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Cynthia McFadden | 06/30/2008 6:00 am

What Katharine Hepburn Taught Me About Life and Death

© AP

Editor’s note: On the fifth anniversary of the late icon’s death, Cynthia McFadden remembers her longtime close friend Katharine Hepburn.

Five years ago, on June 29th, Katharine Hepburn died at her rambling brick home on Long Island Sound. It was Sunday. I don’t remember much about the weather. Seems to me it was sunny. Warm. Breezy. I do remember vividly what was happening inside, as the final chapter of that last long good-bye was written.

She was 96 years old and, after decades of the finest health and most indomitable spirit, the last years had been difficult as her health failed and her world grew smaller. It was hard to know how to help, what to do.

Since the 1980s, she and I had been the best of friends. She was a loner who wanted company. And I was lucky enough to be standing in the right place at the right time and became that company.

She was 50 years older than I but I don’t think either one of us much noticed. I could barely keep up with her as it was. For years I stumbled through compelled marches through the Connecticut woods in search of exotic plants (butterfly weed was one of her favorites) and shivered through February swims in the sound.

She was not like other people. She did not bend and break as they did. She did not play by the rules.

She loved nature and she loved extremes. She especially loved things other people hated and would frequently say, "Let’s do such and such; it will drive them mad!" I wanted to please her. I tried to keep up.

She adored exhausting herself with exercise. She played tennis through two hip replacements and a variety of shoulder surgeries, and long after her foot was nearly amputated from a car crash. She loved to win.

If it was blowing a gale, she would demand a walk on the beach. If the sidewalks of New York were burning up with the heat, she’d light the fire and turn on the air-conditioning. She was not like other people. She did not bend and break as they did. She did not play by the rules. "If you obey all the rules you miss all the fun." She said it, she lived it.

She often joked about death: "Death will be a great relief. No more interviews." And so, I suppose, I thought maybe she would figure out a way around that final exit. As I look back, I realize how unprepared I was for her to die. I knew it was coming. The doctors were clear. But even now as I write this, it is hard to believe she was unable to use that extraordinary charm and enormous wit to wiggle out of death’s demand. It took me a long time to admit how angry I was with her for dying.

She was born on May 12, 1907, "despite," as she wrote in her autobiography Me, "everything I have said to the contrary." Until she wrote her book, well into her 80s, she had publicly claimed November 8, 1909, as her birthday. The date was actually her beloved brother Tom’s birthday, the boy who at 16 died by hanging, whether by intention or accident I think she was never certain. She was 14 when she found his body. She was never the same after that. She stopped going to school, tutored at home and became terribly self-conscious. She felt, she said, that people were talking about her family’s tragedy and so she withdrew further into herself.

The year 1907 was neither real nor a tribute to Tom. Rather it was Kate’s successful effort to shave two years off her age, the better to play the ingenue. When I was about 25 or so she said to me, "It’s time." "Time for what?" "If you are going to lie about your age you need to start now."

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

kermie b
Fannie, I didn’t know that. No wonder she was so independent. She had a fantastic role model.
By kermie b on 06/30/2008 1:49 pm
kermie b
Fannie, are you Mugsy?
By kermie b on 06/30/2008 2:29 pm
Fannie Peabody
No. I’m Mugsy’s sister. She’s been telling me about the site, but I’m too busy to spend much time on the computer. However, I was curious as to what the “pop” was for her.
By Fannie Peabody on 06/30/2008 6:02 pm
phyllis Doyle Pepe
Fannie: Please tell Mugsy I send her my best and hope that her breathing gets better. Terrible things, those fires. Oh, and a question: Who is that beautiful woman on your avatar?
By phyllis Doyle Pepe on 06/30/2008 7:58 pm
Fannie Peabody
I’ve passed along your good wishes. The picture is of my namesake, Ms. Fannie Brice. I think my mother got confused — better Mugsy were named after her, I’d think.
By Fannie Peabody on 06/30/2008 9:15 pm
Valerie Naughton
Why did this say Cynthia was Hepburn’s “former” best friend? Who was her latter one? Does anyone edit this site? I cant believe how many errors there are here all the time gramatically, not from the people who post, from the wOwers. Very sloppy, careless and not professional. What a surprise from such professional people.
By Valerie Naughton on 06/30/2008 2:24 pm
Valerie Naughton
I guess old professions die hard. I used to be a teacher and then a principal. I’m retired now but I still like to see the rules of grammar observed and it makes my hair stand on edge when on this site of all places, there is such carelessness. I am hoping the editors can get up to speed soon, otherwise the report card for wOw not be a good one and they will have to stay after class!
By Valerie Naughton on 06/30/2008 6:14 pm
GEORGE WU, A.I.A.
V.N.: Not only that, this ” Editor” is very opinionated. Kill any one who is in the way by using the little power the editor has, to its extreme! I protested, other people protested on several counts. Such as coloring beautiful Cindy McCain to have a GREEN face! and purposely misquoted Dr.Klein’s quotation, just because those people are not on the same side politically as the “editor”. Very vicious behavier!. The editor has to learn to provide space for some one the editor ( some one suggested the name of the editor is TOM) did not necessarily agree with, just like some of the great people, Darwin or Lincoln did ! Well, those are great people; but this editor is NOT!—-dancewu(dot)net
By GEORGE WU, A.I.A. on 06/30/2008 9:29 pm
cath c
she’s beena hero of mine since i was very young. what an iconoclast! my admiration of her may explain why my mother- though we both loved the old movies and it was through them we found our only lasting bond - was never very fond of my “peculiar independence”.
By cath c on 06/30/2008 2:27 pm
Blue Circle Girl
Cynthia many thanks for sharing your relationship with Katherine with us. I can see you are still hurting. I am sorry. We all loved her but you had some kinda wonderful relationship. Ms. Hepburn is greatly missed.
By Blue Circle Girl on 06/30/2008 3:45 pm
Judy S
Dear Ms. McFadden: I was feeling particularly sad yesterday and it wasn’t till midway through a screening of “Summertime” at the Thalia in NYC that I realized why. It was the 29th of June, and while Hepburn, Lean and Venice usually fill me with joy, this time I was feeling like I did on this day five years ago when I learned of Katharine Hepburn’s death. It’s difficult to explain how or why one can be so affected by someone who is, essentially, stranger, but for some of my childhood and all of my adult life she was like some magical presence. Beautiful, gifted, funny, smart. Her appeal on screen was easy to define. It was all of those things coupled with a startlingly genuine vulnerability that lay just beneath the surface of her skin. But so much of what one learns of her private persona via remembrances like yours here as well as the funny and moving speech you gave a couple of year ago at the dedication of the Katharine Houghton Hepburn Center at Bryn Mawr lives up to the public image, even surpasses it in many ways. I miss her presence in the world. Thank you for remembering her with such affection.
By Judy S on 06/30/2008 3:56 pm
James the Game
What a singularly unique talent and persona did Hepburn have.
By James the Game on 06/30/2008 4:09 pm
Frannie Em
Cynthia, Thank you for the great article. Ms Hepburn was certainly one of a kind. I had the great fortune to work for Eve Arden for several years, starting with her book and since she didn’t want me to leave, I went on and worked with her business manager, and managed many of her affairs. Her generation was something special and I learned so much from her. She knew Ms Hepburn, as did my mother and they always had respect for her and her willingness to take risks and stand up for what women are all about.
By Frannie Em on 06/30/2008 4:46 pm
Maurine H
What I’ve always admired most about Katharine Hepburn was her ability to make being smart, sexy. Every defiant raising of her chin, flashing of her eyes, and “straight to the core’ remark just radiated sex appeal. She awakened me to the fact that independence and a sharp wit turn more heads than short skirts and platinum blond hair.
By Maurine H on 06/30/2008 5:12 pm
Elynne Chaplik-Aleskow
I had the extraordinary pleasure of attending.. crashing… a party given for Katharine Hepburn after a performance of “Coco” on Broadway. She had just won the Oscar for “The Lion In Winter.” A banquet was set up in the lobby after the theater was closed to the public for the evening. Ms. Hepburn was speaking to her friend Phyllis. I tapped her on the shoulder and when she turned to look at me, I was amazed at her piercing blue eyes and high cheek bones. She was a handsome woman. I told her that I had come in from Chicago to see her perform and that I wished I had known her as a friend. She thanked me and answered that I might have been disappointed in her as a friend. I told her I did not think so. Reading Cynthia’s memoir, I know I was right. Elynne Chaplik-Aleskow
By Elynne Chaplik-Aleskow on 06/30/2008 5:14 pm