Kay Francis, a long, tall, elegant drink of water in an early Warners/First National outing. |
She was regally tall—at 5 foot 9 inches the lankiest female star Hollywood’s Golden Age—with an impeccable
sense of style. The critics called her a clothes
horse. With large, expressive hazel eyes and dramatic dark
hair she was never an ingénue, playing
sophisticated society women, sharp businesswomen,
and scheming villainesses while barely out her teens. Her somewhat husky voice lacked the almost British
mid-Atlantic accent used by many
actresses in similar roles. But a slight
speech defect—a lisp which made her letter r and l sound like w—seemed to audiences
to be upper class.
The voice, the height, the sense of style made her a definitively modern American leading
lady seldom assigned to play Brits or to costume dramas—and
one who had astonishingly few love
scenes with her leading men,
some of whom she towered over. Yet for a good stretch of the 1930’s Kay Francis was one of the most popular female stars in
Hollywood—and for a stretch the highest
paid. She was the Queen of Warner Bros. until Jack Warner soured on her and Bette Davis knocked the crown from her
head.
Katharine
Edwina Gibbs was born in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma in
1905. Her father was 6’ 5” tall wealthy businessman who abandoned the family before she was
four years old. Her Nova Scotia born mother, Katharine
Clinton was an actress who returned to the stage to support her
daughter. The girl usually accompanied
her mother, but when her mother could afford it she was sent to Catholic Schools and even briefly to an
Upstate New York finishing school.
When she was 15 she enrolled in the Katharine Gibbs Secretarial School in New York City, the flagship of a then successful
and famous chain of business schools
for young ladies. Later she would not discourage a biographical confusion that the founder of the schools was her mother.
When she graduated she skipped the steno
pool or even service as a private
secretary. Instead the sophisticated teen ager got highly respectable and well-paying positions selling real estate and arranging extravagant parties for wealthy socialites.
In this capacity she met James
Dwight Francis, a scion of a
wealthy New England family. They wed
when she was just 17.
The marriage was short lived. In something that might have come straight
out of the script for one of her later movies, Katherine sailed to Paris to obtain a divorce with a minimum
of scandal. While there she met former Harvard athlete and Boston William Gaston who swept her off her feet.
When the pair returned to the United
States, however, Gaston returned to his Boston
law practice and she, liberated
from having to work for a living,
decided to follow her mother on the
stage. She had some connections and in 1925 premiered on Broadway billed as Katherine Francis as the as the Queen of Players in a modern
adaptation of Hamlet. She later
admitted to advancing her early career
by “lying a lot, to the right people.” Some suspect
that this turn of a phrase was a pun
on “laying a lot.” One of those who she impressed by word or
deed was producer Stuart Walker who
hired her for his touring repertoire
Portmanteau Theatre Company. Making
the rounds of Midwest cities in roles ranging from walk-ons to features, she quickly learned
her craft.
Francis returned to Broadway and had
success in 1927 as a second lead in
the drama Crime starring an even younger Sylvia Sydney. Sydney
claimed Francis stole the show from
her.
Understandably her long-distance marriage to Gaston ended
in divorce about this time. But Francis
never seemed to be short of wealthy
suitors. Next in line was playboy Alan Ryan, Jr. Before their brief marriage she promised
his family that she would give up the stage.
That proved to be a promise she could not keep. Within months she was back on the boards
playing an aviatrix in Rachel Crothers’ play, Venus.
In 1928 she found her greatest
success to date as the female lead
in Ring Lardner’s baseball comedy Elmer the Great opposite Walter
Huston and produced by George M. Cohan. Cohan helped her obtain a screen test at Paramount Pictures studio in Astoria, Queens. She was cast in Gentleman of the Press
once again opposite Huston, a star turn
in her first film. That may be the
first movie she shot, but the first to be seen by the public was the inaugural Marx Brothers film effort The
Cocoanuts. She had a relatively
small part as a villainess plotting
to steal a broken-down resort hotel
for a real estate scheme. She was billed as Katherine Francis below all
the Marx brothers, Dumont, and even the insipid juvenile romantic leads who threatened to destroy the entertainment value of the film every time they ate celluloid.
None-the-less, Paramount was
impressed enough by these two outings, both released in 1929, to offer Francis
a lucrative contract and invite her
to work at the main studio in California.
Not yet 25 years old she was a movie
star.
Shortly before leaving New York,
Francis married for the fourth time to writer/director John Meehan. Once again a
long-distance relationship failed, especially after Francis took up with actor and producer Kenneth MacKenna who she married in 1931. That marriage failed two years later. Francis laid
off matrimony for a while, having affairs
with various men, including some co-stars,
and occasionally with women.
Setting and rising stars--Clara Bow and Kay Francis in Dangerous Curves, 1931. |
The studio certainly kept her busy, churning out more than 21 films featuring or staring her in before
the end of 1931. In her first California-made
film, Dangerous Curves, a circus
drama in which Francis, billed as Kay for the first time, she played the vamp who tries to steal the pretty-boy acrobat from the virtuous but plain girl who truly loves him. Interestingly the plain Jane was Clara Bow
the sexiest of silent stars in one of the films that killed her career. But it
cemented Francis as the evil other woman,
a part she would play with variations repeatedly.
Francis was often the second lead
alternating between the temptress and the wronged woman. In 1930 she teamed up for the first time with
William Powell, her most regular
Paramount co-star for Behind the Make Up in which Powell played, of all things, an Italian clown, brought down by a wicked
temptress. Guess who.
Later that
year Francis stepped up to a full-fledged starring role as a romantic lead in an important picture—Raffles with Ronald Coleman as the Amateur Cracksman. It was one of the relatively few films
requiring her to pretend to be English. It also left her with little to do but look
adoringly at Coleman and be alarmed.
Beef cake and babe--out of the evening gown and onto the boat with Joel McCrea in Girls About Town. |
Some of her
other noteworthy films from this period include the newspaper melodrama Scandal Sheet
as the cheating wife of a tabloid editor, the pre-code shocker 24 Hours, Girls About Town which was a comedy opposite Joel McCrea in which she played a gold digger who falls for a poor
guy, and The False Madonna as the grifter
redeemed by the love of a child.
Despite her
success there, Paramount was a studio in
trouble. It had a glut of actresses
and a had a run of bad luck—and bad pictures. The studio was in financial trouble. In what
would be recognized by any sports fan as
a salary dump, at the end of 1932 it
released Francis, Powell, and Ruth
Chatterton to Warner Bros. where
all got big raises and promises of better roles.
In the short run it was a hell of a career move for Francis.
Warners was then the second
biggest and successful studio in Hollywood behind behemoth MGM. It was feasting on a string of
successful musicals and the
tough, gritty urban dramas and crime stories for which it became
famous. It was well stocked with wise
cracking dames fit for those pictures, but needed a more elegant leading lady for films set
among the posh for the diversion of Depression weary audiences. Kay Francis was the key to winning that
audience and the devotees of women’s movies—sudsy melodramas of
marriage and betrayal in penthouse
apartments, Park Avenue mansions, and country
estates with lots of changes of elegant wardrobe.
In addition
to a salary, Warners boosted Francis’s career by giving her more sympathetic roles, top billing with its biggest male stars, including Powell, better scripts, and lavish production values. It worked
spectacularly. By 1935 Francis was
the best paid actress in Hollywood
taking down $115,000 a year or about $4,000 a week. By contrast Bette Davis, Warner’s fast rising star, was making only
$18,000. And don’t think Davis didn’t
notice.
Francis was not only one of the most popular cover girls on American fan magazines, but on publications around the world. |
The same
year she was the top grossing female
star and the sixth biggest money maker
among all stars. She appeared on 38 national magazine covers, more than any
other adult Hollywood actress and second only the astonishing 138 covers
featuring the adorable Shirley Temple
in the seven-year span from 1930 to ’37.
Kay Francis was as hot a
commodity as there was.
Warners
shifted her to playing long suffering,
betrayed wives and women caught in
peril by circumstances beyond her control.
Gone, for the most part were the temptresses, villains, and husband
stealers she had specialized in at Paramount.
Even when
she played the other woman, the wife
turned out to bitch as in the weeper, Street of Women, one of
her early Warners outings. On top of
that she played a brilliant fashion
designer, all the better to show her off in gowns, business suits, and plenty
of fur.
Warner was
happy enough with their new star to loan her back to Paramount—or it may have
been part of a back-room deal—to
make the Ernst Lubitsch comedy Trouble
in Paradise. This time she was
the fabulous owner of a Paris perfumery targeted by suave jewel thief
Herbert Marshal—despite the fact
that Marshal, one of the stiffest actors
ever to don a tuxedo failed utterly as being suave—who wormed
his way into her employ and heart. It turned out to be a good move for Warners because the film was such a hit that it raise
interest in Francis’s films upcoming films for that studio.
Her biggest
successes came in unabashed weepers like I Found Stella Parish the convoluted tale of a woman framed for murder by her jealous ex-husband who flees to Europe with their child when she is released from prison to start life as an actress under a new name only to be discovered and disgraced. She and the child run back to the States hoping to disappear in New York but are discovered
by a reporter who, naturally falls
in love with her. Reporter files story, regrets it. Long suffering
actress sends her daughter away from
the scandal and returns to the stage to milk
the publicity for money to support her.
End the end she makes a triumphant
return to the London stage with
the help of the gob smacked reporter
and is reunited with the
daughter. No woman could jam enough hankies in her pocketbook for this kind of fare.
Francis
played a doctor in at least three
films, each time betrayed by the
feckless love of a partner and usually threatened
with false imprisonment or other doom.
Only
occasionally at Warner was Francis allowed to let her considerable comedic charms loose as in First Lady as a Washington socialite hostess, mover and shaker who tries to promote her
Secretary of State husband into the White House. Instead she almost accidentally snares the nomination for a pompous dolt of a Supreme
Court Justice, and has to let fly another wild maneuver to save the
day.
But films
like that were all too rare. And when
the plots to her weepers grew evermore
convoluted and ridiculous,
Francis rebelled. She watched the spunky Bette Davis challenge
Jack Warner for better parts and get them
despite high drama and suspensions. When she tried
the same thing, the dictatorial
Warner was not amused.
The failure of The White Angel, one of Warner Bros. prestige biopic projects, sealed Franci's fate at the studio. |
He seemed to
throw her a bone, one of Warners’
prestigious biopics produced as Oscar bait. Francis was cast as Florence “Flo” Nightingale in 1936’s White Angel. The expensive
costume drama was a box office bust. That turned Warner firmly against his leading
lady. He began to extract revenge, even if it was nearly as costly to the studio as it was to Francis’s career.
It began subtly.
Francis’s lisp had never been a
problem, or much mentioned in the
press. Warner studio flacks began feeding gossip columnists and
fan magazine supposed quotes from
fellow cast and crew members mocking her
impediment. One joke went that behind her
back they called her the “Wavishing
Kay Fwancis.” Then the script writers on her movies were
instructed to load her dialog up
with as many words as possible with r’s and l’s, preferably strung together for greater affect.
Francis’s employment documents were doctored and left where they could be “accidently discovered” by prying
reporters to indicate that she was born as early as 1892, not as always
previously reported, in 1905. Since
Francis had always played older than her years, this seemed plausible,
especially when no Oklahoma City birth
certificate could be found.
Eventually census records were
found that proved she was 5 years old in 1910, but many in the public now
believed she was more than 10 years older than the 32 years of age she really
was in 1937.
Instead of
improving, her scripts kept getting ever more ludicrous. Finally, Francis
announced that she would sue the
studio to force them to give her better parts.
That enraged Jack Warner who
vowed to destroy her career. The studio sent out a press release announcing that Francis was being demoted to the B unit which churned out low
budget programmers for the
bottom half of double bills. It was not unusual for a studio to demote
aging or fading stars in this way, or even to temporarily punish top stars like
Bette Davis. But it was unheard of to
make a public announcement of the humiliation.
Under this
arrangement Francis’s scripts got worse, budgets shrank, and top-flight directors were replaced by factory hacks. Naturally the pictures did not do as well as
before. In the midst of all this in 1938
the Independent Theatre Owners
Association paid for an advertisement in the Hollywood Reporter listing
Francis along with Mae West,
Katharine Hepburn, Greta Garbo, Fred Astaire, Marlene Dietrich, and Dolores del Río as Box Office Poison. It was a blow and set back to all the careers, but most of the stars, with studio support, were able to come roaring back on the strength of their next success. But Francis was toiling at a studio that was
actively trying to destroy her career.
She bitterly
noted in her private journal that
she would show up and “scrub floors” rather than give up and quit, as Warners hoped she would, to keep her $4,000 a week salary. She
also despairingly suggested that
when her film career was finally over all of her films and their negatives would be burned so that the world would forget she ever existed.
Warners had
to fulfill their contract they put
her in two more movies including the air
race drama Women in the Wind and King
of the Underworld with Francis as a doctor again forced to bring to
justice gang boss Humphrey Bogart
who murdered her husband and pinned the crime on her. It was one of the last of Bogies B movie gangster flicks before his breakthrough
to A list stardom the next year with High
Sierra and then The Maltese Falcon. To add
insult to injury, Francis’s name was left off the lobby posters and ads
despite dominating screen time and
being the obvious protagonist. Everyone
involved knew these films were crap.
Then the studio unceremoniously released
her when her contract expired at the
end of 1938. Both films were released the following year and sank unnoticed.
During all
the turmoil, Francis married for the
fifth and final time to a guy named Eric
Barnkow about whom almost nothing is
known and who quickly vanished
from her life. It is unknown even if annulment or divorce papers were ever drawn up to officially end the marriage.
Francis
discovered that no other studio would pick her up. She was forced into the role of an independent actor, available for
work on a picture-by-picture basis
for any studio that would hire her,
at far less than she made at Warners.
Old friends rallied to her
support.
With Cary Grant and Carole Lombard in RKO's In Name Only--billed third but a rebound from Warner Bros. purgatory. |
Carol Lombard insisted on
casting Francis as the vicious, vindictive wife of Cary Grant in RKO’s In Name Only. She was billed third and on the
surface it seemed like a throwback to
the villain role she played in the early Paramount pictures, but the script was
subtle, the direction by John Cromwell intelligent and all the
principles working at the top of their considerable
skills. The film was well received then and now is something
of a cult classic beloved by fans of
all three of the stars.
She returned
to star billing in an independent
production of Louisa May Alcott’s Little Men in which she played the grown-up Jo March/Mrs. Bhaer, the operator of a progressive school for boys.
The film was released by RKO.
Francis was
increasingly being cast as a mother
figure, like the mom of Deanna
Durbin in the lightweight Universal musical
It’s
a Date. She even did a B western at Universal, When the Daltons Rode opposite Randolph Scott. Most of her work was in supporting roles, when
she could get them.
In 1941 she
got the small role of the real aunt in
the 20th Century Fox production of Oscar Wilde’s Charley’s Aunt starring Jack
Benny. Most impressively, Francis
went toe-to-toe with Rosalind Russell over Don Ameche as a clueless college professor and would-be
author in the MGM screwball comedy The Feminine Touch.
When America
entered World War II Francis
virtually put her career aside to dedicate herself to war work. She organized
one of the first tours of American
performers to entertain Army Air
Force crews in England and
troops in North Africa. This was before the USO was even organized and Francis had to make virtually all of the
arrangements for her small troupe
herself. Her pal Carol Landis was along and in 1942 published a bestselling account of the trip, Four Jills in a Jeep. 20th Century Fox snatched up the film rights and Francis and Landis were playing themselves with Martha Raye and Mitzi Mayfair as the other Jills.
The action and romance was filled out with appearances of Fox stars like
Alice Faye, Betty Grable, and Carmen Miranda plus Jimmy Dorsey and his Orchestra. The film was an unexpected hit in 1944.
Francis hoped that it would show
her in a new light and lead to better post-war
roles.
But peace
came and there were no offers. After
being turned down everywhere, Francis swallowed
her pride and inked a deal to produce and star in her own pictures
for Monogram Pictures, one of the poorest of the Poverty Row studios. She
made three solid but shot-on-a-shoestring melodramas under
the deal, Divorce, Allotment Wives, and Wife Wanted. All three films are highly regarded by those few
who have seen them. Despite their quality Monogram did not have the distribution muscle to get them in wide
release. The company typically fed third
and fourth rate movie houses and drive-ins
which could not afford major studio releases.
Their audiences preferred westerns, detective
yarns, and other low budget action movies. There just wasn’t much of an audience for
ambitious women’s movies featuring a fading actress, like the one she played in
the final film, Wife Wanted.
Allotment Wives, a tough film noir, was one of three films Francis produced and starred in for Poverty Row Monogram Pictures. |
That was the
end of Kay Francis’s movie
career. She returned to the stage and had some success with regional touring companies and summer stock. In 1948 she was badly injured and scarred in a freak radiator accident. After that she did some radio and made two television appearances in 1950 and ’51, both long lost.
She became
something of a recluse, spending
most of her time in virtual seclusion
in her New York apartment and her estate near Falmouth on Cape Cod. She had no children or living relatives.
In 1966 she
was diagnosed with breast cancer and died despite
undergoing a mastectomy on August
28, 1966 in New York. As requested her remains were cremated and scattered at an
undisclosed location. In the end she
was nearly as obscure and forgotten as she once claimed that she wanted to be.
She left her
estate, valued at well over a
million dollars, to her favorite charity Guide Dogs for the Blind.
No comments:
Post a Comment