Bernadette Schwartz, 1947-2016
Most of all, Bern had unshakable loyalty. That’s a rarity when you’re dealing with anything Hollywood. I’m just glad she’s not suffering anymore and I’m certain she’s broken free and is soaring now.
Most of all, Bern had unshakable loyalty. That’s a rarity when you’re dealing with anything Hollywood. I’m just glad she’s not suffering anymore and I’m certain she’s broken free and is soaring now.
Another Hollywood legend has fallen. Mickey Rooney, pictured above with Nelson Eddy, has died at age 93, having lived a long, hard-lived but happy life (for the most part). He lived as any entertainer would want, continuing to entertain folks right up until his final days.
Many people may not remember that Nelson Eddy’s very first movie role was a quick walk-on (or sing-on) in the 1933 film Broadway to Hollywood. It starred Frank Morgan and Alice Brady as a vaudevillian couple. Twelve-year old Mickey Rooney played their grandson.
Nelson portrayed a vaudevillian singer named John Sylvester, who walked onstage and started singing “In the Garden of My Heart.” A few seconds later, the scene shifted back to an argument between Frank Morgan and Alice Brady so we hear Nelson finish the song over the din of their quarreling voices.
Not a great movie debut but at least Nelson enjoyed a short off-screen romance with an older woman, the film’s female star, Alice Brady.
Those of you who were lucky enough to see Mickey Rooney’s most recent touring show, “Let’s Put on a Show” (as we did), found him to be elderly and somewhat feeble but with enough mental energy and spunk to put over the songs and stories of his life that audiences cherished. He made vivid the memories of 1930s Hollywood and at several points in the show particularly when talking about Judy Garland, he wept. Even when the spotlight moved off him as the next portion of the show was set up, if one studied his face one could see that it took a few moments for him to compose himself.
He was a fairly religious man in later years and if one casually asked him about a Hollywood scandal (that didn’t include himself and/or Judy Garland), he was most likely to brush it off or not want to discuss it. However, you should know that he was receptive to narrating a documentary about the Jeanette MacDonald-Nelson Eddy romance. In fact, the negotiations only broke down over the very high and rather unrealistic fee that was demanded for his participation. Let me clarify here that these business decisions were not handled by Mickey himself; he had only kind words for Jeanette and Nelson. But it was a puzzlement.
So… it did not come as a surprise when more recently, unhappy reports came from Mickey himself about his finances and elder care problems. Three years ago, People magazine wrote:
The 90-year-old – whose on-screen problems were always easily resolved when he played all-American boy Andy Hardy – told a Senate hearing of a real-life drama involving elder abuse, and he spoke from his personal case history, he said.
“I felt trapped, scared, used and frustrated,” testified Rooney, who also said he and his (ninth) wife Jan were made to go hungry, he had medicine withheld from him and that his Oscar was even sold off. “But above all, when a man feels helpless, it’s terrible,” said the screen legend.
According to a court case in Los Angeles, Rooney has accused his stepson, Chris Aber, of elder abuse, and has obtained a restraining order against him. Aber denies Rooney’s claims, as does Jan Rooney, say news reports.
Mickey ultimately came to a private financial settlement with his stepson (who agreed Mickey was owed 2.8 million dollars but filed bankruptcy so could not repay him), turned all his finances over to his lawyer and separated from his wife Jan. His beloved Westlake Village home was sold and the proceeds split with Jan. They never divorced.
Mickey was working up till the time of his passing. He recently reprised his role as “Gus” in the upcoming Night at the Museum 3, which is still filming at this writing and is set to be released in December 2014. Hopefully Mickey’s footage will make the final cut of the movie.
The Los Angeles Times today notes that Mickey Rooney was “the tireless last surviving star of Hollywood’s 1930s Golden Age, a performer always ready to make an appearance when there was a crowd waiting to applaud.”
“As long as our country has Shirley Temple, we will be all right.” – Franklin Roosevelt
Shirley Temple Black, the darling of Depression years and the most famous child star ever in Hollywood history, passed away last night at the age of 85.
Shirley Temple’s life story is well known – she was a child star who, as an adult, used her fame to help others…but the Nelson Eddy connection may not be so well remembered. Shirley herself referred to it in her autobiography. Nelson was working with her the night of her radio debut and also the night she was almost killed! The date was December 24, 1939. Nelson was the host and narrator for the Screen Guild presentation of “The Blue Bird,” young Shirley Temple’s radio debut. During this live broadcast, a mentally unbalanced woman stood up in the studio audience and aimed a gun at Shirley. The woman was hauled away before she could pull the trigger… Amazingly, both Shirley and Nelson had a “show must go on” attitude and they continued the program without a hitch. Near the end, Nelson and Shirley sang a duet of “Silent Night” and he gave her a protective hug as they smiled for the cameras.
Many celebrity teenagers go through a bratty or rebellious period…but not so many in fully recover, or transition into their adult lives with the grace, optimism and good deeds that Shirley Temple displayed.
Her last major public appearance was receiving the SAG Lifetime Achievement Award in 2006, and she was just as bubbly and gracious “in person” as she appeared on screen all those years ago. You can watch a video clip of it here.
Our very best thoughts and wishes go to her family and friends…and to all of us who mourn today and feel she was a national treasure and “one of our own.” For several generations, whether you saw her films in theaters or on TV, she was a part of our childhoods.