American Rebel by Marc Eliot - Excerpt
American Rebel by Marc Eliot - Excerpt
American Rebel by Marc Eliot - Excerpt
amer
THE LIFE OF CLINT EASTWOOD
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iCan
rebEl
MARC ELIOT
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
First Edition
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American Rebel
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CONTENT S
introduction 1
sources 333
notes 335
index 369
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INTRODUCTION
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C lint Eastwood stands tall among the most popular and endur-
ing stars Hollywood has ever produced. He has been making movies
for more than fifty years, ranging from small, meaningless, and for-
gettable parts as a Universal Studios contract player to acting in, as
well as producing and directing, many Oscar-caliber blockbusters that
will one day, sooner rather than later, take their place among the best-
loved American movies.
Early in his career, Clint spent seven and a half years costarring in
TV’s Rawhide, and his Rowdy Yates became one of the most popular
TV cowboys of the late 1950s and early 1960s.* By the time Rawhide
ended its eight-season run he had also become an international movie
star, following his appearance in three wildly popular spaghetti west-
erns made and distributed throughout Europe; when they were finally
released in America, they made him a big-screen star in the States as
well. For the next quarter-century Clint appeared in dozens of enter-
taining movies that made him a household name anywhere in the
world that films could be seen. He was undoubtedly a crowd-pleaser,
but at the time the Hollywood elite considered his movies too genre-
heavy to be Oscar-worthy.
Then in 1992 Clint produced, directed, and starred in Unforgiven,
a western to (literally) end all westerns, made by his own production
company, Malpaso, that he had created to operate as a ministudio in
the service of its resident star. Unforgiven won four Academy Awards,
including two for Clint (one for Best Director and one for Best Pic-
ture), and the Midas-touch Oscar-style was suddenly his; nearly every-
thing he made for the next fifteen years was deemed award- or
*The show ran eight seasons, with only twenty-two episodes in its debut year as a mid-
season replacement. The show made thirteen episodes in its final season. Seasons two
through seven had full-season commitments.
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p erhaps more than for any other Hollywood star, the double helix
that is Clint’s creative and real-life DNA is so intertwined it is nearly
impossible to separate the off-screen person from the on-screen per-
sona. The two feed off each other so thoroughly, it is often difficult
to tell where the lives of the characters in his movies end and the life
of the man playing them begins.
In the movies that he has thus far acted in, produced, or directed,
in various combinations wearing one or more of these hats, three
essential Clint Eastwood screen personae continually reappear. The
first is the mysterious man without a past who is resolute in his lone-
ness, the Man with No Name, who appeared in the three Sergio
Leone westerns—A Fistful of Dollars, For a Few Dollars More, The Good,
the Bad and the Ugly—then reappeared slightly altered in Hang ’Em
High and The Outlaw Josey Wales, and took several other guises and
variations all the way through to Unforgiven. The second persona is
“Dirty” Harry Callahan, whose essentially nihilistic loner personality
continually reemerges up to and including Gran Torino. And finally,
there is the good-natured redneck, who uses his fists the way a more
thoughtful person uses words and who makes his first appearance as
Philo Beddoe in Every Which Way but Loose and returns again and again
on the way to Pink Cadillac.
All three characters in their various incarnations are viscerally con-
nected to the real-life Clint. All three are quintessential loners, unlike
any other in the canon of American motion pictures. The other cin-
ematic “men alone” who most immediately come to mind are not
really loners at all—that is to say, they are loners Hollywood style,
buffered with the idealized images of the actors who played them.
Probably mainstream films’ greatest “loner” is Gary Cooper as the
isolated sheriff in Fred Zinnemann’s High Noon (1952). Yes, Will Kane
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heroically stands alone to face his enemies, but in truth he is not alone
at all, as in the end he relies on the love of his wife, and her reluctant
use of a gun that saves his life; and when all the fighting has ended,
the two of them ride off together into the sunset. Another who comes
to mind is Humphrey Bogart’s Rick Blaine, the neutral American
caught in the crosswinds of World War II in Michael Curtiz’s
Casablanca (1942). He proudly boasts that “I stick my neck out for
nobody” and then does precisely that for the woman he loves, in this
case Ingrid Bergman, in an act so unselfishly noble that the very idea
that he was ever a loner is so absurd it becomes laughable. James Bond
appears to be the ultimate loner, but we now know that he lost his one
true love early on and both seethes with revenge and longs with lust,
no longer for any single woman but, apparently, all of womankind.
On a nobler plane, Charlton Heston in Cecil B. DeMille’s The Ten
Commandments (1956) is isolated from his family, his people, his land,
and his heritage. Yet he still needs someone to lean on, in this case the
Almighty himself, who provides the love, guidance, and moral suste-
nance that establish quite profoundly that even Moses did not go it
alone.
Clint’s movie characters need nothing and no one more than or
beyond themselves. Whether he is surrounded by vicious killers or
predatory women (oftentimes one and the same), faceless adversaries
(as opposed to the Man with No Name), by serial man-hunters pur-
sued and ultimately defeated by someone dirtier (and therefore
stronger) than they are, or even by buddy-buddy orangutans, the Man
with No Name, Dirty Harry, and Philo Beddoe all arrive alone at the
start and leave alone at the end. They rarely, if ever, win the heart of
any woman because they almost never pursue women. On the few
occasions when a Clint character reluctantly finds himself to be
involved with one, the relationship remains distant, cynical, unro-
mantic, and for the most part nonintimate; the so-called love story is
always the least interesting part of any Clint Eastwood movie. His
loners are unable, unwilling, and therefore unavailable to fulfill the
wishes of those men or women who want to be with him, but not of
those in the audience who dream of being like him. With this brand
of character, Clint delivered something original and provocative to
American motion pictures.
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*Clint and Maggie Johnson, his first wife, were married in 1953, separated in 1978, and
divorced in 1984.
†One with Roxanne Tunis, one with Frances Fisher, and two with Jacelyn Reeves. His
total of seven children are Kimber Eastwood (born June 17, 1964), Kyle Eastwood (born
May 19, 1968), Alison Eastwood (born May 22, 1972), Scott Eastwood (born March 21,
1986), Kathryn Eastwood (born February 2, 1988), Francesca Fisher-Eastwood (born
August 7, 1993), and Morgan Eastwood (born December 12, 1996).
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struggled to find his way out of his own emotional wilderness. He was
a child of the Depression, whose parents wandered from town to town
to try to make ends meet. Not long after he finished high school, he
was drafted into the army and fell in with a bunch of other tough
young would-be actors, all of whom grew up in or near Southern Cal-
ifornia and quickly discovered they had what it took—rugged good
looks—to make easier money as contract players, in the desperate
declining days of studio-dominated moviemaking, than they could
pumping gas.
After his discharge he followed their lead, but his emerging talent
quickly separated him from the two he became closest to—Martin
Milner and David Janssen—and the rest of the pack. Milner’s undis-
tinguished career in movies led to an even less distinguished, if steady,
one on television with Route 66 (1960–64) and Adam-12 (1968–75);
Janssen briefly hit pay dirt on TV as Dr. Richard Kimble in the mid-
1960s (1963–67), only to see his post-Fugitive career devolve into
increasingly mediocre work. But Clint used the time he spent on TV
as a film school. Amid tired and bored union men moving wagon trains
onto and off of Universal’s back lot, he studied everybody and every-
thing and learned not only how to make movies (Rawhide, a one-hour
TV western series, cranked out a minimovie every week, thirty-nine
weeks a year) but how to make them fast and cheap, telling a concise
and comprehensible story, often the same one over and over with
slight variations; these stories had a logical beginning, an action-filled
middle, and a morally uplifting, perfectly plot-resolved end.
Years later, after establishing himself as a bankable star on the big
screen, Clint finally got the chance to direct. Early on he had felt that
that was where the real action was in movies, that it was ultimately bet-
ter to play God than to play parts. Along the way to achieving that
goal, he met Don Siegel, who would direct him in five films, Coogan’s
Bluff (1968), Two Mules for Sister Sara (1970), The Beguiled (1971),
Dirty Harry (1971), and Escape from Alcatraz (1979). These films
greatly influenced Clint’s own early directorial style, especially their
collective belief in human nobility as the ultimate redemptive force.
Clint would, however, eventually shrug off nobility and redemption
as his own style continued to develop and he realized these themes
were not just overly derivative, but the least interesting aspect of what
he wanted to put on film—less-plot-dependent movies that were, in
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PA RT I
From Aimless
to Actor
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one
My father always told me you don’t get anything for nothing, and
although I was always rebelling, I never rebelled against that.
—Clint Eastwood
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T he boy who would one day become famous for playing the Man
with No Name did not have a well-defined self-image or a strong role
model to follow growing up. In his formative years his father, forever
in search of a steady job during the Great Depression, developed a
deceptive California suntan, the mark of a hardworking outdoor
laborer trying to avoid poverty rather than a man of sun-worshipping
leisure and privilege.
Clinton and Francesca Ruth (sometimes recorded as Margaret
Ruth, although she only used Ruth as her given name) were two
good-looking California kids who met while attending Piedmont
High School in Oakland. They dated each other and married young,
before the market crashed, and took with it their romantic dream of
the good life. Ruth’s family was Dutch-Irish and Mormon with a
long line of physical laborers, including pickup fighters, lumberjacks,
sawmill operators, and an occasional local politician. She graduated
from Anna Head School in Berkeley, where she had been transferred
to from Piedmont just before her senior year—a move that may have
been prompted by her parents’ concern over an intense relationship
she had begun with her high school sweetheart, Clinton Eastwood.
Clinton was a popular, well-liked boy with strong American roots;
his ancestors were pre–Revolutionary War Presbyterian farmers and
men who sold goods by traveling from town to town, their carts
bearing inventory samples such as women’s underwear and soap used
to elicit orders from their customers. In the days before mail-order
catalogs, most goods were sold this way outside the big American
cities.
Despite Ruth’s parents’ attempts to put some distance between
her and the economically deficient Clinton, upon graduating from
high school they were married, on June 5, 1927, in a ceremony held
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Well, those were the thirties and jobs were hard to come by. My par-
ents and my sister and myself just had to move around to get jobs. I
remember we moved from Sacramento to Pacific Palisades just [so my
father could work] as a gas station attendant. It was the only job open.
Everybody was in a trailer, one with a single wheel on one end, and the
car, and we were living in a real old place out in the sticks . . .
My father was big on basic courtesies toward women. The one time I
ever got snotty with my mother when he was around, he left me a lit-
tle battered.
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When I sat down at the piano at a party, the girls would come around.
I could play a few numbers. I learned a few off listening to records
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and things that were popular at that era. I thought this was all right,
so I went home and practiced . . . I would lie about my age and go to
Hambone Kelly’s. I’d stand in the back and listen to Lu Watters and
Turk Murphy play New Orleans jazz . . . I grew up listening to Ella
Fitzgerald and Nat King Cole . . . Lester Young, Charlie Parker, Dizzy
Gillespie, Miles Davis, Clifford Brown, Fats Navarro, Thelonious
Monk, Erroll Garner.
And he loved cars. For $25 Clint’s father bought him a beat-up
1932 Chevy to help him keep his paper route job. Clint nicknamed it
“the Bathtub” because of its missing top. Its best accessory was, of
course, the girls. The Chevy, which didn’t last very long, was only
the first of a long line of his beat-up cars. To pay for them all and the
gas and repairs, Clint took extra after-school jobs on top of his paper
route. He worked at the local grocery and as a caddy at the golf course;
he baled hay on a farm in nearby Yreka, cut timber near Paradise, and
was a seasonal forest firefighter. All these jobs were purely physical,
the type of work he could forget about as soon as he punched out. But
they were time consuming and exhausting, even for a young and
strong teenage boy. They left him even less time for his studies at
Piedmont High, and when his parents and school authorities realized
he wasn’t going to graduate with a regular academic degree, he trans-
ferred to the Oakland Technical High School, a vocational training
institute where he would specialize in aircraft maintenance. This
would give him his best chance, upon graduation, to attend the Uni-
versity of California, which had an affiliated program with the high
school, or to land a well-paying job.
After school Clint hung with a crowd of tough-looking teens decked
out in leather and T-shirts, with greased-back long hair. All strong,
tall, and lean, they tucked cigarettes behind their ears and held bottles
of beer in one hand while they drove, usually to the local dives where
the hottest girls hung out. And they were all into jazz. Most often they
found themselves at the Omar, a pizza and beer dive in downtown Oak-
land where Clint liked to play jazz on a beat-up old piano in the cor-
ner. Whenever he could, he would go to hear Dizzy Gillespie, Coleman
Hawkins, Flip Phillips, Lester Young, or Charlie Parker. Sometimes
they played alone in the small dark clubs that dotted the streets of Oak-
land; sometimes they performed together at the Shrine Auditorium,
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where the heavily mixed crowd regularly gathered to see and hear
them.
It was Parker, more than all the others, who opened his eyes to the
new music’s emotional power. As Clint later told Richard Schickel,
“I’d never seen a musician play with such confidence. There was no
show business to it in those days, and this guy just stood and played,
and I thought, God, what an amazing, expressive thing.” His cool,
aloof sound held great appeal for Clint.
He was nineteen when he finally graduated from Oakland Tech in
the spring of 1949. By then, he had grown tired of school and often
cut classes to hang out with boys, among whom he was the only one
still in school.
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To purchase a copy of
American Rebel
visit one of these online retailers:
Amazon
Barnes & Noble
Borders
IndieBound
Powell’s Books
Random House
www.HarmonyBooks.com