife in Sorry, Wrong Number (1948).

An orphan at 4 years old, she never went to high school & began performing out of necessity when she was 14 years old. Stanwyck smartly invested her money, eventually becoming one of the richest women in the USA.

“I knew that after 14 I’d have to earn my own living, but I was willing to do that… I’ve always been a little sorry for pampered people, & of course, they’re ‘very’ sorry for me.”

“I’ve known women who plodded through life, but the women I knew did their plodding on the pavement, not the soil. I know very little about the simple life. I’m a product of crowded places & jammed-up emotions, where right & wrong weren’t always clearly defined & life wasn’t always sweet, but it was life.”

Stanwyck married twice, the first time to Broadway star Frank Fay who starred opposite her in the immensely successful Burlesque (1927). Their marriage was a rough. When he moved to Hollywood with his bride, Fay, a vaudevillian, was unable to parlay his success on Broadway to the screen, while Stanwyck easily found Hollywood stardom. Fay was easily enraged & struck with his young wife when he was inebriated. William Wellman, Dorothy Parker & Alan Campbell used the relationship for the basis for their screenplay of A Star Is Born (1937).

Stanwyck’s second marriage go-round was to stunning leading man Robert Taylor. After appearing together in His Brother’s Wife (1936), Taylor & Stanwyck set up household together without the benefit of matrimony. An outraged Louis B. Mayer put together a wedding for the pair of popular stars in 1939. Their large ranch with horses & rustic home on Mandeville Canyon Road in LA’s Brentwood section & is still referred to as The Robert Taylor Ranch.

In 1950, when the Taylor’s divorced, the rumors swirled, especially because both actors were known for having affairs with people of the same sex. Although she rebuffed all questions about her sexuality or her marriages, most of Hollywood believed that neither Stanwyck nor either of her husbands was straight. It seems that she did have an affair with actor Robert Wagner, when he was just 22 years old & Stanwyck was 45. Wagner writes very fondly of their time together in his memoir Piece Of My Heart (2008).

In my research, I don’t find many girls named as Stanwyck’s female lovers. She seems to have been both discreet & well-loved by those in an industry where discretion & affection are hard to come by. There were the usual suspects including Joan Crawford & Tallulah Bankhead, not all that impressive as they both fucked me.

Wildly popular among her peers & with audiences, Stanwyck continued working into the early 1980s, but when she retired she became a recluse. A smoker since she was 9 years old, pulmonary disease got her in early 1990. There was no funeral, according to her wishes. Her ashes were scattered over Lone Pine, California, where The Big Valley & many of her Western films were made.

“Career is too pompous a word. It was a job, & I have always felt privileged to be paid well for what I love doing.”

If you want to know more about Barbara Stanwyck, & you really should, try Steel-True (2013) the massive, but engrossing 2 volume bio by Victoria Wilson.

 

The post #BornThisDay: Actor, Barbara Stanwyck appeared first on World of Wonder.


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