"ARCHIE
LEACH"
by
Cary
Grant
Chapter
Twelve
abitually, I’m a man who examines and totals the
restaurant check. And so should you at today’s prices;
but if you’re afraid to, disinclined to, or too
embarrassed to, then that’s up to you. I indulge in no
such insecurities. I examine my bills. Just as any other
sensible man would when doing business at any other place.
Which reminds me that Time
magazine recently claimed I still have the first nickel I
ever made. I really should look for it. A nickel of that
vintage ought to be a collector’s item by now and worth
quite a bit more. Perhaps, like all those bartenders who
keep the first dollar they take in, I could frame it so
that the income-tax department would always know where to
find the four and a half cents they collect from each five
I earn. Of course, I’d prefer they didn’t, but if they
didn’t, then I might not be able to write with such
freedom or in such safety.
Time also reported I
counted out change to one of my wives. Now isn’t that
odd? Especially since I don’t remember giving any of
them any change at any time. I was more intent upon
getting theirs for my piggy bank.
I like money.
Anybody know anyone who doesn’t? You do? He’s a
liar.
When it comes to income
tax, I have little knowledge of its ever-changing
regulations and complexities, and leave such matters to
men who specialize in them. I have the ability to earn
large sums and trust they will be properly, fairly and
legally used and administered. Hundreds of letters asking
for personal help reach me weekly from scattered hopefuls.
But aside from the nationwide charities, the local
Community Chest, and certain other organizations which
receive annual donations from me, my advisers insist I
give to none of them.
There has recently been an
extraordinary rash of people eager to make easy pin money
by compiling a cookbook of celebrities’ recipes. I’ve
given up answering them. There’s an even larger
accumulation of mail from people who’ve decided to hold
auction sales of “little personal items” from
celebrities. It is no longer possible to answer each
request. It would take a larger office staff than I now
possess and my home would be empty of belongings and I
would be broke and, in turn, unable to retain either the
home or the office.
After that successful 1924
vaudeville season, during which most of us saved
sufficient money to feel our independence, we also began
feeling the strain of our incompatibilities. And so,
unable to amiably discuss our mutual dissatisfactions, we
disbanded and returned to New York. Some of the troupe
left for England, and others, including myself, remained
in America.
I wish I could report a
sudden meteoric rise of career, but summer and its slack
theatrical season was around again. I remained in New
York, eking out my savings while living in a very small
but clean, pleasant room at the National Vaudeville
Artists Club, where I was again permitted to run up bills
while trying to run down jobs. I still think of that club
and its staff with fond, grateful memory. At night, many
well-known theatrical figures of vaudeville and musical
comedy came there for late supper after their shows, and
at almost any other time during the day I could be
surrounded by the sound of friendly voices. I met
performers of every kind and often teamed in temporary
partnership with young comedians no more experienced than
myself, in order to obtain a day’s work here and a
day’s work there. Usually somewhere close to New York,
on a Saturday or Sunday, when small theaters advertised,
as a sort of weekend bonus, three or four
“outstanding” acts, to embellish their movie program.
We were paid the regular
minimum scale of $62.50 a day. For the two of us. Less 10
percent agent’s commission. Less cost of travel, less
cost of keeping our clothes clean for the performances,
less tips at the theater and meals between shows. Leaving
less and less and, too often, nothing. But I was glad for
the work. The experiences were of incalculable benefit,
because it was during these one- and two-day engagements
that I began learning the fundamentals of my craft. (Give
me a sentence with the word fundamental: I went horseback
riding yesterday, and now I have to eat fun da mental.”)
Eventually, after
graduating to more entertaining routines with more
accomplished comedians and more regular bookings, I played
practically every small town in America. As the
“straight man,” I learned to time laughs. When to talk
into an audience’s laughter. When no to talk into the
laughter. When to wait for the laugh. When not to wait for
a laugh. When to move on a laugh, when not to move on a
laugh. In all sorts of theaters, of all sizes, playing to
all types of people; timing laughs that changed in volume
and length at every performance.
I was 21 years old and
still six years away from Hollywood. Six years of
intensive, diligent work toward an unknown goal.
While
playing some short but lucrative engagements in and around
New York, I struck up a happy acquaintance with a
musical-comedy juvenile named Max Hoffman, Jr., and
through him met Reginald Hammerstein, a stage director and
younger brother of Oscar Hammerstien II. One evening, in
the nightclub where Helen Morgan sang her unforgettably
poignant songs, Reggie suggested that instead of pursuing
what was becoming a profitable livelihood in vaudeville, I
should begin training for musical comedy. He concluded
that although I might someday become quite popular on
vaudeville circuits throughout the country, it would still
not bring me recognition on Broadway, the New York center
of the theatrical world. It was logical and sound advice,
and I have never regretted taking it, nor forgotten the
considerate manner in which it was offered.
Reggie was about my own
age. Usually I found myself gravitating to older people to
seek advice, or to enjoy their amused regard of life and
be reassured that people could mature with age. Of
course, nowadays, people older than myself are becoming
increasingly difficult to find; but I’m consoled to note
that young people, in turn, now gravitate to me.
Yet, what hopeful advice
can one give a younger person? How can young people,
products of today’s sociological order, derive comfort
from the words and deeds of our political, scientific,
religious, moralistic and philosophic leaders, regardless
how well intended, when the combined result of all their
rules, regulations and beliefs has, cyclically, led us to
armament and eventual war?
In society’s present
stage of evolution, how can anyone tell anyone else how
best to live? I can only advise you to relax and, just as
all lasting religions prescribe, have faith in a master
plan far greater than our minds can yet perceive. Find,
through prayer, an inner peace for yourself no matter what
goes on around you. Perhaps someday there will be a magic
moment when everyone everywhere prays simultaneously, in
unity, for eternal peace.
Until that great day, do
the best you can. For yourself. And for your fellow man.
Take care of yourself and of each other.
Permit me to suggest that
you dress neatly and cleanly. A young person who dresses
well usually behaves well. Learn good manners. Good
manners and a pleasant personality, even without a college
education, will take you far.
What is the use of packing
our heads with general or academic learning, instruction
or information, if neither the learning nor the use of it,
in a world of competitive rather than concerted efforts,
can bring you personal happiness? Most of us, certainly
myself, spend years congesting our minds with useless bits
of knowledge that will go with us to the grave, and leave
little room or time for philosophic thought and the quiet
meditation of life beyond the grave.
Reggie Hammerstein
cheerfully took me to the offices of his uncle, Arthur
Hammerstien, who was soon to begin rehearsals of he
expensive, well-produced but ill-destined operetta, Golden
Dawn, which opened the newly built Hammerstien Theater
at Broadway and 54th Street in 1927. I played a small part
and understudied the leading man, Paul Gregory. On
matinee, he arrived at the theater only a moment before
curtain time. I had feverishly dressed preparing to go on
in his place, quaking with fright; with the overture
ringing in my ears, I begged him never to do that
to me again! Despite that familiar movie plot about the
understudy finally getting the great opportunity, I was
one who welcomed it not.
When Golden Dawn
closed after a disappointingly short run, Mr. Hammerstein
groomed me for the lead in his next venture, a musical
version of Polly With a Past. We opened in
Wilmington, Delaware, where a local critic wrote that
“Archie Leach has a strong masculine manner, but
unfortunately fails to bring out the beauty of the
score.” My musical-comedy inexperience was too evident
to go unnoticed, and I was taken out of Polly and
replaced before it opened on Broadway, where it too,
unluckily for that wonderful man Mr. Arthur Hammerstein,
was not a success.
At this point, Marilyn
Miller became interested in me as a replacement for her
leading man in Rosalie. The male star of the show,
of course, was the great comedian Jack Donahue, whom I
knew and greatly admired. But Mr. Hammerstien and Mr.
Ziegfeld, who produced Miss Miller’s show, were hardly
on friendly terms and, over my complaining voice, my
contract was taken over by the Messrs. J.J. and Lee
Shubert, managers and owners of a vast theater chain and
countless original plays, musical comedies and other
theatrical properties.
I was kept happily,
gainfully and steadily employed with them for almost three
years. First in the New York production of Boom Boom
starring Jeanette MacDonald, at the Casino Theater, which
was then almost opposite the old Metropolitan Opera House,
and next in the traditional male role of Die Fledermaus
at the Majestic Theater in New York. Followed by a summer
season of operettas at the delightful open-air St. Louis
Municipal Opera in Forest Park.
In those years of 1928,
‘29 and ‘30, I earned from $300 to $450 weekly, with
seasonal raises; more than many featured stage players
earn today, and was treated with consistent thoughtfulness
and courtesy by Mr. J.J. and Mr. Lee. Yet I often
overheard actors of dubious ability, who had been given
good employment year after year, grumble about the
so-called Shubert control of the theater and theatrical
employment.
In 1928 I bought an
automobile. Bought it before I could drive it. A Packard.
At that time the finest of American-made cars. There was
almost no chromium in those days, and all shiny parts had
to be polished with metal polish. An arduous task, but for
me a work of love. I washed, polished, scrubbed, waxed,
patted, doted upon, and finally even learned to drive,
that car. It was a phaeton, called a touring car; a model
no longer made. It had a 143-inch wheelbase, which made it
difficult to lumber around corners. On my first day out
for a spin in the country, having only just called for two
young ladies, who sat demurely in the back, I began to
make a nice wide turn, but couldn’t properly manage to
alternate my foot between the gas and brake pedals, and
plowed slowly and steadily into a bright new car that a
surprised middle-aged gentleman had just finished parking.
Well, he got out. And I got out. The girls remained in the
car.
I told him how sorry I was
and explained that I was unaccustomed to driving such a
long car and indeed, in lower tones, unaccustomed to
driving any kind of car, and only trying to impress
those two young ladies who sat over there in the back
seat. He looked at me for a long, silent moment, then bade
me good-day with a smile of forgiveness and a raise of the
hat. I’ve often wondered about that man. Rare. Probably
French. Only the French have that sense of the romantic.
Personally I would have blown my top.
(top)
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