Tuesday, October 28, 2014

RONALD REAGAN: Post-War American Presidents (8)




[This series describes the 12 Post-War American Presidents from a British perspective]


Ronald Reagan’s accession to the Presidency was received with misgivings by the British public, as former movie actors were thought unlikely presidential material. They totally underestimated the man. In the event genial Reagan proved to be a highly successful and respected leader, reviving conservatism and simple patriotism which had been in sharp decline in the previous years.

President Ronald Reagan
Ronald (Ronnie) Reagan (1911 – 2004) was born in Tempico, Illinois and the family eventually settled in Dixon, where Reagan senior ran a shoe shop. After education at Dixon High School, Ronnie won an athletics scholarship to Eureka College in 1928 leaving four years later to become a radio sports announcer.


 In 1937 he was signed up by Warner Brothers and he made some 50 films until the mid-1950s. Never a leading star, but a well-recognised face, his earlier films were the more striking. He played the 1920s Notre Dame American football hero George Gipp in the 1940 movie Knute Rockne, All-American memorably encouraging his team colleagues from his deathbed to “win one for The Gipper” – Reagan was often known as The Gipper thereafter. His best film role was as Drake McHugh in Kings Row (1942), a rather lurid melodrama where Reagan has both legs amputated after a railway accident; he wakes up in his hospital bed and exclaims in horror “Where is the Rest of Me?” This risible line was delivered with a straight face and Reagan used it as the title of his 1965 autobiography. From 1940 Reagan was married to Jane Wyman, a notable actress, (they had co-starred in Brother Rat in 1938) but they divorced in 1948.

Ronnie Reagan as football star The Gipper
Soon after Kings Row, Ronnie was drafted into the US Army, but his poor eyesight kept him out of combat and he made training films. Returning to Hollywood after the war his film career fluctuated but from 1947 to 1952 he was President of the Screen Actors’ Guild where he learnt the politics of trade unionism. More dependable for Reagan was his appointment as public relations spokesman for General Electric and he moved gradually from the liberal Left (he defended actors from anti-communist witch-hunts) to the pro-business Right, denouncing excessive government regulation and wasteful state spending. He toured the country speaking to business audiences and honed his communication skills. In 1952 he had married actress Nancy Davis who was to be his life-time support and companion.


Reagan’s developing conservative views (he only joined the Republicans in 1962) were out of sympathy with the atmosphere of Kennedy’s and LBJ’s America but Reagan loyally supported Republican Barry Goldwater’s doomed campaign in 1964. Almost 50 years ago to the day, Reagan delivered a rousing speech, known as The Time to Choose, to a Republican audience which made his name:


“You and I are told increasingly we have to choose between a left or right. Well I’d like to suggest there is no such thing as a left or right. There’s only an up or down – [up to] man’s old-aged dream, the ultimate in individual freedom consistent with law and order, or down to the ant heap of totalitarianism.”


This emphasis on the personal freedom of Americans animated Reagan’s political philosophy together with the belief that governments were too big and too pervasive. Reagan’s conservative viewpoint in time became deeply influential and his soft-spoken, humorous and folksy delivery enhanced the effectiveness of his message.


In 1966 Reagan won the Governorship of California, a prize which had long eluded the Republicans. His programme was populist in that he pledged “to get the welfare bums back to work” and to “clear up the mess at Berkeley” – the University of California campus and hotbed of hippie and anti-war protest. More constructively he raised taxes sharply to balance California’s poorly controlled budget. Reagan served two terms to 1974 and sought the Republican Presidential nomination in vain in 1968 and 1976 losing out to Nixon and Ford. Nixon and Reagan were usually friends and allies, both historically to have many accomplishments to their credit.

Like-minded Reagan and Nixon

Reagan’s chance came in 1980 when Carter, beset by the Iran hostage crisis, campaigned ineffectually for his second term and was thrashed 489-49 in the Electoral College. At 69, Reagan was the oldest new President ever. A month or two after taking office in 1981, Reagan survived assassination, taking a bullet near his lung – he nonchalantly told Nancy “Sorry, Honey, I forgot to duck!” – but he pluckily recovered.

Ronnie and Nancy Reagan

Reagan’s domestic programme started with a bang with a significant reform of the tax code and deep cuts in marginal tax rates in 1981. Some of the tax reduction was later clawed back but the 1980s saw what became known as “Reaganomics”.  In guru economist Milton Friedman’s words: "Reaganomics had four simple principles: Lower marginal tax rates, less regulation, restrained government spending, noninflationary monetary policy. Though Reagan did not achieve all of his goals, he made good progress”. These policies underlined the importance of monetarism as opposed to the old consensus supporting Keynesian demand management and echoed many of the policies of Britain’s Margaret Thatcher who became a close ally and confidante of Reagan. There was then, and there remains, much partisan debate about how important Reaganomics were, but the facts are that the US economy revived from 1983 with the tax take and productivity growing strongly. Reagan’s regular fireside chats on TV were well received – not for nothing was he dubbed The Great Communicator.


Foreign policy was of crucial importance to Reagan. The Russians remained in Afghanistan until 1989 and Reagan used the phrase “The evil Empire” to describe Soviet policy. He took the simple view that Russia did not merely have to be contained, but defeated by rolling back the communist empire in Eastern Europe. He developed a constructive but wary relationship with reforming Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev but he greatly increased military spending and challenged the Soviet capacity to compete by launching the Strategic Defence Initiative envisaging a missile shield around the West. The Soviet economy was too weak to do likewise; Gorbachev negotiated the significant Intermediate Nuclear Forces Treaty with Reagan in 1987 reducing nuclear arsenals. 

Reagan with Gorbachev making Peace



Eventually, in 1989, the Soviet satellite states in Eastern Europe, starting in East Germany, deposed their communist governments, opened their borders and welcomed the West. The Soviet Union itself disintegrated in 1991. A long nightmare was ended and although Reagan was no longer President, much of the credit for this peaceful political earthquake must go to him.


Margaret Thatcher’s British government greatly esteemed Reagan. When in 1982 Argentina seized the British colonial Falkland Islands in the South Atlantic, Britain sent a military force to recover them, a risky venture. Against State Department advice, Reagan (and Defence secretary Casper Weinberger) helped Britain with intelligence and equipment and British forces triumphed. In a punitive action against Libya following terrorist activity by Gaddafi, Tripoli was bombed and Britain gladly provided airbase facilities.

Partners Thatcher and Reagan



Not everything went smoothly overseas. In 1982 800 US Marines were sent to bolster the government of Lebanon but, in 1983, 241 were killed in a suicide attack on their Beirut barracks, a heavy blow. Later the reputation of the Reagan administration was tarnished by the Iran-Contra Affair, a murky episode whereby the proceeds of arms sales to Iran, in contravention of an embargo, were diverted to the Contra rebels fighting against the leftist Sandinista government of Nicaragua. Senior government figures were involved and Reagan later apologised to the nation in 1987. It was not Reagan’s finest hour.


Reagan’s Presidency ended in 1989 and after the election he was succeeded by his vice-president George Bush senior. In 1994 he movingly wrote to the American people announcing he was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s and bade his public farewell. His mental powers gradually deteriorated and in 2004 he died, aged 93, in Los Angeles. 


Reagan’s Presidency was a landmark in US history. He reasserted conservative values and gave them a new shape, inspiring later libertarian movements like The Tea Party. His devotion to the American Dream was unwavering and his role in ending the Cold War has earned him the gratitude of all free people.



SMD
28.10.14
Text Copyright © Sidney Donald 2014

Sunday, October 26, 2014

ALL SHAPES AND SIZES



    
It will not have escaped most of you that Woman has changed her shape quite markedly over the last 70 years or so. This seems to be a never-ending process as the femme fatale expands, slims down and slowly swells again, first for her own and secondly for mere males’ delectation. I hasten to add that ladies are lovely whatever shape is in fashion - we cannot have too much of them!

Venus de Milo

Botticelli's Venus

The Venus de Milo, from the 2nd century BC is a handsomely curvaceous ideal (une grande gendarme, complained unimpressed Renoir) while Botticelli’s waif-like Venus has shed many pounds in the meanwhile. These were classical figures to admire and were not intended to remind you of the girl next door. The pendulum swung back to the beefy, not to say obese, with those heavy-thighed Flemish ladies of Rubens, a stiff challenge for any prospective Don Juan.

The Rape of the Sabine Women by Rubens

In the 19th and early 20th century the female form was strictly covered up, unless you bought those rather feeble postcards from disreputable Frog touts at Paris railway stations. But it could not last and it was foreign films that showed the way, at least to the buttoned-up Brits. The Continental cinema cornered the market in voluptuous beauties, an early favourite of mine being Gina Lollobrigida: then La Dolce Vita exploded with well-upholstered Anita Ekberg soon to be followed by statuesque Ursula Andress. No modest wallflowers here.

Gina Lollobrigida

Anita Ekberg in La Dolce Vita
 



The US was well up with the game as their great pin-up Marilyn Monroe was far from svelte and amusing Jayne Mansfield was positively top-heavy.

Marilyn Monroe

 
 
Indeed the US became breast-obsessed to a remarkable degree provoking the hilarious tirade from Terry-Thomas about the importance of brassieres to the American economy in It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World.


Slow-starting Britain eventually joined the so-called sexual revolution, though maybe not quite as late as poet Philip Larkin ironically dated this great moment:


Sexual intercourse began
In nineteen sixty-three
(which was rather late for me) -
Between the end of the Chatterley ban
And the Beatles' first LP.


Everyone let it all hang out. Brigitte Bardot had shown the way in And Woman was Created (although I admired her pert bottom rather than her cheeky breasts). Actresses were determined to strip off like Vanessa Redgrave while Glenda Jackson rather overdid it. We forget what a bright screen presence she had, a world away from the later snarling leftist harridan on the Labour benches.


 Shapes changed too; the voluptuous gave way to delicate Audrey Hepburn, iconic models Jean Shrimpton and almost anorexic Twiggy. The miniskirt flattered those with slim legs, though not all wearers understood that. As the years passed, a slightly fuller figure was back in vogue with Jamie Lee Curtis leading the charge and lovely Kiera Knightley must have been mortified to hear her modest breasts recently dismissed by her director as “two poached eggs”!

 
 
Keira Knightley


Of course physical attributes are not of overriding importance. A woman’s intelligence and dynamism matter much more. I am however reminded of my dear mother-in-law who, charitably supporting the merits of a friend’s daughter, would say “she has lovely eyes” - a sure signal that the rest of her was hideous!  However, this piece is meant to be a calm analysis of the geometry of Woman and not a sexist effusion.

                      
Amal and George Clooney

 But am I wrong in advising today’s icon Amal Alamuddin (aka Mrs George Clooney) to add a pound or two in her new home at Sonning, Berkshire? She seems in want of a square meal and I recommend a generous portion of steak and kidney pie, with sprouts and floury potatoes followed by treacle pudding.



SMD
26.10.14
Text Copyright © Sidney Donald 2014

Thursday, October 23, 2014

STEWART GRANGER and ALBERT FINNEY: Celebrities of Stage and Screen (15)



[This is the 15th in an occasional series describing British artistes who found fame on stage or in the movies]


This piece describes two very different actors.  Stewart Granger was the quintessential matinée idol of the 1940s and 1950s before gradually fading away. He said accurately enough that he was “a successful film star, not an actor’s actor” and he left hardly any artistic legacy. By contrast Albert Finney is a consummate member of his profession and has delighted his audience with Shakespeare, drama, comedy and even musicals in roles ranging from the heroic to the disguised character part.

Stewart Granger
Stewart Granger (1913-93) was born James Stewart into a military family in London. He later changed his stage name to avoid confusion with the famed Hollywood actor but friends and colleagues always called him “Jimmy” - “Granger” was the surname of his Scots grandmother. After private education at Epsom College he went to drama school and then learnt his trade from 1933 in the busy repertory companies of the time. In 1938 he married the talented actress Elspeth March, also from a military family with a Scots background. In 1939 he and Elspeth were in rep in our then family-owned theatre in Aberdeen (Michael Denison and Dulcie Gray were the juvenile leads).  My parents came to know the Grangers quite well – my mother kept up with Elspeth March for some years. When war broke out Granger enlisted in the local Gordon Highlanders, but was commissioned in The Black Watch. He was troubled by stomach ulcers and was invalided out in 1942.

Granger and Mason duel in Fanny by Gaslight

Tall, dark and handsome Granger was a natural for the escapist period melodramas being produced by Gainsborough Pictures, featuring artistes like Margaret Lockwood, queen of the bodice-rippers, and James Mason, a rather better actor, who often appeared alongside Granger.  Early successes were The Man in Grey (1943) and Fanny by Gaslight (1944) with Granger developing his image as a swashbuckler and romantic lead. A younger generation swooned over Granger in the manner of the contemporary US bobby-soxers. Perhaps it is not altogether surprising that Granger’s ego swelled and he resolved to launch himself upon Hollywood; his marriage to Elspeth March ended in 1948 and he had an affair with lovely Jean Simmons whom he married in 1950. Liz Taylor’s husband, Michael Wilding, was best man and the wedding was at Howard Hughes’ ranch – Hughes had designs on Simmons, sharply resisted by Granger.


He secured the lead in adventure film King Solomon’s Mines (1950) filmed in Africa and featuring Deborah Kerr. It was a great success – Granger was Britain’s answer to Errol Flynn. Caddishly Granger claimed in his much later autobiography that Kerr had seduced him “Oh what a gallant man he is!” remarked a pained Miss Kerr.

Granger and Kerr in King Solomon's Mines

Granger starred again with Kerr in The Prisoner of Zenda (1952), an ideal vehicle for Granger, with a sneering James Mason as Rupert of Hentzau.

Granger charms Kerr in The Prisoner of Zenda

Granger was making much money but he overstretched himself buying ranching land and both he and Simmons had to work hard to pay off their joint debts. He had another notable success with the French confection Scaramouche (1952) with its famous sword duel round a theatre, for which Granger trained and did his own stunts. Granger had a notoriously roving eye, always getting the girl on screen and very often off-screen as well. Scaramouche saw him opposite glamourous Janet Leigh.


Granger and Janet Leigh in Scaramouche

Granger made three films with his wife Jean Simmons of which the best received was 1955 thriller Footsteps in the Fog, where he played a villainous husband discovered poisoning his wife by his housemaid Simmons.

 But his luck was running out. He played a British officer opposite Ava Gardner in the thoughtful Bhowani Junction (1956) about the chaos of Partition in India but the film did not make money.

Granger and Ava Gardner in Bhowani Junction
While he appeared in the entertaining North to Alaska (1960), he divorced Simmons and was relegated to minor parts or appearances in German films of impenetrable obscurity. His arrogance had caused him to turn down many plum parts, notably Norman Maine in A Star is Born and Messala in Ben Hur. He still had his cattle ranch, but he eked out his days in TV mini-series. His third marriage ended after 5 years in 1968. Unpopular within his profession for his prima donna ways, he nevertheless retained the warm friendship of James Mason, Richard Burton and Michael Wilding, suggesting an attractive side to his personality. He had indubitably entertained, but from the second rank, and would have been better advised to accept he was no longer a romantic lead and gracefully graduate to character acting. He died in Santa Monica, CA, aged 80 in 1993.
--------------------

Albert Finney (1936 - ) is still with us, aged 78. The contrast with Stewart Granger is marked: no private education, he was born the son of a bookmaker in gritty Salford by Manchester. After the local Grammar School, he studied acting at RADA and became a member of the Royal Shakespeare Company. His London debut in 1958 was in a play directed by and acted in by Charles Laughton and, as understudy to Laurence Olivier, he briefly took the part of Coriolanus in 1959.

Albert Finney

The British theatre then was still in the throes of the kitchen-sink drama revolution glorifying working-class mores and values. This suited Finney who leapt to public notice in 1960 as the devil-may-care mill-hand in the film Saturday Night and Sunday Morning by Alan Sillitoe.

Rachel Roberts and Finney cavort in Saturday Night and Sunday Morning

    
He was excellent in the title role in the original stage version of day-dreamer Billy Liar and later featured as John Osborne’s conscience-troubled and constipated Luther in the West End in 1962, a rather heavy affair. His greatest youthful triumph was as the eponymous Tom Jones in Tony Richardson’s gloriously lively film of 1963 with Finney at his picaresque best.

Susanna York and Albert Finney in Tom Jones

The movie was showered with honours although an Oscar has ever eluded Finney despite several nominations. Finney remained busy in the 1960s with the 1967 film Two for the Road co-starring Audrey Hepburn, depicting a bickering touring couple with flashbacks to happier times. On stage he impressed with A Day in the Death of Joe Egg about a couple caring for their handicapped child. He also made the film Charlie Bubbles, a partly autobiographical piece following a successful actor returning to his roots in Manchester.


Finney’s range is so wide, it is impossible to do more than mention highlights. He amused as a Liverpool bingo-caller turned detective in Gumshoe (1971) and then became a rotund, wax-moustachioed Hercule Poirot in Murder on the Orient Express (1974). He starred in a musical of Scrooge but his finest musical effort was as millionaire Daddy Warbucks in Annie (1982). He also won golden opinions for his depiction of fading Shakespearean Sir in Harwood’s The Dresser (1983).

Finney steps out in Annie with Aileen Quinn
A huge later success was Erin Brockovich (2000) with Finney playing opposite inspired Julia Roberts as her long-suffering boss Ed Masry in the true story of legal action against industrial pollution.

Finney and Julia Roberts make a team in Erin Brockovich

More recently it has been difficult to penetrate Finney’s disguises as the sinister Dr Hirsch in The Bourne Identity and The Bourne Legacy, starring an energetic Matt Damon, and I did not spot him first time round as Scots gamekeeper Kincade in the 2012 James Bond thriller Skyfall. But great actors assume many personae and Finney has comfortably assumed the mantle of Winston Churchill and Pope John Paul II, to name but two.


Finney keeps a low profile. He is on his third wife, travel agent Pene Delmage, (he was married to striking Anouk Aimée from 1970 to 1978). He keeps active despite battling with kidney cancer since 2011. He refused a proffered knighthood in 2000 (“perpetuating snobbery” he explained), but few actors have deserved honours more and he has earned the gratitude of a vast audience.

Finney as Kincade in Skyfall

SMD
23.10.14
Text Copyright © Sidney Donald 2014