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The Liz Smith Column | 11/02/2009 5:00 am

Liz Smith: A New Book on Hollywood's Star of Stars – Elizabeth Taylor

Our Gossip Girl also shares a few personal stories about Liz.
Liz in Monte Carlo, 1967

"You see, she didn’t care about being a star. She cared about living a certain way. It was what she was used to. And she lived that grand life with [Richard] Burton and thought they’d have it forever. That’s what was most important to her: to have a great companion in her great life … it was all about being with him. That’s all that really mattered."

So chimes in photographer Gianni Bozzacchi, on Elizabeth Taylor, in William J. Mann’s new book, How to Be a Movie Star: Elizabeth Taylor in Hollywood.

***

This is an entertaining work, revealing much of the machinery behind star-building and star-maintaining back in the day. (The trajectory of gossip queen Hedda Hopper’s relationship with Elizabeth – from adoration to loathing – is deliciously conveyed.)

But the book is also (mostly) a testament to Taylor’s iron willfulness and how she bent the rules to suit herself, while keeping her career boiling for quite a long time. So long, in fact, that once her box-office collapsed in the late 1960s, she carried on just as before, and carried media and world attention with her. She was a movie star who didn’t need to make movies. Her hold has lessened in recent years, but not for lack of true interest. Steadily declining health has cast a shadow on the star; she is less visible and, when she does appear, poignantly fragile.

2009_1102_amazon_liz_taylor_mannCROP.jpg
Image: Amazon

I don’t think Mr. Mann breaks any new ground – his take on Elizabeth’s unique position has been written up before. And a lot of it by this columnist, who knew Elizabeth and Richard well during the halcyon days of their international travels and movie-world domination. (The best thing I ever wrote on the Burtons was following the pair as they ate, drank, mock-argued and shopped. Elizabeth never actually answered one question I’d been sent to ask her!)

But there is a nice, juicy quality to this book; the author is an admirer and he is pretty accurate. There are no shocks. We all know by now that Elizabeth didn’t marry every man she slept with. (This was her old defense, taken as gospel by many.) In that case she’d have had more than eight marches down the aisle. We know some of her marriages – Eddie Fisher – were based solely on s-e-x. Or as Carrie Fisher puts it, "My father consoled Elizabeth with his penis."

***

The worldwide effect of La Liz’s serial husband-snatching might seem impossible to believe now – after all, it was only a little adultery! But think of the biggest star in the world today. Then magnify that star 1,000 times. You still wouldn’t be close to what Elizabeth Taylor was. The world – and the industry – was enslaved by this woman. Twentieth Century Fox actually sold off part of its back lot to finance "Cleopatra"! The star of stars. I don’t call her that for nothing.

Mr. Mann does an excellent job capturing the media/public frenzy of her greatest years. (When the Vatican denounced ET for her affair with Burton, her first response was an angry, "Can I sue the pope?")

2009_1102_photoplay_burton_taylor.jpg
Miss Taylor herself would probably not appreciate the slightly jaundiced eye Mann casts on the brief but legendary marriage of Elizabeth and Mike Todd, which ended in Todd’s death in an airplane crash. It was more than love and lust at first sight. Elizabeth wanted the grand life Todd could provide. Todd wanted the reflected fame Elizabeth brought to the venture. Of course, they were in lust and love, but less romantic issues were on the table.

Later, she would do it all over again with Burton. Only bigger and better. Yes, she was mad for him, but also much attracted to his mind. He would be the education she missed out on at MGM. Yes, he was mad for her. But her fame seduced him as much as her wild ways in bed, or her beauty. (She would elevate Burton to a position of taking care of her as she wished to be taken care of. He would come to feel he’d made a Faustian bargain, and grew weary of life á la Liz. Elizabeth? She worried constantly that she "bored" him!)

55 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Jeannot Kensinger
Long live lizabeth!!!!
By Jeannot Kensinger on 11/02/2009 9:01 am
Jeannot Kensinger
(keys sticking this morning , read Elizabeth! Movie Queen forever!
By Jeannot Kensinger on 11/02/2009 9:02 am
Eileen Alannah
Dear Liz, can you write or what?! Seriously, I’d quote everything that jumped out at me in this article about the other Liz, but it’s just too much! : ) Thanks.
By Eileen Alannah on 11/02/2009 9:07 am
rick gould
Someone once wrote that Jackie O was our country’s dream wish for a queen, and that Elizabeth Taylor was our wish for a real-life Scarlett O’ Hara. As a great admirer of Taylor, I think that’s about right ;)
By rick gould on 11/02/2009 9:09 am
Baby  Snooks

But above all, she had audacity, the courage to live openly and to say "screw you."

______________________

And usually do so in much more "colorful terms" which even in today’s more "open society" still can’t be printed or broadcast.   

Carrie Fisher’s got a way with words,too, doesn’t she?

By Baby Snooks on 11/02/2009 9:18 am
Kim Horton
Snooks if you ever want a seriously good laugh or even a good thought Carrie Fisher has a blog that has it legs over butt in witism (probably not a word .. lol) and wisdom.  I love Liz she is one in a trillion. 
By Kim Horton on 11/03/2009 6:51 pm
Roger C. Memos
simply brilliant Liz!! promise me you’ll NEVER retire… ! roger c. memos
By Roger C. Memos on 11/02/2009 10:09 am
David Cuthberr

A great essay on a great subject.

I like Carrie Fisher’s story that, when  dying of pneumonia, about to be carried out on a stretcher before the London paparazzi, Elizabeth asked Eddie Fisher for her lip gloss!

Is that a star or what?

As Fisher wrote about herself and her mother Debbie Reynolds, "We’re built more for public than  for private."

By David Cuthberr on 11/02/2009 10:40 am
michael   funk
 once again the one the only, absolutely hands down the most beautiful woman who ever lived. Beauty at its highest form and  A heart that matches the outside too.  ELIZABETH IS MY GODDESS AND ALWAYS HAS BEEN .OH TO BE LIKE HER IS MY DREAM. IM HER BIGGEST CHEER LEADER!!!!!!!!!!  MICHAEL FUNK  ATLANTA ,GEORGIA
By michael funk on 11/02/2009 10:53 am
John Dillon
The best written, most insightful column I have ever read regarding the fabulous, happy, sad, wonderful, tragic life that is Elizabeth Taylor. I’ve always been a fan. She always was and still is one helluva Broad, excuse me, one helluva Dame.  Vive la Liz!  
By John Dillon on 11/02/2009 11:04 am
Mr. Wow
Mr. Wow never really "got" Elizabeth Taylor until she began going crazy and wearing glitter cigarettes on her head, as per this incredible photo. Too bad nobody could find photos of Elizabeth in white lace hot-pants, when she…went to visit her first grandchild!  Only after I fell in love with Big Baroque Liz, could I look back and appreciate her as a dewy MGM princess.
By Mr. Wow on 11/02/2009 11:38 am
Eileen Alannah
Hi, Mr. Wow! Yeah, we should really get to caption THAT photo, right?…haha  (lLiz & her glittery cigarette crown : ).
By Eileen Alannah on 11/02/2009 12:14 pm
Baby  Snooks
Big Baroque Liz? Are you referring to Elizabeth the Fat or Elizabeth the Wife of Bath after the collision with the Brinks truck? Or both? I think she was happiest when she had a little "happy fat" but of course some of the jokes were cruel and really uncalled for.  The worst probably was the magazine article they titled "National Velveeta" although many in Washington roared over it.  She was certainly a sight to behold in those days.  Most people really couldn’t believe it was her.   She was definitely at her most elegant during the "Burton Years" and a little age became her.  Forty and fabulous indeed.
By Baby Snooks on 11/02/2009 1:09 pm
Mr. Wow
Oh, Baby!  "National Velveeta" ran in Esquire and was, despiite that title, an extremely good piece on Mrs.John Warner.  Mr. Wow saw Elizabeth many times during that era.  Often she was fab, even with the flab, sometimes not.  But no matter, they rioted to see her.  How well I remember the opening night of Liza Minnelli’s "The Act."  Taylor’s presence must have put twenty minutes on the curtain gonig up.
By Mr. Wow on 11/02/2009 1:16 pm
Baby  Snooks
I’m told she still has the "wow" effect even in the wheelchair and even with the travesties of age - she looks at you with those eyes and works her magic.  And that smile.  Could melt an iceberg as someone once said.  There’s an expression "smiles from the heart."  That certainly describes hers. 
By Baby Snooks on 11/02/2009 1:40 pm