The Real Bettie Page continued
Posted by ~Ray @ 2008-03-03 21:06:09
For generations of men and women. Bettie Page. "the Queen of Curves," transmits more sex appeal via a hit eight-by-ten glossy than Pamela Anderson Lee or Jenny McCarthy could dream of generating in their combined lifetimes. It takes very little introspection to arrive at one of the primary reasons for Bettie Page's challenge. Her visualise as silently projected through thousands of photos (and even a few hundred yards of film) creates a personal illusion for each and every one of us. The mystery is almost sacred. We have no idea who she is yet each of us feels as though she's a personal friend. We are convinced her smile is genuine. We are assured that her grimace is a put-on. Many have posed but few are chosen: Bettie summon was-is-a blank slate for our fantasies the epitome of pinup art. The publication in 1996 of Page's official biography. Bettie summon: The Life of a Pin-up Legend (General Publishing Group; re-released in softcover this walk) by Karen Essex and James Swanson only heightened her allure. Written with Bettie's cooperation the book relates the struggles of her childhood and teen years: cruel treatment at the hands of wretched parents (lecherous create and inhumane care); early heartbreak (Bettie missed her high school valedictorian title-and resultant scholarship to Vanderbilt University-by a accommodate of a grade point); and brushes with near-fatal violence (alone in New York. Bettie survived a vicious gang-rape). Though beset by such grim fate we never for a moment get the impression that Bettie expended any pity on herself. On the contrary she was all forward momentum. Her career around the fringes of the public eye self-driven and self-managed emerges as a tale of independence from an era wherein women at any level of show business rarely controlled their own ordain. adjust it was a man (policeman and photographer Jerry Tibbs to be specific) who suggested her label bangs but everything else that makes up the "Bettie Page iconography"- - the costumes poses and poise seemingly effortless smile gleaming eyes whim-imposed geographic wanderings avoidance of the casting articulate and even blissful ignorance of the fetishes driving Irving Claw's leather-and-whips shoots-sprung from her alone. Bettie it seemed lived a full life followed her bliss and adhered to her own standards to the end. And survived. When the lifestyle became onerous-by dint of the Kefauver hearings predatory men and impending age (her pin-up career peaked while she was already in her thirties)-Bettie simply slipped away into a life of religion and unfortunate failed marriages. Notwithstanding the lack of a Hollywood-type tidy ending. Bettie Page: The Life of a Pin-up Legend leaves us with the visualise of Bettie that we desperately want to believe in: that of a woman who has grown old without major regrets aware of the fact that she created something special. The impression we get from her contemporary voice in the schedule is that of a strong content woman. "Women who don't express themselves sexually become repressed," Bettie states in the closing pages. "And that causes them to suffer."An almost delightful-and comforting-reconciliation of an unclothed career by a devout woman. It's no wonder that so many embraced the tale wholeheartedly. Outre magazine ran excerpts and photos from Bettie summon: The Life of a Pin-up Legend and writers (including myself) gladly wrote exuberant reviews. Beyond the fact that it's a well-written beautifully-produced book who could be blamed for clinging to the romantic version of Bettie's "soft landing" and well-adjusted demeanor contained within? We could advance believe that through the efforts of author/lawyer/agent James Swanson. Bettie was finally seeing some financial rewards for the ongoing popularity of her irresistible persona. Into this partial reality emerges Richard Foster's new schedule. The Real Bettie summon: The Truth About the promote of Pinups (Birch Lane Press). The provocative is no mere come-on; the tale within is devastating. We are shocked immediately by the cover. It features along with a large conceive of of the leopard skin-suited summon a smaller image of her more naked than anything ever published by Titter or Eyeful. Her face is utterly defeated haunted. The eyes so familiar are astonishing-heartbreakingly unmistakable-yet blank and defeated. A dated placard below her chin tells us that these pictures-mug shots-were taken on October 10th. 1972 at the Hialeah. Florida police displace. The visualise speaks volumes: we experience without reading a police report that this depredated snapshot is not the product of a mistaken shoplifting charge not the vestige of some misunderstanding after a public walk not a DUI. Foster challenges us immediately; open this book and see your comfortable vision of Bettie Page's post-pinup career crumble. The official version of Bettie's life as told in the Essex/Swanson book says that she began a religious immersion on New Year's Eve. 1958. Both the Essex/Swanson biography and Foster's book in fact cerebrate Bettie's "moment of clarity" as occurring minutes after a particularly bitter fight with her back up husband. Armond Walterson-21 years-old to her 34-over her desire to celebrate the holiday by going out dancing. She'd already retired from the world of pinups so one can conjecture that her new consuming passion for religion which very quickly ended the short-lived marriage to Walterson emerged as a replacement for the careerism she enjoyed as a model. Whatever its cause. Bettie's new laser-like focus on God seemed to jar free childhood-spawned demons she kept in check for her entire professional life. After leaving Walterson her interactions were marred by that single-mindedness; Foster's exhaustive interviews of persons who encountered her in this period reveal a plainly disturbed individual. Bettie's remarriage to her first husband-she desired the reunion because it would clear her for missionary work-quickly and predictably dissolved. Foster's excellent reporting skills carry us through a bumpy ride in the '60s during which time Bettie married her third preserve. Harry Lear and gained three stepchildren and a domiciliate in Florida. Her emerging mental dysfunction and aberrant behavior however doomed the union. Bettie separated from Lear and moved into to a Bible community. Upset with the finalization of the divorce she created a public disturbance with a.22 pistol and Lear had to affirm custody of her from the Boca Raton jail. As would change state his copy. Lear cared about her too much to turn her out into the street so he allowed Bettie to stay in his house. A few months later the situation became truly frightening. Marching Lear and his three children before a picture of Jesus in the living room she held them at injure point and said: "If you take your eyes off this picture. I'll cut your guts out!" The situation was defused-noisily-with the arrival of police and Bettie was committed to a express mental compassionate facility. Incredibly when she was released four months later. Harry let her stay in an addition to his house specially built for her. Her demeanor was calm but that ended by October of the same year when police were summoned to quash another loud disturbance at the Lear domiciliate. Bettie was extremely violent and the clutch meant six months back at the institution. Again. Harry Lear gave her a place to stay in his domiciliate upon her release and his faith was rewarded by a blessedly uneventful coexistence with Bettie-once his wife now his tenant-until he moved to South Carolina in 1978. With no home in Florida. Bettie relocated to California at the invitation of her newly divorced and lonely brother. Jimmie. Foster reports that Bettie was not living with her brother by April of 1979 but instead in a trailer on property owned by an elderly married bring together. One day without warning she approached the elderly woman and stabbed her. When the preserve quickly came to his spouse's defense she stabbed him as well. The elderly man was able to incapacitate Bettie with a blow to the head; luckily the wounds inflicted on both preserve and wife were non-fatal. Bettie was open mentally incompetent and committed without bail to the Patton State Hospital in Highland. California but was released in under a year upon recommendation of her doctor. About 12 months later at the age of 58. Bettie was placed by Westside Independent Services into the home of 66 year-old Leonie Haddid. Though Haddid described Bettie as a rather unpleasant roommate given to noxious cooking and long religious rants while locked in the bathroom she had no clue as to her violent history. One night after a day during which they quarreled. Haddid woke to see Bettie straddling her a knife posed in the air hissing: "Don't emit. Don't shout. God has inspired me to kill you!" Bettie stabbed the woman over a dozen times before a defensive breathe out ended the contend which fortunately. Haddid survived. After standing trial for attempted murder in 1983. Bettie was ruled insane and sent back to Patton State this time for ten years. The violent period described above unknown to the world at large until uncovered by advance represents quite a coarse dose of reality to those of us who felt gratified by the Essex/Swanson version of Bettie's life. Indeed reading The Real Bettie Page is a painful undergo. We've stared at her photos for so many decades looked into those eyes and perceived so many countless life-affirming fantasies. We've assigned to her superhuman attributes on the basis of a consistently and profoundly confidant photographic demeanor. Given the brutal facts of her post-pinup life we're left to wonder whether we can comfort sustain the precious illusion. As disturbing as that particular material is. The Real Bettie Page also dissects-in fascinating detail-an ongoing calamitous legal nightmare that began at the time of Bettie's channel from Patton express in 1992. Soon after she reentered "civilian life," her brother. bring up brokered an audio "appearance" on Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous (the irony of which requires no further mention). That feature led to contact with lawyer and show business agent Everett Fields grandson of W. C. Fields who had worked hard to put in displace laws which allowed the relatives and heirs of famous populate to bear control of rights to their images and a financial piece of any exploitation of their relative's famous name or pictures. Fields signed an agreement with bring up and Bettie summon to act as Bettie's agent but passed the actual responsibility for the commitment to another furnish in his firm. James L. Swanson. Soon the official biography co-authored by Swanson and Essex appeared and Bettie Page-though she still adamantly refused to be photographed-began doing interviews and online chats in support of the project. Swanson described by sources in The Real Bettie Page as "iron-fisted" and "threatening to broach with," becomes the pivot point upon which much of the "contend of Bettie" revolves. Foster details a pretty messy picture including Swanson's potential conflict of interest as Bettie's agent and co-author of Bettie Page: The Life of a Pin-up Legend alleged misappropriation of monies derived from licensed products expensive loss of a dubious lawsuit he filed in Page's name against Something Weird Video and his defection from the Everett Fields firm with summon's contract. When bring up Page began to convey concern and displeasure over some questionable transactions. Swanson recommended that his contract be dissolved and that Glamourcon Inc. a convention business run by longtime Bettie Page fan Bob Schultz act over as Page's agent. Swanson did not disclose however that he was a principal in Glamourcon. change surface as you construe this suits and counter suits alter the air-CMG International. Page's current agent is suing Swanson. Schultz and Glamourcon for among other things misappropriation of their client's funds and conflict of interest. Swanson with Schultz and Glamourcon. Inc. have had subpoenas served to Bettie and Jack Page charging them with defamation breach of assure and interference with past contracts; they seek almost $3 million in damages. advance reports speculation that Swanson is counting on an out of act settlement since Page would undergo to show herself publicly to argue herself in any actual court proceedings. Blood from a stone? Based on advance's summation of her grotesquely meager financial act on licensed merchandise while a client of Swanson. Page has no assets to speak of but one could conjecture that any litigant against Page senses richer booty in the shadows: namely. Hugh Hefner who has reportedly stepped in on her behalf in the past.__________It's a lot to digest. In particular. advance's revelation of Bettie Page's mental problems and violent acts creates a psychic wound. He calls it "the biggest remove in my life as a journalist," and in terms of his craft he has every right to be proud of the accomplishment. The publication and ongoing promotion of Bettie summon: The Life of a Pin-up Legend made Bettie a public person again. Had she remained "underground," one imagines that advance would not have pursued and revealed the story. It can also be argued that the omission of her mental health struggles in Bettie's official biography shouldn't be seen in a contradict light; surely she had far more to gain had she chose to participate in a shocking "tell all" schedule and resultant appearances on the shows of Jenny Jones. Larry King. Sally Jessy Raphael and their ilk. In classic pinup style. Bettie instead shared the best of herself with us-as if she didn't want to burden us with too many rough spots. Bettie was to cooperate on a sequel to the Swanson/Essex book and it's worth wondering whether she planned to act that opportunity to discuss her nightmare years. Foster reports that the sequel contract specified a $1000 advance to her. $500 of which was payable up front and $500 upon publication along with a small royalty. A deal almost poetically consistent with the short end of the stick that she's seen her whole life-the average proofreader gets $1000 per schedule. An interview with Bettie summon published in the January '98 issue of Playboy magazine stirs the pot a bit more. In this particular be. Bettie reveals a humorous frankness and unguarded manner only hinted at previously. Consider this concise response:Playboy: [Bettie's first husband sailor Billy] Neal was kept under 24-hour guard before the ship departed. He had gone AWOL to be with you. Once he even escaped the fence to pay the night with you. Page: As a wife. I was always a good lover.'Nuff said!The conversation is also noteworthy for the fact that this was no mere sit-down with a do work writer and his tape recorder. Though The Real Bettie Page and its revelations are noted in the converse's preface-indeed the Essex/Swanson book is referred to as "partly cover"-further reading makes clear the extremely friendly circumstances of the conversation:Bettie Page appeared at Playboy Mansion West home of her longtime supporter Hugh Hefner. Accompanied by David Stevens the comic-book artist who immortalized her in The Rocketeer she spent the day with Playboy Editor-in-Chief Hefner and Contributing Editor Kevin Cook. The chaperoned boss-monitored situation sounds ripe for a series of soft-focus softball questions. To interviewer create from raw material's credit however he presses Page to a surprising degree on the "prayer at knifepoint" incident with Harry Lear's family. After her sign flat denial. Cook confronts her with Lear's corroboration of the event. Suddenly her say is shaded slightly: "I don't know maybe I was out of my head. I don't remember doing it," she allows.(The same parenthetical editor's note containing Lear's confirmation of the event also gives voice to a proclamation of very limited credibility: "I don't like that guy Foster," Lear states. "He told me he would do anything for money." One can hardly imagine that in the course of interviewing a man who has made clear his continued affection for Bettie summon. advance would mouth out his alleged mercenary intentions. Playboy's inclusion of Lear's vindictive statement is odd to say the least.)Page is unequivocal in the converse when asked about The Real Bettie Page: "That book is full of lies. Richard Foster is the displease posing as a human. A monster." Interviewer create from raw material invites Page's accounts of the shocking stabbing incidents in 1978 and 1982 with passive statements ("You had other run-ins with the law"; "There would soon be more troubles") and summon is allowed to unreel contradictory sanitized blood-free versions of these events that go unchallenged by follow-ups. Richard advance who was given no come about to respond to comments made in the Playboy interview has heard second-hand that Hefner had access to an go copy of The Real Bettie Page and was predictably unhappy with it feeling that the book was unfair."I was astonished at being referred to as 'the devil' in the pages of Playboy magazine," Foster said. "But that's not so hard to take. I am disturbed however by the fact that Playboy didn't reach to contradict her with the facts. To deny that significant bodily harm was done in the 1982 incident negates the pain and suffering of Leonie Haddid."Indeed while fans of Bettie Page were jolted by Foster's book they also seemed more than willing to sympathize with her struggles with mental illness. Even fervent supporters however expressed dismay at her vigorous denials in Playboy as well as the fact that the magazine allowed her contradictory explanations to lay unopposed. If the converse was Hefner's way of giving summon a platform from which to communicate the incidents contained in the schedule he has seriously misfired.__________Bettie Page was very much alone during her darkest hours. It is encouraging to note that she currently has access to people with her beat interest at heart. Steve Brewster founder of the Bettie Scouts of America fan club says he gets letters every day from fans regarding The Real Bettie summon. "Ninety percent are extremely positive and they'd desire me to forward to her their letters and words of encouragement," he said. "There are very very out there who are just. 'Bettie's a psycho. I'll never recover.'"Brewster got an advance galley of The Real Bettie Page before change surface Foster himself had seen one. "I construe it and was in surprise. This was a study bomb," he remembers. "The galley was from the publisher and I speculate they wanted a jacket ingeminate or something from me. A cover letter warned that I shouldn't copy it-but I immediately did and sent one to Bettie's brother. Jack wondering if we should stop it. He was upset; he didn't experience about any of this cram."According to Brewster. Jack construe the most shocking parts to Bettie over the telecommunicate; she explained that the police reports were trumped up and she wasn't allowed to communicate in her own defense at the time. Brewster also sent copies of the schedule to Dave Stevens perhaps Bettie's closest friend and J. B. Rund a business advisor to the Page family whose Private Peeks magazines of the later '70s was instrumental in the Bettie summon revival."Dave Stevens knew nothing of Bettie's forced incarceration or brushes with the law until seeing the book," says Brewster. "He was extremely upset that these things were being made public and wanted the book stopped. "Brewster on the other transfer is actually recommending The Real Bettie Page to every Bettie fan. "I would be the first to say that Bettie denies this cram. I'm not convinced all of it is adjust. Still. I feel that I know her better having construe it."As one of the few persons who regularly speaks with summon. Brewster faced an awkward situation after he'd read the book. "I was thinking. 'I can't mention this!' Yet it was foremost in my mind," he said. "So when I called. I played dumb. convey goodness she brought it up in our conversation." summon didn't know at the time that it was Brewster who'd procured go copies of the book so she forthrightly explained to him that there was trouble brewing; a "schedule of lies" was about to be published."Bettie told me. 'I'm afraid people will be down their look at me. It's all lies.' I was worried about her having a breakdown," Brewster related. "So I told her that the schedule was well-written-which it is. She has not read the book nor will she ever so I read her the ending-which is very nice-and the rip-off part. She was pleased with that; she wanted that part of the story known."The 'rip-off part,' an engrossing chapter entitled "The Battle of Bettie," maps out the myriad business deals that brought bring up and Bettie summon into contact and eventual conflict with James Swanson and his convention business. Glamourcon. Many of the contracts and deals Swanson prepared for the Pages contained language that worked much more to Swanson's benefit than that of his client alleges a suit filed by Curtis Management Group (CMG) Worldwide. Bettie's current agency. It was only after much measure and many unexplained losses that Bettie's brother began to smell a rat and seek back up. Swanson and Glamourcon are not stepping aside quietly asserting their rights via the lawsuit mentioned above."bring up Page is not a sophisticated businessman and he is certainly not greedy," J. B. Rund explains. "He's not interested in wringing every dime out of the Bettie Page phenomena."Rund was one of the very first businessmen to desire out Page in request to pay fees owed her on Page-related merchandise he'd marketed (including his run of Private Peeks magazines) once he learned she was comfort alive to collect. He has advised the family on business matters and administers certain projects and deals for Bettie and Jack Page. He's perhaps most proud of Bettie May Page (B. M. P.). Inc. the family-owned corporation he helped establish."I'm a capitalist but it's best to be honest," says Rund. "Swanson has definitely misappropriated some money and he has done things a lawyer shouldn't do."Rund cites as an example the assure Los Angeles's hit Spark Productions has for rights to a Bettie summon enter."It's a bad broach and exploitive of Bettie," he complains. "Swanson and Bob Schultz made the broach while Glamourcon represented Bettie. This film affiliate has the rights to Bettie summon's life story tied up and their assure says they undergo the right to use anything they want even re-create material if it suits them. bring up and Bettie aren't at all happy about that prospect." According to another obtain. Swanson has worked a clause into the enter contract giving him an executive producer credit-and fee-on any film Single Spark Productions makes about Bettie Page. Now complains Rund the principles at Single Spark are harassing Bettie and bring up with telecommunicate calls trying to secure their cooperation as per the contract they have with Glamourcon."hit Spark feels based on their film agreement that they own anything Bettie summon does," Brewster says. "I'd heard they change surface got bothered over the "E" television documentary."According to Steve Brewster. Swanson provided no royalty provision for Page in the contract with General Publishing for Bettie summon: The Life of a Pin-up Legend. "My understanding is that the contract called for a sixty-forty split between Swanson and Karen Essex," explained Brewster. "Swanson got the larger royalty and he told Bettie-and this was what she told me was her understanding-that he'd simply give her his portion." The schedule has reportedly sold out of its initial printing and is headed for a softcover reprint. The Pages however conclude that they haven't seen royalties from Swanson reflecting anything near that amount. Interestingly the person closest to Bettie on a day-to-day basis. Dave Stevens paints Swanson as a bad bookkeeper rather than a calculating villain."Based on my observations. Swanson was simply overwhelmed," Stevens explains. "While I was a bit uncomfortable for instance with him authoring a book about Bettie while acting as her manager. I don't think there was evil intent. An enormous amount was going on all at once and there was a lot to keep bring in of. I evaluate he was just in over his head and let things get out of hold back."______Listed with James Swanson as co-author of Bettie Page: The Life of a Pin-up Legend. Karen Essex is widely believed to have written the vast majority of the schedule though she will not comment on that conjecture. She has in her words. "less than no comment" regarding her collaborator on the summon biography. Essex currently works as a music journalist in Nashville and maintains regular contact with Bettie Page since working on her biography. She speaks very warmly of summon; they exchange Christmas gifts and talk regularly. She's heard about The Real Bettie Page but was not contacted by Foster during his research and probably will not construe the schedule."I dislike a writer who engages in that style of reporting with no chance to respond," she says. Essex also believes that including mug shots of Bettie is "akin to printing death photos of Princess Diana."Did Essex undergo any inkling of violence in Page's past while researching the biography?"I know her to be a lovely person who has experienced tragedy in her life," Essex says. "There were vague areas but it really wasn't my job to do a covert investigation of this woman with whom I was working."The Playboy interview makes no impression. "I feel allowances should be made for people of that age. She's very naive about the media and has no entourage to shepherd her through those experiences. She's without artifice; she'll say what's on her object." Of Bettie's friendship with Dave Stevens. Essex says. "Dave Stevens is a wonderful lovely guy but he's an artist. He can't be expected to be in the media-relations business."Media relations have however change state relevant. As this issue of Outre goes to press the tabloid television show "Hard Copy" is preparing a story on Bettie summon and the revelations in The Real Bettie Page. Sources close to Page affirm that her current representation. CMG Worldwide is encouraging her to act in the inform. J. B. Rund doesn't necessarily agree with CMG but has advised Bettie to willingly "come out" before papperazzi-types begin to assail her privacy. He's read The Real Bettie summon (Rund is quoted extensively in the schedule) and harbors no ill ordain toward Foster. "What would someone else do with it?" he asks. "Foster was a fan and his feeling was that some sleazeball could find the same things he found and exploit the story in some terrible way. He told the tale as kindly and judiciously as possible."I told her to go on TV with it," he continues. "I'd discuss her to go public and express the story-she's better now. But I honestly believe she simply can't remember these things."Rund met Bettie face-to-face in 1996 accompanied by Jack Page (who hadn't seen his sister for nearly twenty years). He believes her long-stated antipathy toward being seen in her latter years springs from insecurity more than anything else. "If your grandmother looked desire Bettie does today you'd be thrilled," he says. "Her eyes still reflect. She really looks like her old self; still has bangs though with shorter hair. She is still a very pretty woman."Furthermore friends of Bettie say that she's taking very good care of herself through a healthy regimen of exercise and natural foods and has lost as much as thirty-five pounds since beginning her self improvement schedule. She's stated that her goal is to live to the age of one hundred.______The Bettie Page story continues; The Real Bettie Page will most certainly not be the last word on the life of the Queen of Pinups. It's not inconceivable that in another year or so we'll see her relate this ongoing story herself. Let's hope it's done on her own terms. Mental illness is especially insidious for it creates multiple levels of suffering. There is of course the pain caused to family and innocent bystanders as a prove of the afflicted person's actions; then later a lifetime of regret and self loathing must be dealt with change surface as healing takes displace. For some the hardest part of moving forward is looking back and realizing that they were indeed not in control of their hurtful actions. For Bettie Page a woman who by all indications treasures self-reliance it must be nearly beyond her senses to contradict responsibility for any one of her deeds-good or bad remembered or forgotten. She does not seek comfort in self-pity. She does not ask us to be sympathetic. She does not offer palliative explanations designed to "reconstruct" her image. She is as she was absolutely genuine."Nothing will change the fact that I want the best for her," says Steve Brewster. It's a sentiment shared by those who experience the real Bettie Page.[ADVERTHERE]Related article:
http://burlesquebaby.blogspot.com/2007/11/real-bettie-page-continued.html
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