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That's Entertainment!


When Stars Collide

-- Stephen Schochet

During the silent era it was thought a waste of money to make a movie with more than one star. Personalities like Charlie Chaplin, Harold Lloyd, and Buster Keaton were considered potent enough box office on their own. But with dwindling attendance during the great depression, MGM decided to feature Hollywood's first all star ensemble cast in Grand Hotel (1932) starring the mammoth egos of Joan Crawford, Wallace Beery, John Barrymore, and Greta Garbo. The director Edmund Goulding was unable to let Joan Crawford and Garbo have any scenes together for fear they might try to upstage each other. Although she complimented her Swedish co-star's beauty, Crawford hated Garbo's demands for top billing. Knowing that Greta hated tardiness and Marlene Dietrich, Crawford was constantly late and played Dietrich's records loudly on the set.

Crawford had another classic encounter with rival Bette Davis on the set of Whatever Happened To Baby Jane (1962). Betty, knowing that Joan was the widow of Alfred Steele, the former head of the Pepsi Corporation, had a Coke dispenser brought in for the cast and crew. When Joan was late Bette, an often nasty woman but a total pro, would proclaim loudly," Is the Widow Steele ready yet?" Joan retaliated by lining her dress pockets with weights so in a scene when Bette Davis had to drag Crawford's nearly dead character across the floor, she almost broke her back.

Male stars don't always get along either. On location in Japan for the filming of The Teahouse Of The August Moon (1956), Glenn Ford paid a visit to his co-star Marlon Brando's dressing room. "Marlon did you eat one of the chocolate chip cookies my wife sent me?". "No I didn't Glenn." "OK." Ford hesitated at the door. "Marlon, all you to do was ask, you didn't have to take one." Ford left to shoot his next scene giving the infuriated Brando time to go into Ford's dressing room and smash the remaining cookies with a sledgehammer.

Another Ford, Harrison, had a dust-up with Brad Pitt during the making of The Devil's Own (1996). At first Pitt was excited to be working with the older actor, but his enthusiasm waned as the script focus moved away from his sympathetic young Irish killer to Ford's middle-aged, happily married policeman. Harrison Ford perhaps threatened by the younger star, accused Pitt of trying to be an apologist for the IRA. The film was delayed almost every day for hours as Pitt, Ford, and director Alan Pakula would argue about the script. The budget skyrocketed to over ninety million, became a box office failure, and led to Columbia Pictures head Mark Canton, being fired. During the production when Harrison Ford and Brad Pitt had fight scenes together they took out their frustrations by landing real blows.

An all star male cast can make it hard to stand out. Steve McQueen had been so desperate to appear in The Magnificent Seven (1960), he had intentionally crashed a car and used his minor injuries to temporarily get out of his television series Wanted Dead Or Alive (1958-1961). He sneaked down to Mexico while he was "recuperating" to work on Magnificent. His new challenge was how not to be overshadowed by the movie's star Yul Brynner. The colorful, bigger than life Brynner was actually five foot nine (same as McQueen) and concerned about his height on screen. For the first scene between Chris (Brynner) and Vin (McQueen) the Swiss Mongolian actor built a hill of dirt that would allow him to tower over his co-star. But Steve kept blowing his lines. Before each new take he would kick some dirt out from underneath Yul's hill. By the time he got the scene right Brynner was nearly standing in a hole.

Sometimes the most petty arguments will break out between male stars and their leading ladies. A tender scene in the Bishop's Wife (1947) was delayed because Cary Grant and Loretta Young couldn't face each other. Both insisted that their left profiles were more their more photogenic half and strongly pushed for that position in front of the camera. After the standoff lasted a few hours the furious producer Sam Goldywn came down to the set and shouted," If I photograph only half, I pay only half!" The problem was solved with Young gazing out the window and Grant coming up from behind, placing his arms around her and gently resting his chin on her shoulder, so both left profiles remained in full view.

Stephen Schochet is the author and narrator of the audio-books Fascinating Walt Disney and Tales of Hollywood. The Saint Louis Post Dispatch says, "these two elaborate productions are exceptionally entertaining." Hear RealAudio samples of these great, unique gifts at HollywoodStories.com.






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