+ interview with the director, Peter Bogdanovich
Whispers
You may have heard some things about William Randolph Hearst.
That he was superrich and not a little tyrannical, publishing
magnate and proponent of yellow journalism, Patty Hearst's
grandfather and a model for Orson Welles' Charles Foster Kane.
You may have also heard that he was, for years, devoted to his
mistress, Marion Davies, endeavoring not only to design a film
career for her, but also to ensure her fidelity to him -- like,
forever.
For years, a rumor circulated around Hollywood, with occasional
seepage outside, concerning the bizarre and untimely death of a
friend of Hearst, the cowboy picture producer Thomas Ince,
during a November 1924 cruise on Hearst's yacht, the Oneida.
According to one rather legendary version of events -- the one
that is taken up by Peter Bogdanovich's new film, The Cat's
Meow -- on a dark night, Hearst mistook Ince for Charlie
Chaplin, whom he understood to be dallying with Marion, and shot
him in the head.
Being Hearst, he was able to have a doctor and private
ambulance take Ince's unconscious body home, where he died days
later. And being Hearst, he was able to keep the press and the
law at bay: the official word was that Ince died of something
like "indigestion." (Hearst's biographer, David Nasaw, by the
way, insists that there is no good reason to believe this story,
any whichway).
Bogdanovich's movie reimagines all this as it might have
appeared to one of the guests on that fateful yachting trip,
Elinor Glyn (Joanna Lumley). Though Elinor isn't precisely a
witness to what happens, she offers bits of memory and gossip,
laced through with cautions about excess -- of desire and
wealth, fantasy and business. Glyn's narration begins while at
Ince's funeral (which appears in the film in quaint, and rather
elegant, black and white). As she gazes on the coffin, the shot
dissolves to the yacht and fades into color: the distinction
between past and present is at once harsh and hazy. Worst of
all, The Cat's Meow insists, you can't go back to the
good old days, because they were never so good as you think they
were.
The yachting party, ironically conceived as a birthday
celebration for Ince (Cary Elwes), begins as Glyn waits in her
motorcar at the pier: though she has arrived before the other
guests, she'll be damned to make her actual appearance
early. Immediately, then, the film asks you to be wary of
your guide. No matter that Glyn is witty, self-aware, even, for
fleeting moments, warm. She has a reputation for writing well
about the rich and famous because is one of them.
For all the forgetting that goes on this film -- willful and
accidental, self-delusional and self-protective -- you can't
forget this much. Glyn's capacity to go along, not to mention
feel nostalgic for this scene, is premised on her dedication to
the cause. Or rather, as she herself describes it in a bit of
writerly explication: she's in thrall to the Curse, which
strikes you "like a disease." Once you succumb, you realize that
Hollywood is "not a place at all, but a living creature, an evil
wizard." And soon you start believing what it tells you, that
"you are the most important person in any room."
This speech takes place at the first night's dinner, and as the
camera pans around the table, it's clear that just about
everyone in that room is thinking how important he or she is at
that moment. This is how the business works, how lies and
careers become codependent. And it's exactly how the film sets
up Hearst (Edward Hermann), as the King of This World, always
the most important person in all rooms. He's poofed up and soft,
and deadly afraid that his lack (of knowledge, security,
potency, juice) will be found out. And so his entire life is
dedicated to putting up the front that he is absolutely, never
ever afraid of any of it.
He's introduced, tellingly, as less powerhouse publisher ("He
controls more print than Jesus Christ," observes one hanger-on).
Peeping through a porthole on his yacht, he observes his guests
and especially, keeps watch over Marion (Kirsten Dunst, who is
tremendous in this role). Marion is a child next to Hearst, but
also his grown up caretaker: when he frets that she's going to
leave him, or doesn't appreciate the butterfly broach he's given
her, she assures him, at ease with her own will and love: "Shut
up and keep me happy, Pops." At times anxious because she knows
he's watching her, Marion maintains her stylish sailor-dress
sunny-ness: she's surely resilient, or maybe just terrified to
let down her guard.
As this little show goes on in Hearst's outpost/stateroom, the
lower deck teems with performance. Louella Parsons (Jennifer
Tilly, of the fingernails-on-chalkboard voice) appears as a
young up-and-comer, not yet the gossip columnist with a lifetime
contract with Hearst Papers (this comes about, according to
The Cat's Meow because Hearst must buy her silence
regarding the Ince incident); a couple of flapper-party girls;
Ince, his business manager-buddy-beard George (Victor Sleazak),
and Ince's mistress, Margaret (Claudia Harrison); the band
members; and Chaplin (Eddie Izzard), all mill about expecting
good times to rain down on them.
Though everyone knows the illicit nature of Hearst's
relationship with Marion, they all observe the pretense of
propriety as if their lives depended on it. Ince, in particular,
is worried "not to get on [Hearst's] morally objectionable
side," as he's hoping to strike up a lucrative movie-making deal
with him, promising to take "good care" of Marion. Ince believes
that his primary potential obstacles are 1) even getting
Hearst's attention, since the old man tends to be easily
distracted, and 2) keeping the Margaret affair a secret. Of
course, everyone already knows about the affair (he's brought
Margaret along for the trip), and frankly, it's hard to believe
that he's so ignorant. But Ince's density and self-absorption,
matched only by Hearst's own, become important plot points. And
so, you settle in to listen to Margaret's incessant complaints
and his alarming indifference.
Given that he's only one navel-gazer on a ship full of them,
Ince's problems (and annoyances) start looking minor, even
though he's actually the closest to losing his livelihood (and
so, his sense of himself, or his sense of room-importance).
Ince's once lucrative Western films have fallen out of fashion,
and he's up against it. Louella is angling for a career; her
early morning ping-pong game with an angry Margaret is part
comedy and part tragedy: Lolly is dim beyond the pale.
Chaplin is also at something of a crossroads, as his film, A
Woman of Paris (in which he did not appear), failed
miserably at the box office, and his last conquest, teenaged
Lita Grey, has turned up pregnant. He's hopeful about Marion,
but you're not sure why. She, in turn, apparently quite in love
with Hearst, is still not beyond imagining what it might be like
to spend time with someone who might last more than 30 seconds
on the dance floor. She's also quite ready to believe Charlie
when he tells her that her career path lies in comedy, as her
historical dramas, which Hearst prefers because they are
"respectable," are mostly painful to watch.
Everyone is in some state of crisis, personal and professional,
because these are the same thing, and because, crisis is the
only way these folks know how to function (or not function).
Still, this may be the least interesting way to read The
Cat's Meow. It's hardly a newsflash to say that Hollywood is
rife with corruption and selfishness. Neither does the film
offer much in the way of plot of clever camerawork: such
conventional movie elements have never appeared to interest
Bogdanovich, and it shows, especially in his most successful
films. Most sadly, perhaps, her protestations to Hearst -- "Stop
listening to whispers and listen to me!" -- are rendered
meaningless. The whispers in Hollywood are deafening.
But if The Cat's Meow is regular in story and execution,
that's actually okay. Because it's not about either. In fact,
it's less a narrative per se than a portrait of a moment that
never really existed. Or better, it's a series of portraits
setting off its most eloquent and moving image, and that is,
again and again, Marion Davies. Forgotten by film "history," or
worse, remembered as a victim of Hearst's follies, here she
comes alive. By film's end, she looks too
deer-in-the-headlights, unable to collapse or move. She's seen
the shooting and the work of the cover-up, and the next morning,
she faces herself, in the form of the choices she does not have:
to believe in Charlie Chaplin, or William Randolph Hearst.
Marion is here, in her blankness and horror, the most accurate
register of the loss that lies at the center of this film, and
by extension, this narcissistic culture. When she decides, at
last, to stay with "Pops," you're left feeling as shell-shocked
as she looks, waving to her departing guests from the deck,
leaning into her hollow mountain of a man.
25 April 2002