______________________________________________________________________________________________




______________________________________________________________________________________________




______________________________________________________________________________________________

Thursday, June 24, 2010

Dear, dear Joan



























This is a portion of what George Cukor read on June 24, 1977 in Los Angeles at a memorial service for Joan, who had died the month before.


"But for all that, in private life she was a lovable, sentimental creature. A loyal and generous friend, very thoughtful; dear Joan Crawford, she forgot nothing---names, dates, obligations. These included the people at Hollywood institutions who had helped make and keep her a star. When it was fashionable to rail against the studio system and the tycoons who had built it, she was always warm in their defense. She spoke of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer as a family in which she was directed and protected, provided with fine stories and just about every great male star to play opposite; later she built up a similar relationship with Warners. And through it all she was consistently herself, unmistakably Joan Crawford, star. Katharine Hepburn says that every great star has a talent to irritate. Joan Crawford had that: whether you liked her or did not like her on the screen, you could not ignore her existence nor deny her quality.

I thought Joan Crawford could never die. Come to think of it, as long as celluloid holds together and the word Hollywood means anything to anyone, she never will."

9 comments:

  1. Honey, as long as there are gays - or at least breath in my body - Joanie will never die.

    ReplyDelete
  2. When younger, Joan Crawford scared me, she wasn't soft spoken or nonthreatening like other woman her era.
    The older I get the more I appreciate her.
    She took the bull by the horns and rode it till the end. All the while looking killer, fit, and ready.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I saw the picture and was reminded of a quote regarding her 60's LA apartment from the TCM documentary about her that I worked on:

    "There was more plastic on that funiture than on the meat at the A&P!"

    ReplyDelete
  4. I would kill for that portrait. I wonder where it is? Probably lurking in the back of some thrift shop waiting to be discovered. Perhaps Christina burned it.

    ReplyDelete
  5. i didn't know (but everyone else did) that the artist that did this (keane) painted those big-eyed kids that were the rage back then & joan chose her to do the portrait because she loved those kids (which she had scattered through the imperial hose apartment).

    ReplyDelete
  6. The Keane! My other favorite Keane is his painting of the Jerry Lewis FAMILY.

    ReplyDelete
  7. REALLY? i'll start googling right now.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Donna had it on her blog. Jerry as a Harlequin.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Norma - do you have that picture of Wilma and Betty hanging over the Desmond family Davenport?

    ReplyDelete

Please, we're all ears!