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Magazine

TIME PACIFIC
December 4, 2000 | NO. 48

Tallulah Times Three
What becomes a legend most? A sudden rash of stage tributes to her divinely dissolute career
By RICHARD ZOGLIN

She came from a prominent alabama political family-her grandfather and uncle were U.S. Senators; her father, William Brockman Bankhead, served as Speaker of the House. After winning a beauty contest at age 15, Tallulah Bankhead moved to New York City, where she became an actress, as well as an attractive side dish at the Algonquin Round Table. She created some legendary stage roles-Regina in The Little Foxes, Sabina in The Skin of Our Teeth-though Hollywood never really took to her (Hitchcock used her best in Lifeboat).

Most people today remember her, if they remember her at all, for that husky, bourbon-soaked voice and her outsize personality ("Dahhhling"), emblems of a kind of theatrical glamour that was even then going out of style. Drinking and chain-smoking eventually wore her down, and the actress, who died in 1968, spent her last years parodying herself in TV guest spots (the celebrity who moves next door to Lucy and Ricky Ricardo) and polishing her own fading image. To a fan who asked if she was really Tallulah Bankhead, she reportedly answered, "What's left of her."

There's quite a bit left of her, actually. After at least seven books about her life, an off-Broadway musical in the '80s (starring Helen Gallagher) and dozens of female impersonators, the deep-voiced diva is back in no fewer than three plays. Tovah Feldshuh is the star and co-author of Tallulah Hallelujah!, an off-Broadway play in the form of a fictional United Services Organization show with Bankhead as host. Nan Schmid, formerly of the Second City improv troupe, wrote and stars in off-Broadway's Dahling!, in which eight actors portray more than 40 characters in Bankhead's life. And Kathleen Turner, last seen as Mrs. Robinson in The Graduate in London, is touring America in a Broadway-bound, one-woman show called (three guesses) Tallulah.

Granting that the stage bio is among the most debased of theatrical forms (a decent impersonation, a little library research and-presto!-you've got a play), Bankhead offers unusually rich material. The masochistic anecdotes just keep on coming. In Tallulah we learn that the star once fired a young Marlon Brando from her play The Eagle Has Two Heads because she couldn't stand him "yawning and pawing his privates during my speeches." In Tallulah Hallelujah! we find out that she had gonorrhea, wanted the Bette Davis part in Jezebel and turned down the role of Blanche in the original production of A Streetcar Named Desire. In Dahling! we watch her throw wild '20s parties, experiment with cocaine and bisexuality, and toss off one of her more famous quips from the bathroom. Asking for toilet paper, she's told there is none. A tissue? Sorry, no. "Well," says Tallulah, "do you have two fives for a ten?"

Dahling! is the most information packed but also the loopiest of this Bankhead bonanza; it opens with Tallulah as a squalling baby at her mother's funeral and trots her famous friends-Ethel Barrymore, Noël Coward, Eleanor Roosevelt-on and off the stage so fast it looks like the lightning round on Hollywood Squares. Tallulah Hallelujah! is as much cabaret act as play; Feldshuh, camping it up before a uso crowd in 1956, gives a dead-on, vibrantly self-aware performance, spiced with some lovely, low-register renditions of standards like I'll Be Seeing You. Turner's Tallulah is the most traditional star vehicle; it is set in Bankhead's lush, lavender-colored bedroom on a day in 1948 when she is about to play host at a political fund raiser. The profanity-laden script by Sandra Ryan Heyward is being reworked for Broadway, but Turner (maybe the only actress who doesn't need voice exercises to do Tallulah) flounces about the stage with panache and, occasionally, the poignance of a woman who confesses that it's "exhausting, this business of being more than you are."

Why, all of a sudden, so much Tallulah? "There are not many characters to play for a woman my age," says Turner, 46, with refreshing pragmatism. "And this is a great character. You just get to pull out all the stops." Feldshuh decided to write her own Tallulah play after starring in an off-Broadway musical about her (another one!) two years ago, Tallulah's Party. "She was a groundbreaker for women," says Feldshuh. "She was a self-created woman. She didn't take no for an answer. And she would not give up her youth." She's also a reminder of an age when larger-than-life stars could soar high and crash hard, and we didn't have to watch them cry about it on TV talk shows. Unless Oprah too is planning a Tallulah retrospective.
 

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December 4, 2000 | NO. 48

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As lawyers clash in the courts and electoral deadlines loom, the bitterness grows between Vice President Al Gore and Governor George W. Bush-and among their supporters

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THE SENATE: Gridlock Looming
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LEGAL MANEUVERS: In the Labyrinth of the Law
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VIEWPONTS: Of Courts and Campaigns
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DAVID BOIES: Battling for Every Ballot
Margaret Carlson on the superlawyer turned street fighter

THE FLORIDA LEGISLATURE: Getting in the Game
Dominated by angry Republicans, the body wants to play

AL GORE: Spoiling or Fighting?
Peggy Noonan on why Gore should give in graciously;
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NEW ZEALAND: A Yen for Whale Meat
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T H E   A R T S
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THEATER: Tallulah Bankhead takes to the stage

BOOKS: Kapow! A superb novel about the comics
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