For
those who thought we at The Jade Sphinx
had procrastinated by waiting three weeks between posts, what would be the
response when I confess that it took me 40 years to get around to reading this
book?
I well
remember when W.C. Fields By Himself
was first released. I was just 10 years
old and already obsessed with the movie comedians of Hollywood’s Golden Age,
perhaps W.C. Fields (1880-1946) most
of all. Media coverage was
extensive. Ronald J. Fields, grandson of
the great man, had gathered his grandfather’s papers, saying, this book is really the autobiography that
W.C. Fields would have written. I merely
compiled his own letters, writings, and thoughts; wrote the commentary and a
short introduction. I think this should
become the definitive book on W.C. – not padded out with anecdotes and
reminiscences that cry for credibility, but rather, a portrait of W.C. as he
perceived himself, as he actually lived – the true story.
Was the
40-year wait worth it? Well, yes… but
for all the wrong reasons.
First
off, this book is not a biography, nor the first draft of an
autobiography. What Ronald Fields did
was, simply, take his grandfather’s papers and place them in some sort of coherent
order – and even that is not strictly chronological. There is no real effort to weave a
biographical narrative around them, there is no insight or context, and much of
the book seems padded (nay, bloated) with truly incidental correspondence. (Do we really need nearly 15 pages of Fields’
letters to his wife, explaining why he’s sending a $15 check instead of a
$20? Wouldn’t it be better, for example,
to explain their marital difficulties and simply reprint a letter or two?) What Ronald Fields really did was gather what
he had (both the deeply interesting and the merely tedious) and left it to the
dedicated reader to make sense of it.
But,
while this sounds like a deep criticism of the book – it’s not. It is merely disappointment at a presumed
biography/autobiography. If you are
interested in Fields, think he is funny, or want to know how the mind of one of
the last century’s most creative funnymen worked, than this book is a goldmine.
Here is
Fields in all of his contradictions – the sweet man who could be genuinely
nasty, the generous family man who hated charities, the lover of freedom who
liked J. Edgar Hoover. You may not know the coherent story of his
life once reading W.C. Fields By Himself, but you will know the man.
Here,
for example, is Fields writing to studio head Jack Warner once Warner asked for
a contribution to his favorite charity.
Warner thought if Hollywood’s elite did not contribute to his favorite
charity, the country would descend into Communism:
Dear Mr. Warner:
Thanks for your letter of January
29, which, by the way, is my natal day.
I am sorry my notation on your
letter was not more lucid and so cryptic.
I apologize. I know that you are
a busy man and it is fine of you to champion these worthy causes and I, like
yourself, am adverse to Communism. I
never wish to see it rear its ugly head in America. I appreciate and have enjoyed to the fullest
our liberties and our freedom to do as we please, providing we do not break any
of the laws of our country, not to be brow-beaten and threatened as I
understand these unfortunate people are in Russia.
However, I thought your letter of
January 19th had a Communistic lash and I think you were quoted in
one of the trade papers as threatening to expose all those who did not
contribute an amount according to your ideas.
That is still your prerogative – to expose me and ruin me with the
public and drive me out of moving pictures.
I know what I’ll do, I’ll go to India and become a missionary. I hear there’s good money in that too.
I still want to take care of
charities in my own way and personally.
I think this is one of our inalienable rights.
Sincerely,
W.C. Fields
It is
the “I know what I’ll do, I’ll go to India” that really sells it.
Then
there is my favorite letter in the book – to the Christian Science Monitor after they panned his masterpiece, Never Give a Sucker an Even Break. Clearly, Fields did not suffer fools gladly:
Dear Editor:
On January 28th in the
Year of our Lord 1942, the Christian Science Monitor printed:
Never
Give a Sucker an Even Break: W.C. Fields acting out a story with results that
are by turns ludicrous, tedious, and distasteful. There is the usual atmosphere of befuddled
alcoholism.
If the chosen people decide that the
Christian Science Monitor is expressing the thoughts of the majority of the
people in the United States, it is possible they would bar me from their
studios and bar my pictures from their theaters, which would force me into the
newspaper business. And if I used your
tactics I might say:
The
Christian Science Monitor: Day in and day out the same old bromides. They no longer look for love and beauty but
see so many sordid things that Mary Baker Eddy did not see in this beautiful
world she discovered after trying her hand at mesmerism, hypnotism, and
spiritualism before landing on the lucrative Christian Science racket.
Why I play in a picture in which I
take a few nips to get a laugh (I have never played a drunkard in my life) I
hope that it might bring to mind the anecdote of Jesus turning water into wine.
And wouldn’t it be terrible if I
quoted some reliable statistics which prove that more people are driven insane
through religious hysteria than by drinking alcohol.
Your very truly,
A subscriber,
W.C. Fields
“The
lucrative Christian Science racket” is a sentence for the ages.
In
retrospect, it’s perhaps for the best that I waited 40 years to wade through
Fields’ papers – we never needed him more than we need him now.
W.C.
Fields By Himself can be found on all major used-books sites, such Abebooks.com
and Alibris.com. For the Fields
enthusiast, it is essential reading.
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