Natasha (67 page)

Read Natasha Online

Authors: Suzanne Finstad

BOOK: Natasha
9.71Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

FIRST LEADING MAN, IN LOVE, BLEW HIS TAKES, EYES REFLECTED TRAGEDY
: Orson Welles, “Tribute to a Very Special Lady”

HELPFUL TO HER
: Natalie Wood interview excerpt on AMC’s
Hollywood Real to Reel

TERRIFYING
: “New Movie Moppet,”
Life
, 11/26/45

WELLES HAD A LOT OF EXPERIENCE
: 2/26/62
Newsweek

BOOMING VOICE, TAUGHT MAGIC
: October 1984
McCall’s

KNOW LINES, TERRIFIED TO CRY, GOT HER WORKED UP, SHORTY, COLBERT, WELLES CHANGED LIGHTING, MUD GOT HER WORKED UP
:
Twinkle Twinkle Little Star

PERFECTIONISM
: Olga Viripaeff to SF

BEST AT SAD CHARACTERS
: 6/69
Screen Parade

ACTS FROM HEART; COLBERT SAID SMART
: “Natalie Wood: Teenager with a Past,”
Movie Life
, July 1956

THE WAY IT WORKS
: Robert Hyatt to SF, 5/10/99

I HAD TO TAKE
: Natalie Wood on
Tomorrow
with Tom Snyder, 2/14/80

HORRENDOUS STORIES
: Mart Crowley, “Intimate Portrait: Natalie Wood”

TAUGHT MAGIC TRICKS
:
San Francisco Chronicle
, 3/22/46; “Natalie Wood Makes It As Actress,” Bruce Bahrenburg,
Newark Sunday News
, 6/15/69; Erskine Johnson column,
Los Angeles Mirror-News
, 7/7/56

LOVED GROWN-UPS
: 3/64
Motion Picture

WATCHING TO BE BETTER
: November 1957
Movie Show

COLBERT KIND, MATERNAL
:
Claudette Colbert
unsourced biography, Academy Colbert collection

LETTER TO EDWIN
: Letter and photo from Natasha Gurdin to Edwin Canevari received 5/22/45

I INVENTED HER
: Maria Gurdin to Randal Malone

CHAPTER 6

FAN MAGAZINE
: (circa July) 1945
Motion Picture

FRIGHTENED TO BE ALONE, MUD NEVER LET HER
: “Natalie Wood’s Own Story,” Patricia Reynolds,
Pageant
, July 1971;
Natalie: A Memoir by Her Sister

KIDNAPPED
: 6/69
Screen Parade;
11/68
Cosmopolitan

DANGEROUS
: 10/84
McCall’s

DREADED BEDTIME, STORYBOOK DOLLS, CALLED “FATHER,” LIVED IN IMAGINATION, BEST FRIEND PICHEL
: 6/45
Motion Picture

DOLLS KEPT HER COMPANY
: Maryann Marinkovich Brooks to SF

TALKED TO HER DOLLS
: 11/68
Cosmopolitan

SOLE COMPANION
: Olga Viripaeff to SF, 7/11/99; 6/45
Motion Picture

FANTASIZED RUSSIA
: 7/80
Biarritz;
“Natalie Wood’s Russian Roots,” Roderick Mann,
Los Angeles Times
, 2/15/79

BIRTHDAY PARTY
: “Am I Too Young to Be a Good Mother?” Frank Collins,
Motion Picture
, July 1958

ENAMORED OF
: Mrs. Gregory (Lily) Muradian to SF, 2/9/99

PERFUME
: 7/7/56
Los Angeles Mirror-News

11/26/45
LIFE
Maria Gurdin to Shirley Mann to SF; Maria Gurdin to Sue Russell, 11/85; Maria Gurdin to Randal Malone

STORY LANA WAS TOLD
: Lana Wood to Dennis Bartok at the American Cinematheque Tribute to Natalie Wood, Hollywood, California, 9/2/99

GENIUS, FOOT IN THE DOOR
: Randal Malone to SF

PUT A LOT INTO HER
: Robert Wagner, “Intimate Portrait: Natalie Wood”

DECIDED TO WORK; NOT EXCITED ABOUT MOVIES
: Olga Viripaeff to SF, 5/24/99 47–48 NO MATTER WHAT: “Just for Variety,” Army Archerd,
Daily Variety
, 11/8/78

DEFINED ACTING, BULGING CALVES
: 6/45
Motion Picture

MARIA’S STORY
: Maria Gurdin to Sue Russell and Phyllis Quinn for
Star Mothers
, 11/85

GAIL REMEMBERED HER
: Gail Lumet Buckley letter to SF

TREAT TO GO TO MOVIE, BIT HER CHEEK, WET HER PANTS
: Olga Viripaeff to SF, 5/24/99

NATALIE SAW HER PARENTS AS GODS
: 11/68
Cosmopolitan
; 6/69
Screen Parade

94
STARS
: 2/60
Coronet

PLAYED MAKING MOVIES
: 11/57
Movie Show

NICK WAS PROUD
: Dmitri Zakharenko to SF

GOSSIP IN SAN FRANCISCO
: Nina Arrabit to SF

NICK WAS UNHAPPY
: Lana Wood to SF, 8/19/99

RUBBED OIL, SAID NO
: 8/67
Photoplay

TOLD HER SHE WAS FRAIL, SHE IMAGINED ILLNESSES
: 3/62
Photoplay

WOULDN’T LET HER RUN
: Robert Wagner, “Intimate Portrait: Natalie Wood”

SO OVERPROTECTED
: “Natalie’s Happy To Be Back In Films,” Kevin Thomas,
Los Angeles Times
, 10/30/69

MISPLACED FEAR, CHILD ABUSE
: Robert Blake outtakes

NICK HELD A KNIFE, MARIA IN CONTACT WITH CAPTAIN, MARIA WAS AFRAID
: Olga Viripaeff to SF, 5/24/99

GOSSIP ABOUT HOLLYWOOD PRODUCER
: Nina Arrabit to SF

MEAN DRUNK
: Lana Wood to SF, 8/24/99

AIRPLANE FEAR
: Robert B. Jiras to SF, 9/16/99; Faye Nuell Mayo to SF; various Natalie Wood published interviews

PULLED PIGTAILS, AFRAID
:
Twinkle Twinkle Little Star;
8/2/70
Los Angeles Times

GABRIELLA, THRILLED BY SNOW
: 7/56
Movie Life; Hollywood Top 10 Scandals
1963

SELDOM NEGATIVE, WOULDN’T WANT HER OWN CHILD
: “Natalie Wood: A Young Wife’s Tragic Story”,
Modern Screen
, December 1961; 4/64
Screen Stories

RELINQUISHED LANA TO OLGA
: Lana Wood to SF; Olga Viripaeff to SF; Constantine Liuzunie to SF; Randal Malone to SF; 8/67
Photoplay

RUMORS SVETLANA WAS OLGA’S BABY
: Olga Viripaeff to SF,
Natalie: A Memoir by Her Sister

IT WAS THE LAW; “THEIR MOTHER NEGLECTED LANA…”
: 8/67
Photoplay

NON-PERSON, THINKS SHE LIVED THERE, NO GODPARENT OR CURTSYING
: Lana Wood to SF, 8/19/99

PRESENTED NATALIE WOOD
: 3/22/46
San Francisco Chronicle

MAGAZINE PRAISED NATALIE
:
Tomorrow Is Forever, Look
, 3/19/46

OLGA WORRIED ABOUT GRADES, FIRED NANNY
: Olga Viripaeff to SF, Maria Gurdin to Phyllis Quinn, Lana Wood to SF

DAYS CONSISTED OF DRINKING; MARIA WAS UNHAPPY, SHE’LL SING
: Lana Wood to SF, 8/24/99, 8/19/99

NATASHA FELT GUILTY
: 3/79
Saturday Evening Post;
10/79
Orange Coast

MARIA’S COMPANION POSITS
: Randal Malone to SF

EATS YOUR HEART
: Louella Parsons column,
Los Angeles Herald-Examiner
, 4/5/46

CHAPTER 7

BRENT TOOK HER TO FAMOUS ARTISTS
: 9/57
Photoplay;
8/67
Photoplay

CONTRACT WITH FAMOUS ARTISTS
: Case #503232, Los Angeles Superior Court

SHE’D STILL READ THE TRADES; OLGA STAYED BEHIND
: Olga Viripaeff to SF, 5/24/99

MARIA NEGOTIATED
: Robert Hyatt to SF, 5/10/99

MOTHER MANAGED MY CAREER
: 6/67
Pageant

DIDN’T LIKE SCHOOL
: 9/57
Photoplay

DIDN’T KNOW NEIGHBORS; BITTY HOUSE
: Lana Wood to SF, 8/19/99

NATALIE FELT AWFUL
: “Natalie Wood Gets Back In the Ring,” Patrick Pacheco,
After Dark
, 10/79

FILMED AS B MOVIE
: Robert Hyatt to SF, 5/10/99

TITLES; SUGGESTED WHILE VACATIONING; NATALIE FLEW ON 11/17
: “Vital Statistics on
Miracle on 34th Street
,” Harry Brand, Director of Publicity, Twentieth Century Fox, circa 1947 [from the Fox archives, Los Angeles]

ZANUCK SENT A NOTE, ASSIGNED O’HARA AND PAYNE
: Fox Archives, Los Angeles

I WAS ONLY EIGHT
: “Exclusive Interview: Natalie Wood,” Flanzy Lewis,
Preview
, 1978, USC Archives, Natalie Wood Collection

MARGARET WAS THE TOP
: Randal Malone to SF

THERE WERE A MILLION; COACHED HER TO “BE MARGARET”; PEOPLE THINK IT’S ME
: Margaret O’Brien to SF

ZANUCK’S NOTES ON
GHOST;
MOOD STORY
: “Vital Statistics on ‘The Ghost & Mrs. Muir,’ ” Harry Brand, Director of Publicity, Twentieth Century Fox circa 1947 [Fox collection, Los Angeles]

TRACY DROPPED OUT
: Amanda Duff Dunne to SF, 6/22/99

MANKIEWICZ’S COMMENTS
: Mankiewicz Q&A at the Director’s Guild of America, Los Angeles, 1986, as quoted in
Films In Review 1986

MAUREEN HADN’T READ IT; ORDERED BACK; NOT SO MAD
: Maureen O’Hara to SF, 6/16/99

MAGIC
: Maureen O’Hara to SF, 6/16/99; “Charming Christmas Story Brings O’Hara Back,” Mark Dawidziak,
Calgary Herald
, 12/17/95

BELIEVED HE WAS SANTA
: Maureen O’Hara to SF, 6/16/99; “Maureen O’Hara Hopes She Has Made Her Second Christmas Classic,” Walt Belcher,
The Tampa Tribune
, 12/17/95

FELL MADLY IN LOVE
: “Tennessee Williams Took His Name Off It,” Rex Reed,
New York Times
, 1/16/66

ONE-TAKE NATALIE
: Nina Arrabit to SF

SEATON WAS AMAZED; INSTINCTIVE SENSE OF TIMING
: 2/60
Coronet

MARIE NEVER INTERFERED
: Robert Hyatt to SF, 5/10/99

MOST VIVID MEMORY
: 7/7/56
Los Angeles Mirror-News

NATALIE’S TECHNIQUE
:
Twinkle Twinkle Little Star;
1/64
Seventeen

SPELLED MANKIEWICZ, KNEW SHE’D BE AN ACTRESS
: Mankiewicz Q&A as quoted in
Films in Review 1986

WHAT A WONDERFUL TIME
: “Recalling the Happy Times with Natalie Wood,” Donfeld,
Los Angeles Times
, 9/30/83

HAD TO BE PAMPERED
: Amanda Duff Dunne to SF, 6/22/99

LEE RECOLLECTIONS
: Anna Lee Nathan to SF, 6/3/99

O’HARA RECOLLECTIONS
: Maureen O’Hara to SF, 6/16/99

GOOD LITTLE GIRL
: Natalie Wood interview,
Peeper
press release from Gordon Armstrong, Publicity Director, Twentieth Century Fox, 1975

MAYBE SHE WAS BEATEN
: Scott Marlowe to SF, 6/8/99

THREATENED WITH PIANO
: Twentieth Century Fox press release

BOBBY HYATT RECOLLECTIONS
: Robert Hyatt to SF, 5/10/99, Robert Hyatt letter to SF, 5/99

JEANNE HYATT RECOLLECTIONS
: Jeanne Hyatt to SF, 5/6/99

SCUDDA HOO
BACKGROUND
: “Vital Statistics on ‘Scudda Hoo Scudda Hay,’ ” Harry Brand, Director of Publicity, Twentieth Century Fox [Fox collection]

IN ONE I WAS
: “Falling Stars,” David Castell,
Sunday Telegraph
, 12/6/81

I WAS PLAYING
: 3/9/69
New York Times

I TOOK ON THE CHARACTERISTICS
: 7/71
Pageant

DIFFICULT TO SEPARATE THE REALITY
:
Twinkle Twinkle Little Star

STILL VAGUELY BELIEVED IN SANTA
: Natalie Wood on AMC
Hollywood Real to Reel

NATALIE WAS PARALYZED
: 2/60
Coronet

ALWAYS BEEN FRAIL
: 3/62
Photoplay

IT WAS TERRIBLE
: Scott Marlowe to SF, 6/8/99

PLAYED CANASTA
: Robert Hyatt to SF, 5/10/99

CHAPTER 8

LOUELLA GUSHED
: Louella Parsons columns,
Los Angeles Herald- Examiner
, 5/3/47, 6/14/47

MARIA’S DIRTY TRICK
: Maria Gurdin to Phyllis Quinn; Maria Gurdin to Sue Russell for
Star Mothers
, 1/10/87

NICK WAS TOO DRUNK
: Olga Viripaeff to SF, 5/24/99

LANA’S STORMY RECOLLECTIONS
: Lana Wood to SF, 8/19/99

SHOW BUSINESS HER SOLUTION
: Robert Blake, “E True Hollywood Story: Natalie Wood”

BELIEVED SHE WAS SEXUALLY ABUSED
: Robert Blake outtakes

THE SIGNS WERE THERE
: Scott Marlowe to SF, 6/8/99

KEEP HANDS OUT OF BEDCOVERS
: Lana Wood to SF, 8/19/99, Olga Viripaeff to SF, 5/24/99

TOLD NATALIE SHE WOULD DIE
: Robert Hyatt to SF, 5/10/99

FAHD WAS IN THE BACKGROUND
: Margaret O’Brien to SF

NICK PRETENDED, FLIPPED OUT, SENSITIVE TOPIC, NATALIE KNEW RUSSIAN, KIMONOS
: Robert Hyatt to SF, 5/10/99

LANA HATES SHOUTING, NATALIE HATED CONFRONTATION
: Lana Wood to SF, 8/19/99

OLGA AND LEXI, SHE WAS MORE RUSSIAN
: Olga Viripaeff to SF, 8/13/99

RUSSIAN FOODS
: “Natalie Wood and Robert Wagner,” Barbara Wilkins,
Bon Appetit
October 1977

DACHAS HIDDEN IN FORESTS
: 2/15/79
Los Angeles Times

GOAL TO BE BEST BALLERINA
: 9/57
Photoplay

WHAT INTRIGUED DWAN
:
Who the Devil Made It
, Peter Bogdanovich, 1997, Knopf

IT WAS A SLEEPER
: Robert Hyatt to SF, 5/10/99

THE NEW YORKER
, 6/14/17, “Santa Out of Season”
“‘Ghost and Mrs. Muir’ Scores as Novelty,” Edwin Schallert,
Los Angeles Times
7/4/47

Other books

Surrender by Angela Ford
Whiskey Lullaby by Martens, Dawn, Minton, Emily
Sweet by Alysia Constantine
Dark Alchemy by Laura Bickle
Broken Skin by Stuart MacBride
Revenge by Lisa Jackson
Fighting the Flames by Leslie Johnson
Shadow's Son by Jon Sprunk
Stiff by Mary Roach