The
Little Girl Who Saved the Big Studio
By
Ed Garea
The
death of Shirley Temple Black at the age of 85 on February 10 has
opened up a treasure trove of memories for the film fans. Many movie
buffs watched her films as children; they were frequently shown on
television in the mornings or afternoons on Saturday and Sunday. My
mother was a huge fan of Miss Temple’s work and often made me watch
with her when I could have otherwise spent the hours with a good
horror film on another channel or engrossed in the latest copy
of Mad or Famous Monsters of Filmland.
But I’m glad she made me watch, as the films deepened my
appreciation of musicals.
Over
the years her films came to be regarded as family classics and were
hawked on VHS and later DVD to the public in frequent advertisements,
assuring the purchaser that not only would he or she receive the
original black and white versions, completely restored, but as a
bonus would receive a colorized version of each films, as kids today
are reluctant to watch anything not in color.
If
anyone could have been said to born a movie star, it was Shirley
Temple. Born in Santa Monica, California, on April 23, 1928, to
businessman George Temple and his wife, Gertrude, she was prepped for
bigger and better things beginning at the age of 3, when her mother
enrolled her in dancing school.
In
1932, she was spotted by an agent from Educational Pictures and
was chosen for a role in Baby Burlesks, a series of
rather sexually-suggestive shorts in which children played all the
roles. The children, all around the ages of 4 and 5, wore adult
costumes that ended at the waist. Below they wore diapers outfitted
with oversized safety pins. The shorts were rather obvious parodies
of popular films, with Shirley imitating such stars as Marlene
Dietrich, Mae West, and Dolores Del Rio.
As
Educational Pictures was pretty much a shoestring operation, proper
behavior was strictly enforced; any child that misbehaved on the set
was locked in a windowless sound box with only a block of ice on
which to sit. Shirley served her share of time in the box, claiming
later in her autobiography that the experience did no lasting
psychological damage and taught her the lesson that wasted time is
wasted money.
After Baby
Burlesks ran its course, Shirley was schlepped to a series
of casting calls and auditions for bit parts that won her a few small
roles. But age was threatening to erode her earning potential and as
a remedy, her mother cut a year off Shirley’s age. She said in her
autobiography that at her 12th birthday party in 1941
she was surprised to learn that she had really turned 13.
It
was in 1934 that her career began to gather steam. She was chosen to
play James Dunn’s daughter in Fox’s Stand Up and
Cheer, one of many Depression musicals that suggested the best
way to deal with the everyday misery is to sing and dance your way to
happiness. Her initial Fox contract called for a salary of $150 per
week, with an additional $25 each week for Gertrude. The contract
also contained an option for seven more years and the stipulation
that she was to provide her own tap shoes.
The
critics gushed over Stand Up and Cheer, and Shirley
made an additional eight movies in 1934, the earnings of which saved
the studio from certain bankruptcy. However, it was with the release
of Little Miss Marker, an adaptation of a Damon Runyon
story for which Fox had loaned her to Paramount, that she became a
star. Besides being a box office hit for a studio that badly needed
one that year, the film also established the template for future
Shirley Temple films.
In Little
Miss Marker, Temple plays a child left with a bookie as a marker
for her father’s gambling debts. As the film progresses she goes on
to reform a gang of gamblers, bookies and race fixers. This carried
over to her future films: she was cast as a sort of miniature adult
who dominated the adults around her, solving problems with uncanny
common sense and infusing them with her sense of unbounded optimism.
Each of her films onward would simply be a variation of that basic
story.
Besides
being cute, Shirley was also given a trademark song to sing in each
film, the better to sell records. So powerfully was she identified
with some of the songs that even today when a film buff hears “On
the Good Ship Lollipop” or “Animal Crackers in My Soup,” he or
she cannot help but associate Shirley Temple with the music.
She
was also supplied with a plethora of dancing partners, including
Buddy Ebsen, Jack Haley, and George Murphy. But her best-remembered
partner was the legendary Bill “Bojangles” Robinson, an
African-American veteran of the Broadway stage, and one of the people
credited with tutoring the great Eleanor Powell in tap dancing while
working together on Broadway. His staircase dance with Shirley in The
Little Colonel, the first of four films they would make together,
is considered one of the greatest in the history of film musicals,
and Robinson would always be remembered for his work with her.
She
was so ensconced in the public’s mind by 20th Century
Fox that any criticism of her could result in retribution against the
critic. The studio famously sued novelist Graham Greene for his
review of Wee Willie Winkie in the magazine Night
and Day (which he edited as well). His crime was to question
whether she was really a midget and exposed an uncomfortable truth
when he wrote that her “well-shaped and desirable little body”
was being displayed for the enjoyment of middle-aged male admirers.
Although
the studio could certainly overcome any human obstacle in its way, it
was powerless against nature, and as Shirley aged her box office
appeal diminished. It’s been said that the best decisions are the
ones not made, and in the case of MGM this certainly proved to be the
case. MGM, having the rights to The Wizard of Oz, was bound and
determined to have Temple play Dorothy Gale, but Fox refused to loan
her out; instead they made plans to star her in a fantasy film of
their own, The Blue Bird. MGM instead was forced to go to
Plan B and cast Judy Garland as Dorothy, a move for which the gods of
posterity would thank them.
But
while The Wizard of Oz didn’t exactly light up the
box office when released, it still fared much better than The
Blue Bird, which made its way to the screen in 1940. A lengthy
consideration of the pathetic box office returns combined with an
appraisal of her advancing age led Fox to drop her contract at the
ripe old age of 12.
Now
outside the protective cocoon of the studio, Shirley found the real
world a lot tougher than the one created for her movies. She enrolled
in the seventh grade at the private and exclusive Westlake School for
Girls, where she had trouble at first fitting in with her classmates.
But after she began to relax she became a popular and sought-after
companion, enjoying a happy and productive five years at the school.
Meanwhile,
MGM signed her eight-months later and cast her in their 1941
comedy-romance, Kathleen. It was in the mold of her
earlier films, only now she had to deal with the additional problems
of adolescence. Kathleen did not live up to the
studio’s fiscal expectations, so she was loaned to United Artists
in 1942 for Miss Annie Rooney, and made two films on
loan-out to David O. Selznick: Since You Went
Away and I’ll Be Seeing You (both 1944).
In 1945, she starred in Columbia’s Kiss and Tell,
again on loan. But the changes from an adorable little blonde moppet
to a rather ordinary brunette teenager resulted in her audience
losing interest in her movies.
Her
private life also took another turn when, supposedly determined to be
the first in her Westlake class to become engaged, she accepted the
proposal of 24-year old Army Air Corps Sergeant John Agar Jr. a few
days before turning 17. They were married on September 19, 1945.
“Act
in haste, repent in leisure.” (I’m full of pithy quotes today.)
That would be the motto of her marriage to Agar. While she adjusted
to the new realities of married life and films, her husband wasn’t
as fortunate. Years of being ignored and being dubbed “Mr. Shirley
Temple” took their toll and Agar began drinking as a hobby.
Following in the footsteps of his wife, he also went into acting, but
lacked his wife’s charisma and acting ability, soon working his way
down the ladder to where he was headlining Z-Grade films such as The
Brain From Planet Arous and The
Puppet People,
and, most famously in the annals of bad movies, Zontar:
The Thing From Venus,
which gained a cult status, being featured on SCTV.
He
did appear with his wife in John Ford’s classic Western, Fort
Apache (1948), but while she had a featured role as
Philadelphia Thursday, the daughter of Henry Fonda’s character, Lt.
Colonel Owen Thursday, Agar was given the decidedly minor role of
Second Lieutenant Michael Shannon O’Rourke, which did nothing for
their already troubled marriage.
They
divorced in December 1949, a year after the birth of their daughter,
Linda Susan Agar. Less than a month later she met and subsequently
married Charles Alden Black, a 30-year old assistant to the president
of the Hawaiian Pineapple Company and a certified member of San
Francisco’s blueblood community. Shortly after their marriage he
was dropped from the San Francisco Social Register as punishment for
marrying an actress, but the marriage took, lasting 55 years until
his death in 2005.
Another
casualty of her marriage to Black on December 6, 1950, was her
career in films, which she gladly gave up in favor of being a wife
and mother. Charles adopted Linda, and she and Charles had two
children of their own: Charles Alden Black Jr., born in 1952, and
daughter Lori Alden Black, born in 1954. Both daughters were born in
Santa Monica, California, at the same hospital, not to mention
delivered by the same doctor who delivered Shirley years before.
During
the Korean War, Black served as a Navy lieutenant commander and
Shirley and the children followed him to Washington. Later, when she
entered the diplomatic service, he would travel with her to her
diplomatic postings.
As
the ‘50s progressed, her films began to show up on television,
grabbing huge ratings. This prompted her to accept an offer as host
and occasional performer on a television series titled Shirley
Temple’s Storybook, an anthology of adaptations of fairy tales.
The series ran from 1958 to 1961.
Outside
of show business, diplomacy, and politics, she is best known for her
work with the Multiple Sclerosis Society, of which she later became
president. She became interested in serving for the Society after the
disease struck down her brother George, who was making a name at the
time as a professional wrestler. She also worked to found and develop
the San Francisco International Film Festival, but resigned in 1966
as a protest over a decision to screen the Swedish filmNight
Games, which she derided as “pornography for profit.”
Living
in Washington spurred an interest in politics, and in 1967 she made
an unsuccessful run for Congress to fill the seat left vacant by the
death of California Republican J. Arthur Younger, losing in the
primary to the Pete McCloskey. One newspaper headline read:
"McCloskey Torpedoes Good Ship Lollypop."
In
1969, President Richard Nixon appointed her to the
five-member delegation to the United Nations General Assembly. In
1974 she accepted the position of Ambassador to Ghana, where to all
accounts she performed in an outstanding manner, despite the
reservations of professional diplomats concerning her appointment.
After her tenure in Ghana (1974-76), she was later appointed as
ambassador to Czechoslovakia in 1989.
She
also had a well-publicized bout with breast cancer, during which she
underwent a mastectomy. After the operation she held a news
conference in her hospital room to discuss her experience and urge
women who discovered lumps in their breasts to see a doctor instead
of sitting home afraid to talk about it. The American Cancer Society
credited her with helping to make it acceptable to talk about the
disease.
Survived
by her children, she stands today as a shining example that there
can, indeed not only be life after the movies, but that the life can
be a rich and accomplished one.
Trivia
According
to Groucho Marx, his brother Harpo offered Shirley’s parents
$50,000 to let him adopt her. They declined the offer.
During
the filming of Little Miss Marker, co-star Adolphe Menjou
reputedly referred to her as “an Ethel Barrymore at six,” and
complained to director Alexander Hall about her “making a stooge
out of me.”
Director
Allan Dwan told Peter Bogdanovich, in his book Who the Devil
Made It: Conversations With Legendary Film Directors, that she
was a quick study. All he had to do was tell her something once and
she’d remember it. And if one of the actors gut stuck for a line,
she’d tell him what the line was. “She knew it better than he
did.”
From
1936 to 1939 she was America’s most popular movie star. Clark Gable
was a distant second. Her popularity spurred a line of “Shirley
Temple” dolls, which were the best-selling dolls of that decade.
(Today collectors highly prize them.) She had sat on the laps of over
200 famous people, reportedly preferring the lap of J. Edgar Hoover.
Amelia Earhart shared chewing gum with her, and she had several
conservations with Eleanor Roosevelt. She received more mail than
Greta Garbo and was photographed more often than President Franklin
D. Roosevelt.
The
Brown Derby restaurant in Hollywood created a special drink and named
it for her: the Shirley Temple, a nonalcoholic mixture of
lemon-lime soda, grenadine, topped with a maraschino cherry.
Reportedly, she didn’t care for it.
When
MGM picked up her contract, she was entering adolescence. She wrote
in her autobiography that producer Arthur Freed summoned her to his
office. Once there, he unzipped his pants and exposed himself to her.
As she was ignorant of male anatomy she giggled loudly and he threw
her out of the office.
Director
John Ford, who got along splendidly with her during the filming
of Wee Willie Winkie in 1937, gave her a hard time
on the set of Fort Apache, reportedly asking her where
she went to school and if she graduated.
When
she came to Prague as ambassador she was surprised to discover that
there had been a Shirley Temple fan club there 50 years ago. Numerous
officials brought their old membership cards for her to autograph.
Daughter
Lori played bass guitar for the rock band The Melvins and went by the
moniker, “Lorax.” On a related note, Shirley appeared on the
cover of the Beatles’ album Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts
Club Band.
Her
career was the subject of a series of sketches on the Carol
Burnett Show,
where Carol played “Shirley Dimple.” She was also parodied on
Saturday Night Live in a skit where she was played by Laraine Newman
as the ambassador to Ghana. There, she cutely talks Ghana’s
president, played by Garrett Morris, out of waging any more wars.
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