The Milwaukee Journal – Feb 13,
1938
‘Actors Are Not Egotists’
A Radio Comedian Turned Screen Actor
Here Gives You His Evaluation of His Co-workers and, in the Benny Manner,
Emerges With All Banners Flying in His Defense of This Maligned Profession
Jack Benny, as everybody but an
unidentified man in French Indo-China knows, appears on NBC Sunday nights with
his radio troupe. His next film for Paramount is called “Never Say Die.”
HERE is something I’ve wanted to
get off my chest for years, I expect to be given arguments about it. There will
be many snorts of “Oh, yeah?” But a Benny never falters for mere snorts. He’s
faced too many dead-on-their-seats audiences.
I say actors as a class aren’t
nearly so sold on themselves as nonprofessionals think. Here’s what I mean.
An Irishman named Mike wanted to
go for a sleigh ride but he didn’t have a sled. His friend Pat did Mike thought
over the situation and he said to his wife
“Sure it’s a fine morning for a
sleigh ride. I wish I had a sled”
“Well, Pat has a sled. Why don’t
you go over and ask him if you can borrow it,” said his wife.
“Ah, he’d never let me have it,
the tightwad,” said Mike.
“Maybe he would. Go ask him Mike
said his wife.”
So Mike started for Pat’s house,
and all the way he muttered to himself: “He’ll never do it. I don’t know why I should
be after asking him. Fine friend he is. He wouldn’t give me a potato if I was
starving.”
By the time he reached Pat’s house
he’d worked himself up into a fury. He pounded on the door and when Pat stuck
his head out Mike shouted.
“Listen, I don’t want your
so-and-so sled. You can Keep it!”
THAT’S the way people are about
actors. Everybody outside of show business thinks everybody inside is
egotistical, conceited, egocentric and all the other fine-sounding adjectives
that mean stuck-on yourself. An actor is licked before he has a chance to open
his mouth to defend himself. People say, “Of course he’s conceited. If he weren’t
he wouldn’t be an actor.”
Who wants to bet? I’ve been in
show business for more than 20 years and I’ve known a whale of a lot of actors.
I say they’re no more in love with themselves than other men and less than some
classes of men High-powered salesmen, for instance or hotel managers. If an
actor talked about his performances at the length to which I’ve heard salesmen
go in describing big deals they’ve put over single-handed some listener would
get mad and pop him on the nose.
I’ve found hotel managers who
could praise themselves by the hour.
When I went to Europe last summer
I came home 10 days early just so I could drive from Chicago to Los Angeles,
taking my time along the way; and it takes a lot of time in that Maxwell of
mine. I liked that part of the trip better than anything in Europe, expect
maybe London. This is a great country to drive over.
I remember one night I stopped in
a hotel in a fair-sized middlewestern city. After I’d gone to my room the
manager sent me a note inviting me to his suite for cocktails. He said his wife
and daughter would enjoy meeting me.
I went, of course. It is always
flattering when folks say they want to meet you. I expected to be asked a few
questions about Hollywood and motion pictures and radio. But from the time I
crossed that guy’s threshold Jack Benny did a complete fadeout,
conversationally.
He had me there for the sole
purpose of telling me how wonderful he was. He enumerated the hotels he’d put
on a big-paying basis. It would be no trouble for him to show them how to run
the Ritz.
Then he started in on what was the
matter with the way motion pictures are made and how he could improve them. Pretty
soon he was telling me how to run my radio shows.
A couple of times I got as far as.
That reminds me, “but no farther. Finally his daughter said. ‘Daddy I wish you’d
let Mr. Benny talk a little.’ It was no use.” He was too busy to hear her.
I DON’T know any actors who could
get away with a monolog like that. I don’t know any actors who would try. Sometimes
in a discussion of the self-importance of those in my profession I’ve asked
crities to name six who have gone over board. They never get beyond two even in
Hollywood where it is supposed to be a case of dog eat dog.
Take fellows take Bing Crosby. He
has earned a race track a handsome hut in the San Fernando Valley, a ranch at
Santa Fe Springs, a yacht and plenty of money to run em all by his own efforts.
He has one of the most popular radio programs on the air and his pictures are
in greater demand every time a new one is released. Yet Bing will proclaim to
anyone who will listen that he knows “from nothing” about acting. One of his
favorite occupations is poking fun at himself as an actor.
Nelson Eddy who is swamped by fantail
most of which is sweetly scented, loves to tell about the time Woody Van Dyke,
the director, met him outside the Chinese theater after the premiere of ‘Naughty
Marletta.” The director asked Nelson how it felt to be a great actor
“But I’m not an actor,” said Nelson.
“I know that,” said Van Dyke, “but
how does it feel?”
John Barrymore calls himself a
ham. When actors start talking big, they are scared. They are trying to cover
up for the squeamish feeling in the pits of their stomachs.
AN ACTOR’S only asset in himself. No
matter how successful he becomes he can’t build up anything that will go on
after him. There’s no business to hand down to his children. And he knows his
days as an actor are numbered under the average man’s productivity. You’re darn
tooting he’s scared’
And he can’t conduct himself as an
ordinary human being because like Pat in the story he’s taken the count before
he begins. Anybody else can pass a friend in the street, and if he’s in a hurry
and his mind is doing grasshopper jumps with all the things he has to do, he
can nod hello to the friend and go on without being blamed for it. An actor
doesn’t dare. He has to stop and put on an act regardless. If he doesn’t the
friend says to himself, “Hum so. The fellow is going high-hat. That’s just what
I thought all along.”
And do you know what state a
motion picture player is in when he’s about to begin a new picture? Let a
so-called comedian tell you. He is fit to be tied I speak feelingly. I’m about
to do a piece called “Never Say Die.”
When the picture gets under way
everything will be all right for a while. I’ll relax and feel happy about the
whole thing. Then as it gets down toward the shank end I know what will happen.
Then jitters will come back. I’ll be in what those who have no sympathy
sarcastically call a “mood.” Around the set they’ll say: “Get a load of Benny.
What’s he trying to do, give himself airs?” And it will be nothing but fright,
plan fright. Don’t let anybody tell you old troupers are different. They never
get that old.
And do you know where I’ll be the
night the picture is previewed? I’ll be at the fights with the shakes and an
awful headache, trying to forget it all.
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