Read Enter Helen Online

Authors: Brooke Hauser

Enter Helen (49 page)

BOOK: Enter Helen
2.25Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

329
  
“I talked about the spirit that was animating women”: Ibid. 329 “When push came to shove about comparing us to
Cosmo
”: Ibid.

45: E
NTER
H
ELEN

330
  
“I'm a materialist”: Helen Gurley Brown, “Big Sister,”
Time
, February 9, 1968.

330
  
Working as a kindergarten teacher: Biographical details about Lou Honderich per Honderich, email exchange with the author, January 2014.

330
  
“Even back then, as a such a young woman”: Ibid.

331
  
Lou never stopped relying on Helen's advice, and in 1971: Ibid.

331
  
“Enter Helen,” Lou says: Ibid.

331
  
“The point is, Helen believed in me”: Ibid.

332
  
Someone saw her at an organizer's house: Susan Brownmiller shared this secondhand story in interview with the author, January 2014.

332
  
“She was indicating that women
have
to put up this front”: Ibid. 332 “‘This is reality, kiddos'”: Ibid.

46: T
HE
B
LUE
G
ODDESS

333
  
“You not only enjoy being a girl—you
thrive
on it!”: “How Feminine Are You?”
Cosmopolitan
, April 1971.

333
  
“I said a mighty yes”: Helen Gurley Brown, “Step Into My Parlour,”
Cosmopolitan
, September 1971.

334
  
the founders of
Ms.
were having a difficult time: Background on the beginnings of
Ms.
and securing financial backers is from “Personal Report from
Ms
.”
Ms.
, July 1972, SSC.

334
  
Then they had a couple of breakthroughs: Background from “Personal Report from
Ms.
”; Mary Thom,
Inside Ms.
(New York: Henry Holt, 1997), p. 15; and Clay Felker, “Editor's Letter: What Is Ms. and What Is It Doing in New York?”
New York
, December 20, 1971.

334
  
In a small, cramped workspace: Stephanie Harrington provided a great description of the
Ms
. headquarters in “Ms. Versus Cosmo: Two Faces of the Same Eve,”
New York Times
, August 11, 1974.

335
  
labeled “Spring” just in case: Abigail Pogrebin, “How Do You Spell Ms.,”
New York
, October 2011.

335
  
“A sexually liberated woman without a feminist consciousness”: Anselma Dell'Olio, “The Sexual Revolution Wasn't Our War,”
Ms.
, Spring 1972 preview issue.

335
  
“Those clicks are coming faster and faster”: Jane O'Reilly, “The Housewife's Moment of Truth,”
Ms.,
Spring 1972 preview issue.

336
  
The artist Miriam Wosk painted: “Remembering Miriam Wosk, First Ms. Cover Artist,”
Ms
. magazine blog, December 22, 2010; and Abigail Pogrebin, “How Do You Spell Ms.”

336
  
“Until now, the Women's Movement has lacked”: Clay Felker, “Editor's Letter: What Is Ms. and What Is It Doing in New York?”

336
  
they sold out in eight days: Abigail Pogrebin, “How Do You Spell Ms.”

337
  
Cosmopolitan
's art department was in crisis: Linda Cox, interview with the author, June 2015.

337
  
“Boom-boom-boom, one after the other”: Ibid.

337
  
“Marni called me and said, ‘Please come back'”: Ibid.

337
  
By the following year, his American disciples: Background on Guru Maharaj Ji from Ted Morgan, “Middle-Class
Premies
Find Oz in the Astrodome,”
New York Times
, December 9, 1973.

337
  
“She was so completely swept away”: Linda Cox, interview with the author, June 2015.

338
  
Not long after that, Helen promoted Linda: Ibid.

47:
C
OSMOPOLITAN
N
UDE
M
AN

339
  
“I thought it was a hoot”: Hugh Hefner, interview with the author, November 2013.

339
  
“Helen Gurley Brown of Cosmopolitan”: “Knees Up, Mother Brown,” “Eye,”
Women's Wear Daily
, January 29, 1970, access to article courtesy of ProQuest.

339
  
“You really are so naughty”: “Letter to Eye,” “Eye,”
Women's Wear Daily
, February 9, 1970, access to article courtesy of ProQuest.

339
  
“The Further Adventures of Mother Brown and the Great Male Nude Foldout Caper”; “relatively coy pose”; “collecting pornography”: “Phone Call to Eye,” “Eye,”
Women's Wear Daily
, February 12, 1970, access to article courtesy of ProQuest.

340
  
Men liked to look at women's bodies, and women: Irin Carmon, “Helen Gurley Brown, Objectifier of Men,”
Salon
, August 13, 2012.

340
  
Inspired by the Italian painter Caravaggio: Photographer Guy Webster told the story of shooting James Coburn for
Cosmo
in a video online: “Jim Whitney Documentary on Guy Webster,” YouTube.com, September 12, 2014.

340
  
“Apparently he is in his mystical phase”: Helen Gurley Brown to Richard Deems, “COSMOPOLITAN NUDE MAN,” December 4, 1968.

341
  
The rejections piled up: Helen Gurley Brown, “Step Into My Parlour,”
Cosmopolitan
, January 1971.

341
  
“Mr. Average household face”; “You may or may
not
ever see a male nude”: Ibid.

341
  
“Like fire and gasoline”: Burt Reynolds,
My Life
(New York: Hyperion, 1994), p. 173. The bulk of what follows—dialogue, descriptions, scenes—is per Reynolds's version of the story in chapter 33 of his book.

341
  
“Are you a sexist?”; “I bet in ten years”: Ibid.

342
  
“Why?” he finally asked; “Because,” she cooed, “You're the only one”: Ibid. 342 “On the back of the foldout”: Ibid., p. 174.

342
  
using masking tape, Vaseline, bobby socks, baseballs: Booth Moore, “Cosmo's Eyes,”
Los Angeles Times,
January 9, 2004.

342
  
The day of the shoot: Burt Reynolds,
My Life
, p. 174.

343
  
“Fabulous! Fabulous like that!”: Per photographer Harry King, this is what Scavullo regularly exclaimed during shoots; interview with the author, September 2014.

343
  
“I always know . . . I've caught the butterfly”: Burt Reynolds,
My Life
, p. 174.

343
  
he pretended to hump the bearskin rug: Ibid., p. 175.

344
  

Cosmo
's Famous Extra Bonus Takeoff!”
and following
:
Cosmopolitan
cover, April 1972, SSC.

344
  
“just
lusty
and honest in their appetite for an appreciation of attractive men”; “As for you (that COSMOPOLITAN girl)”: Barbara Creaturo, “Cosmo's Playmate of the Year!—Why?”
Cosmopolitan
, April 1972.

345
  
He had liked a shot where he was laughing: Burt Reynolds wrote about visiting
Cosmo
and seeing the images in
My Life
, 174.

345
  
“The original slide was lost”: Mallen De Santis, interview with the author, October 2012.

345
  
“Apparently the people at
Cosmo
took this thing more seriously than I did”: Mary Alice Kellogg, Newsweek Feature Service, “Redskin to Bearskin: Burt Reynolds Soars,”
Boca Raton News
, April 13, 1972.

345
  
“Hey, I didn't recognize you with your clothes on”: Burt Reynolds,
My Life
, 175.

345
  
“And a major factor in his ascendancy”; “Face it, these women wouldn't be going crazy”: Mary Alice Kellogg, “Redskin to Bearskin: Burt Reynolds Soars.”

346
  
and in Huntsville, Alabama, members of the English Department: This detail and others collected from readers' letters, “Dear Cosmopolitan,”
Cosmopolitan
, July 1972.

346
  
After the issue came out: Burt Reynolds described the frenzy that followed his
Cosmo
appearance in
My Life
, pp. 174–76.

346
  
Back in the States, the Catholic Church issued a critical statement: Ibid., p. 175.

346
  
letters poured in: “Dear Cosmopolitan,”
Cosmopolitan
, July 1972.

347
  
“While leafing through
COSMO
, what did I behold”: Ibid., poem by Donna Visione, reprinted with permission.

48: P
ROBLEMS

348
  
“Helen saw a shrink all the time I knew her”: Walter Meade, interview with the author.

348
  
“Relax chin, stay at 105 pounds . . . torture!”: Helen Gurley Brown, “Step Into My Parlour,”
Cosmopolitan
, January 1973.

348
  
British
Cosmo
was an instant, red-hot success: Linda Grant,
Sexing the Millennium: Women and the Sexual Revolution
(New York: Grove Press, 1994), p. 124.

348
  
“Like Coca-Cola, Helen Gurley Brown and her message”: James Brady, “La Fille Cosmopolitaine,” “New York Intelligencer,”
New York
, February 12, 1973.

348
  
He and Richard Zanuck finally had started their own production outfit: David Brown,
Let Me Entertain You
(New York: William Morrow & Co., 1990), pp. 143–44.

349
  
George Walsh declined: Still furious, Helen detailed her version of the story in
a miscellaneous note to herself, “PROBLEMS,” November 1973, HGB Papers, SSC.

349
  

screw
that . . . public relations are where it's
at
”: Ibid.

349
  
“George Walsh has some kind of personality defect”: Ibid.

349
  
Cosmo
Girls could read all about the man who “runs the office”: Helen Gurley Brown, “Step Into My Parlour,”
Cosmopolitan
, August 1970.

350
  
“one doesn't want to get personal”: Helen Gurley Brown, “PROBLEMS,” November 1973.

350
  
Helen couldn't remember him once complimenting her, or even saying “well done”: Ibid.

350
  
Instead, he played the resigned man: Ibid.

350
  
“Keep George”: Ibid.

49: T
WO
F
ACES OF THE
S
AME
E
VE

351
  

Cosmopolitan
is talking to women one by one”: Suzanne Levine in Stephanie Harrington, “Ms. Versus Cosmo: Two Faces of the Same Eve,”
New York Times
, August 11, 1974.

351
  
“I think a certain girl who just married”:
Cosmopolitan
ad in
New York Times
, April 18, 1974.

351
  
“Why, if she's so smart”: Stephanie Harrington, “Ms. Versus Cosmo: Two Faces of the Same Eve.”

352
  
After making her way up to the fourth floor: Ibid.

352
  
“Have we done anxiety lately?”; “That is like asking if you've eaten in the last week”; “We have depression in the works”; “This one is totally ridiculous—‘Are Lesbians Ecological?'”: Ibid.

353
  
Harrington went to an editorial meeting at
Ms
.: Ibid.

353
  
“What is romance?”; “Women's obsession with romance”: Ibid.

354
  
“I am a survivor”: Ibid.

354
  
The letter was signed “Emma Bovary, Yonville Parish”: Ibid.

354
  
Helen regularly critiqued foreign editions: Per Linda Cox, interview with the author, June 2015.

355
  
“as riveting as the telephone directory”; its “coverpersons”: Stephanie Harrington, “Ms. Versus Cosmo: Two Faces of the Same Eve.”

355
  
“More than twice as many
Ms.
readers as
Cosmopolitan
readers”: Ibid.

355
  
“Before the press conference we went to the ladies' room”: Helen Gurley Brown, “Step Into My Parlour,”
Cosmopolitan
, July 1974.

355
  
“She was the most unconfident, ingratiating person”: Gloria Steinem, interview with the author, December 2013.

356
  
“Helen really created a little money-printing press for Hearst”: Pat Carbine, interview with the author, January 2014.

356
  
“reassure us that you and the other leaders”: Helen Gurley Brown to Gloria Steinem, April 11, 1974, HGB Papers, SSC.

356
  
“She would say, ‘Now, your movement says this'”: Pat Carbine, interview with the author, January 2014.

356
  
a former
Esquire
secretary, Julie Roy: Julie Roy and Lucy Freeman later wrote a book about Roy's relationship with Renatus Hartogs,
Betrayal
(New York:
Stein and Day, 1976); reviewed by Susan Braudy, “Betrayal,”
New York Times Book Review
, August 8, 1976.

BOOK: Enter Helen
2.25Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Betrayal by Christina Dodd
Love Under Two Benedicts by Cara Covington
Twinkle, Twinkle, "Killer" Kane by William Peter Blatty
The Debt of Tamar by Nicole Dweck
Translucent by Dan Rix
Perfect by Pauline C. Harris
Nightkeepers by Jessica Andersen
Stash by David Matthew Klein
Prodigal Son by Danielle Steel