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Ruth Roman: A Career Portrait PDF

223 Pages·2022·12.882 MB·English
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Ruth Roman Ruth Roman A Career Portrait Derek Sculthorpe McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers Jefferson, North Carolina Also by Derek Sculthorpe and from McFarland Claire Trevor: The Life and Films of the Queen of Noir (2018) Edmond O’Brien: Everyman of Film Noir (2018) Brian Donlevy, the Good Bad Guy: A Bio-Filmography (2017) Van Heflin: A Life in Film (2016) Frontispiece: Signed photograph sent from Ruth Roman to author’s father, circa 1950 ISBN (print) 9 78-1-4766-8824-4 ISBN (ebook) 9 78-1-4766-4630-5 Library of Congress and British Library cataloguing data are available Library of Congress Control Number 2022027107 © 2022 Derek Sculthorpe. All rights reserved No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying or recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. Front cover: Ruth Roman publicity still, circa 1949 Printed in the United States of America McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers Box 611, Jefferson, North Carolina 28640 www.mcfarlandpub.com Acknowledgments With grateful thanks to Budd Burton Moss for his invaluable help and enthusiasm. Thanks also to Aaron Schmidt at the Boston Public Library. Thanks as always to my family for their forbear- ance and encouragement. v Table of Contents Acknowledgments v Introduction 1 1. The Carnival on the Beach 5 2. Buffeted on Broadway 14 3. Hope Deferred in Hollywood 20 4. Warner Bros. Contract Star 34 5. Strangers on a Train 50 6. Tomorrow Is Another Day 60 7. “The sexiest girl in town” 76 8. Freelance 87 9. The Box in the Corner 107 10. Disaster at Sea 114 11. Triumph on Tour 130 12. “Did you know Rod La Rocque?” 135 13. Whatever Happened to Ruth Roman? 150 14. The Short Goodbye 163 Epilogue 168 Appendix 171 Chapter Notes 191 Bibliography 203 Index 205 vii Introduction “I never did the greatest picture in the world. Maybe you can’t be better than your material, but you can do a good job. When you start believing in yourself as a great actress and when you’re looking for Academy Awards, you’re in trouble, brother.” —Ruth Roman interviewed, 19541 In many ways, Ruth Roman was “the nearly girl” of 1950s cinema. She seemingly had everything going for her: she was sexy yet whole- some, capable yet vulnerable with a good sense of humor. Behind her were the long years of trying, since the days as a child when she had dreamed of following in the footsteps of her heroines, such as Bette Davis. At one time, it all seemed to be falling into place. Voted the Most Promising Newcomer in 1950 and lauded as the “Sexiest Girl in Hol- lywood,” she had a string of good roles and was consistently one of the most popular actresses. After her second marriage fell apart in the mid- dle of the decade, her career too fell away. Success, as she might have said in one of her endearing mixed metaphors, was a horse of another opinion. In the late 1940s and early 1950s, my dad, like many other young boys of his generation, used to send away to Hollywood studios for signed photos of the stars. The dusty side streets of a northern industrial city in England were thousands of miles away from the glamor capitol of Hollywood and, metaphorically speaking, the two were light years apart. The magic of cinema was a great escape for that generation from the mundanity and drabness of ordinary life, not to mention the privations of war and the lingering effects of rationing, which did not end until the mid–1950s. It was always exciting to see the postmarks stamped with the studio logos from Culver City. Among the many pictures he received by return of post, only a few were actually handwritten. Of those, only 1

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