Fay Wray - Silent Star of September, 1997
by William M. Drew
There is no more dynamic personality in the Hollywood of 1997 than the
actress who was born on September 15, 1907 in Alberta, Canada. One of
six children, Fay Wray and her family moved to Arizona
when she was three and then to Utah where she spent most of her
childhood. She would soon know hard times as the family struggled to
survive after her parents separated. Fay, who had been in frail health
since the great influenza epidemic of World War I in which she lost her
cherished older sister, followed her guiding star to California when
she was fourteen.
Like many actresses of the silent era, her first roles were in comedy
shorts. Eventually, she played leads for Hal Roach, the studio which,
along with Mack Sennett's, had done the most to bring about the golden
age of silent screen comedy. Soon, she graduated to leads in western
features at Universal, continuing to learn her craft as she awaited the
opportunity to demonstrate her talent in a major role.
That opportunity came when Erich von Stroheim chose Fay for the
feminine lead in his masterpiece,
The Wedding March,
which began filming in 1926. Von Stroheim said of his new find at the
time:
As soon as I had seen Fay Wray and spoken with her
for a few minutes, I knew I had found the right
girl. I didn't even take a test of her ... Fay
has spirituality ... but she also has that very
real sex appeal that takes hold of the hearts of
men.
In The Wedding March, Fay plays Mitzi, a Viennese girl of the bourgeois
class who becomes romantically involved with an Austrian prince
portrayed by von Stroheim. Despite their great love, the Prince is
forced by his parents to wed the crippled daughter of a wealthy
manufacturer while Mitzi is married off to a vicious, lustful but
prosperous butcher. As Mitzi, Fay conveys emotions ranging from
tenderness and sweetness in her scenes with the Prince to rage and
abhorrence when she is confronted by Schani. The contrast between
Mitzi and the animalistic butcher Schani is an early manifestation of
the "Beauty and the Beast" theme that would, in very different
contexts, reecho in Fay's later work. For all the film's tragic
denouement, the love scenes between the Prince and Mitzi serve to
affirm love and the human spirit in the face of the world's corrupting
materialism. The Wedding March would remain Fay's personal favorite
and her role the one in which she felt she most fully expressed
herself.
In 1927, while the film was still in production, Harry Carr, co-author
of the script with von Stroheim, introduced Fay to the public in an
article for Motion Picture Magazine:
...this new von Stroheim discovery proves to have
brains--a lot. She is, in fact, one of the most
remarkable personalities I have ever known in the
movies. Miss Wray makes me think a lot of Lillian
Gish. She has the same patient tolerance--the same
understanding heart--the same level, fearless
intelligence; and a gentle distinction and dignity.
By the time von Stroheim finishes her training, little
Miss Wray will probably be a great actress; in any case
she is sure to be a fine woman.
When Paramount took over the distribution of von Stroheim's film, they
also inherited Fay's contract and promptly launched her as a new star.
Silent films she made for Paramount include William Wellman's 1928
World War I drama, The Legion of the Condemned, opposite Gary Cooper;
Mauritz Stiller's last film, The Street of Sin, with Emil Jannings; The
First Kiss which reteamed her with Gary Cooper; and her final silent, a
1929 adaptation of The Four Feathers directed by Merian C. Cooper and
Ernest B. Schoedsack.
Although Fay felt the coming of sound destroyed a unique art, she
successfully survived the change-over and appeared in a variety of
talkies for Paramount such as Josef von Sternberg's first sound film,
Thunderbolt.
It was her work at Paramount that had led to her marriage to John Monk
Saunders in 1928. He was a talented screenwriter, a young man of great
promise with impressive achievements to his credit and seemingly an
even brighter future. Fay and Saunders became part of the Hollywood
set of the late twenties and early thirties. They lived in a
Spanish-style home that King and Florence Vidor had built, complete
with tennis courts, on Selma Avenue in Hollywood. They entertained
frequently, their friends in the film colony coming for tennis and
tea.
But Fay was never so caught up in the social whirl that her work was
affected. Indeed, within a three-year period after her contract with
Paramount ran out, she was the leading lady in twenty-five
features--more than some prominent actresses made in their entire
careers--and worked for every major studio in Hollywood. She kept up a
hectic pace, relying solely on her natural energy and enthusiasm.
While she did not strive for the lavish lifestyle of many actresses of
the era, she said she felt like a true star when she asked the director
to let her stop work at six.
One of the films she did in those years assured her place as a screen
icon and made her a figure in folklore and myth. King Kong, among the
half-dozen most famous films ever produced, was an original conception
for the screen. This 20th century version of Beauty and the Beast was
created by Merian C. Cooper and Ernest B. Schoedsack with the
assistance of special effects wizard Willis O'Brien who made a
remarkably innovative use of stop-motion animation and
rear-projection. Although it inspired sequels, a remake and many
imitations, the original King Kong remains unique and unequaled.
Unlike so many of the others, the 1933 film imparts a kind of humanity
in its strange, poignant tale of the giant, dark ape's love for the
five foot three Fay (who wore a blonde wig to contrast with Kong). A
creature of both terror and pathos, Kong tries to protect the fragile
Fay from dangers both real and imagined. Succeeding generations have
embraced the film. Most people today immediately recognize its
legendary climax with Fay and Kong on top of the Empire State
Building. Even before its release, its reputation in the industry as a
"chiller" led to Fay being cast in the horror films, The Most Dangerous
Game, Doctor X, The Mystery of the Wax Museum and The Vampire Bat.
Although King Kong, like its title character, has towered over most of
her career, Fay showed she was capable of playing everything from an
assertive woman lawyer in Ann Carver's Profession to an artist's model
of the Italian Renaissance in The Affairs of Cellini and the
mysterious, seductive title role of Woman in the Dark. And in still
another variant on the "Beauty and the Beast" theme, in the sweeping
epic, Viva Villa!, she is an elegant lady of the Mexican aristocracy
whose initial attraction to Pancho Villa, portrayed by Wallace Beery as
a heroic, idealistic yet brutish revolutionary leader, turns to
revulsion in the end.
In the later thirties, her personal life took precedence over her film
career. Although she had hoped the birth of their daughter Susan might
bring them closer together, the problems in her marriage to John Monk
Saunders proved insurmountable and led to a painful divorce in 1938.
In 1940, Fay heard the shocking news that Saunders had committed
suicide, a tragedy that could have overwhelmed her except for her
strength of character and deep-seated faith in the spiritual. By 1942,
she had embarked on a new life when she married screenwriter Robert
Riskin, a relationship that brought her years of happiness and two more
children.
In the 1950s, when Riskin became ill, she was forced to return to
acting after a decade of retirement, appearing in many films and
television shows. Widowed in 1955, she withdrew from acting in the
sixties, subsequently marrying Dr. Sandy Rothenberg who had been Robert
Riskin's neurosurgeon throughout the long, difficult years of his
illness. Not content to just retire, however, and feeling she must do
something creative, she turned to writing, concentrating on plays and
stories. In 1989, she published an autobiography, On the Other Hand.
An outstanding movie memoir, it is an honest, sensitive,
unsensationalized account of the joys and sorrows in her life--and the
triumphs and setbacks in her career.
Although widowed in the early 1990s and no longer acting, Fay has
scarcely withdrawn from the world. Nowadays, she divides her time
between her apartments in Century City and Manhattan and, energetic as
ever at ninety, she still drives her own car, enjoys going to the
theatre, visiting with her children and friends and making personal
appearances at screenings of her films. She has continued to write,
evident in her conversation which shows the same gift for observation
and sensitivity to detail. She shows no sign of slowing down and has
remained very much in the public eye. In April of this year, she wowed
Congress as she testified on behalf of screenwriters and their heirs
seeking residuals for films produced prior to 1960. In August, she was
present at the production of her play, The Meadowlark, an
autobiographical work set in a small copper-mining town in Utah. The
play was staged by the Barnstormers Summer Theatre in Tamworth, New
Hampshire and directed by her daughter Susan.
Appropriate for a woman of such resilience, she believes in
reincarnation and is a devoted reader of Whitman and Emerson. She is a
liberal who eschews dogma and maintains that external conditions should
not invade the spirit, that knowing oneself and thinking positively can
help an individual deal with problems while dark, angry thoughts only
make one ill. Concerning her career, she says: "I would have loved to
have had more roles of more unusual character and depth and I often
thought that was too bad. However, it's a strange thing. I think I
have at least one film that people have cared enough about to make them
feel good. I think it's a strange, strange kind of magic that King
Kong has. People who see it--their lives have changed because of it
and they have so told me." If she could have continued to work with
Erich von Stroheim, the favorite of all her directors, she believes
that her career "would have taken a different quality and character."
She feels that circumstances eventually interrupted "my energy and my
drive and my vision of myself. . . .but that is how it was and it's not
to be found disturbing." But whatever her temporary setbacks, she has
always been a living testmony to the enduring creativity of the
cinema's golden age. Spirited but gentle, buoyant but thoughtful, she
attained screen immortality through her skill as an actress in a career
that linked the silent and sound eras with the age of television.
The preceding article is adapted from the introduction to my
interview with Fay Wray that will be published in a forthcoming
book.
For more information, you can write William Drew at his e-mail
address:
ReelDrew@aol.com
Glen Pringle /
pringle@yoyo.its.monash.edu.au
William M. Drew / ReelDrew@aol.com
ISSN 1329-4431
Copyright © 1997 by the Vestal Press and William M. Drew from the
forthcoming book, The Lady in the Main Title: On the Twenties and
Thirties.