The Bogart estate
confirmed the news on Twitter.
Variety’s review of
the 1944 film described her as “a young lady of presence,” and audiences
immediately embraced her gravel-voiced and sultry persona. The voice was said
to have come from a year shouting into a canyon. Regardless, “the Look,” her
slinky, pouty-lipped head-lowered stare, influenced a generation of actresses.
After a 50-year
career, she received her first Oscar nomination for supporting actress for her
role as Barbra Streisand’s mother in 1997’s “The Mirror Has Two Faces.” Though
considered a shoo-in, she didn’t win. However, the Academy of Motion Picture
Arts & Sciences gave her a 2009 Governors Award for life achievement. And,
Oscar or not, she was often called a Hollywood
legend, not only for her career but for her May-December romance with Bogart
and her political activism. However, she always resisted terms like “legend,”
saying that was a reference to the past, and she was more interested in the present
and future.
Born Betty Joan
Perske, “a nice Jewish girl from the Bronx ,”
she stunned audiences in the forever-after-famous “you know how to whistle”
scene in “To Have and Have Not,” in which she was as flirtatious as possible
within the parameters of the Hays Code.
Audiences were
impressed; her co-star, the 44-year-old Bogart, even more so. They were soon
married and remained devoted to one another until Bogart’s death in 1957.
It wasn't until
almost 20 years later that Bacall would emerge from the shadow of being
Bogart’s wife/widow and hit her stride, this time onstage, where she scored
successes in the comedy “Cactus Flower” and then won two Tonys in musicals
“Applause” (1970) and, later, “Woman of the Year” (1981).
That had less to do
with her acting assignments than with her social and political reputation —
lying long-legged on Vice President Harry Truman’s piano, bravely protesting
with her husband against the House Un-American Activities hearings as early as
1947, campaigning for Adlai Stevenson (twice), or hosting the Rat Pack in
Holmby Hills with Bogie and later, in New York, with another famous husband,
actor Jason Robards Jr. It has been suggested that her career — she was under
contract at Warners for several years — was harmed by her political
outspokenness. Bogart did some of his best work in those years, but then, he
was Bogart.
Her independent
streak caused her to be suspended from Warners no fewer than seven times.
Backed by Bogart, she justifiably complained about the poor material she was
handed. That independence sometimes crossed over into diva territory and became
more pronounced as time passed.
At AMPAS’ first
Governors Awards ceremony in November 2009, Bacall was one of four honorees.
Anjelica Huston saluted her by quoting Bacall as saying, “Stardom isn’t a
career, it’s an accident,” though Huston said Bacall’s ascendance was not
accidental.
At the ceremony,
Bacall expressed surprise at her own career, saying, “It’s quite amazing the
people I worked with — some of the all-time all-time greats.” And she admitted
that when Hawks told her he wanted to pair her with either Bogart or Cary
Grant, she said she wasn’t impressed with the dese-dem-dose quality of Bogart
and said of Grant, “Now you’re talking!”
Bacall’s ambition
to achieve stardom began at Julia Richman High School
in Manhattan ,
from which she graduated at 15. By that time she was already doing department
store modeling. She studied acting and dancing and enrolled in the American Academy of Dramatic Arts, where she
remained only one term. She quit modeling on Seventh
Avenue to become a theater usher and got herself a walk-on in
“Johnny 2 x 4” in 1942 and an ingenue role in George S. Kaufman’s out-of-town
failure “Franklin Street .”
Harper’s Bazaar
editor Niki de Gunzberg hired her to model for the magazine, and a 1943 cover
photo came to the notice of Hawks, who screen-tested Bacall and put her under
contract (which he later sold to Warners). The studio coached her for a year,
and then she was slipped into “To Have and Have Not,” where Hawks found that
“when she became insolent, she became rather attractive.”
Bogart’s marriage
to Mayo Methot was on the skids, and Bacall soon became his fourth wife,
bearing him two children over the next dozen years. They appeared together in
movies three more times, most memorably in “The Big Sleep,” followed by “Dark
Passage” and “Key Largo .”
Otherwise, when she
wasn't turning down assignments, she was agreeing to appear in mediocre ones
such as “Young Man With a Horn” and “Bright Leaf.” At Bogart’s urging, she
bought herself out of her contract shortly before Warners shaved its roster in
the wake of the TV boom of the early ’50s.
One of her better
assignments, the 1953 “How to Marry a Millionaire,” teamed her with Marilyn
Monroe and Betty Grable, and “Woman’s World” again utilized her glamorous,
stylish persona to dress up the proceedings.
On television she
co-starred with Bogart and Henry Fonda in a live production of “The Petrified
Forest,” which Bogie had done on film in 1935 with Bette Davis and Leslie
Howard. She also starred with Noel Coward and Claudette Colbert in the 1956 TV
production of Coward’s “Blithe Spirit.”
When Bogart
succumbed to throat cancer, Bacall threw herself into her work, again in A pictures,
but with mixed results. There were impressive efforts like “Written on the
Wind” and “Designing Woman” and considerably less impressive ones like “Blood
Alley” and “Flame Over India.”
After a serious
affair with Frank Sinatra, she moved east and appeared onstage in the comedy
“Goodbye, Charlie.” She met and married Robards, whose star was on the rise,
and they had a son. His drinking problems contributed to their breakup and
divorce in 1969.
In 1967, she was
the toast of Broadway in Abe Burrows’ comedy “Cactus Flower” (a role she lost
to Ingrid Bergman onscreen). She appeared in the comedy for two years, and then
starred in a musical stage version of “All About Eve,” called “Applause,” in
the Margo Channing role originated by Bette Davis. For it she won a Tony Award,
and she played the role in the London
version too.
Later screen roles
consisted of cameos and character parts in films including “Harper,” “Health”
and “Murder on the Orient Express.” She appeared in John Wayne’s last film,
1976’s “The Shootist.” A rare starring opportunity, the 1981 “The Fan,” was a
dismal failure, and Bacall returned to Broadway that year in another
musicalization of a classic Hollywood film,
“Woman of the Year,” which had starred Katharine Hepburn.
Bacall’s 1978
autobiography “By Myself,” written without the aid of the usual ghostwriter,
translated that gravel voice onto the written page and became a bestseller. She
also penned “Now,” in which she wrote about her career, family and friends
since ’78 but which she declined to call an autobiography. In the book, she
wrote, “I’m called a legend by some, a title and category I am less than fond
of.”
She continued to
work on stage and screen and television, including a TV remake of “Dinner at
Eight” and taking a small role in “Misery.”
In 1997, she
received the Kennedy Center Honors; in 1999, the American Film Institute voted
her one of the 25 most significant female movie stars in history.
Bacall continued to
work with edgy filmmakers, including Lars Von Trier in his experimental
ensemble films “Dogville” and “Manderlay,” and Jonathan Glazer in the 2005
“Birth.” She made a hilarious cameo as herself on “The Sopranos” in April 2006,
getting mugged for her gift bag after an awards show. Among her last
films was a role in the 2012 “The Forger” with Josh Hutcherson and Hayden
Panettiere.
She is survived by
three children: two by Bogart, Stephen and Leslie, and her son by Robards,
actor Sam Robards.
---Extract from Variety
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