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Liz Smith | 01/06/2009 8:00 am

Living Legend Kim Novak: Star and Survivor, by Liz Smith

Kim Novak/Q

Editor’s Note: Liz Smith has an article on one of Hollywood’s most elusive and glittering stars and a real survivor, Kim Novak, in Quest’s Winter Quarterly, Q. Here we present the full story as Liz wrote it. It differs slightly from the magazine version and contains new material. To see the article as it appeared in Q, including photos of Novak, click here.

“Why did I leave? Survival. Identity. Discovery.”

That was Kim Novak in a rare interview a few years ago, explaining why she opted out of Hollywood, choosing not to hang on to her place in the movie pantheon. 

Although Novak stretches the truth a bit when she claims, “I left at the peak of my career” (that, in fact, was around 1958), she is not a deluded Norma Desmond. In the mid-’60s, when Novak put the brakes on, she was a big name, if not reliable box office. And that name still conjured up old-style glamour, which was in the midst of transition.

Click here to see photos of Kim Novak and this article as it appeared in Q, the winter quarterly from Quest Magazine.  

Novak had not lost her money, her beauty or her mind. No scandals preceded her decision. In fact, it was the logical move to anybody who had paid attention to Novak’s life as an actress. She was always an independent, never comfortable with the system and extremely sensitive. Indeed, she was, in some ways, more vulnerable than Marilyn Monroe. She simply had a better handle on her emotions, and a more grounded outlook. Novak, in her best years, created something most American movie stars don’t have – mystery. Her hushed, hesitant voice and manner were at odds with a body made for 1950s exploitation.

“The attention, the press, the fans. All that’s nice, until you start to count on it.” Kim Novak made her decision – she wouldn’t count on it.

If Elizabeth Taylor conjured spoilt privilege (and later, indulgence) and Marilyn Monroe was a singing/dancing Technicolor confection, a humorous (if increasingly bruised) fantasy – Kim Novak was a creature of twilight hours; breaking dawn or sunset. She was, for all her voluptuous invitation, elusive, a woman no man could really know, even if he “knew” her, in the biblical sense.

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Marilyn Pauline Novak was born in Chicago, a sturdy hazel-eyed girl of Czech ancestry (not Polish, as is commonly thought). She did not enjoy the discipline of schools. She turned to modeling as soon as high school was over. She had to have been dismayed to discover that modeling consisted of being told what to do, what to wear, how to move! Still, she must have enjoyed the attention. Modeling took her, as it did so many, to Los Angeles, and that led to a brief role in an RKO movie, “The French Line.” She was noticed. She got herself an agent – or an agent got her, as is always the more likely scenario. She was screen-tested by Columbia, deemed photogenic and signed the usual seven-year contract.    

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The year was 1954. Marilyn Monroe was the nation’s No. 1 star. Back in 1948, Monroe had her first starring role in a Columbia film, “Ladies of the Chorus.” She was charming. But Harry Cohn, Columbia’s studio chief, claimed not to recognize her charm, and dropped her. (Perhaps because Monroe refused his advances?) Now, Harry wanted to build his own Marilyn, and to replace his aging and errant Love Goddess, Rita Hayworth. (“That broad could be worth millions, instead, she married those guys,” Cohn said of Hayworth’s dubious choices and long periods off the screen. “Those guys” included Orson Welles, Prince Aly Khan and singer Dick Haymes.)  

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Cohn ordered Kim to lose weight. Other adjustments were required. Novak later said, “They bring you in, they tell how special you are, then they want to change everything about you!” Of course, she could not remain Marilyn Novak, in the era of Monroe. Kim wanted to go with Kit Marlowe, a name she chose – and quite a good one, too! The studio nixed that. She settled for Kim, and her own last name. (Many years later, with tongue in cheek, she would play a character named “Kit Marlowe” in the TV series “Falcon Crest.”)

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

beth willis
Liz Smith, what a wonderfully researched and well written article you’ve shared. I think some people forget what a talented writer you are…Novak leans against a wall, “And whispers some indistinct moth-to-flame-I’m-not-to blame song.” Rich, colorful, full of facts. Will you be collecting your writing into an anthology, oh, please do. How many women of a certain age hear ‘Moonglow’ without seeing William Holden and Kim Novak moving suggestively toward one another? And Rosalind Russell, a life of not-so-quiet desperation, ripping his shirt. Read Liz Smith’s book ‘Natural Blond’, what a fascinating life. Thank you for sharing with us. What can you tell us about Rosalind Russell..another favorite?
By beth willis on 01/07/2009 5:30 pm
Irish Eyes NY
Thank you Liz; I always admired Kim Novak, what a beauty and what an actress. and all of that without scandal.
By Irish Eyes NY on 01/09/2009 4:04 pm
Jeanie Black
When I was a very young girl, I was visiting my Grandmother. One summer afternoon, she took me to the movie matinee. I remember when we came back outdoors after the movie was over, it was already dusk. She had taken me to see “Bell, Book & Candle” with James Stewart & Kim Novak. Needless to say, I adored Kim Novak in her role with her cat “Pyewacket” & have always envied how she could be so famous & still live so privately today, almost as if she didn’t even exist ever! I will always be fascinated by her; to me, she is naturally beautiful. I also admire her for being able to keep her own private world among us in this present time - with all her pet animals she loves to dote on! My own tiger cat when I was 17 was christened “Pyewacket” - my own spelling - because of Kim & her magical cat in “Bell, Book & Candle”. Her role in that film led me to explore psychic phenomena, feminine intuition & the powers of ExtraSensoryPerception!!! Kim Novak really sent me toward awareness…. ^_^ Jean Waldorf Black - Meow!!!!! - ^_^
By Jeanie Black on 01/12/2009 4:32 pm
Diana Allen
Have NOT seen all her movies, but my favorite is “Bell, Book and Candle”. Happy to know she is still around. So many of them aren’t.
By Diana Allen on 01/12/2009 10:26 pm