
Her husky voice still resonates somewhere in the back of old-timers' clogged grey matter. ("You know how to whistle, don't you, Steve? You just put your lips together and ... blow.") That line was almost her trademark and, like any well-known trademark, it became too familiar to stir real passion in real, messy life off the silver screen. The line may have been emblematic of her whole rise -- and decline -- as an American symbol. The once daring has a way of becoming only cliché. A celebrity she definitely was, but a great actress? If so, it was hard to see it inside the glossy cover.
There are stars and there are satellites, and even the finest moon shines with only a reflected light. And she was mainly
If you doubt that, think of how many roles Bogart starred in as Bogart -- not just noir gangster movies but classics like "
Yes, there are remarkable, even inseparable twosomes in our visual memories -- Tracy and Hepburn,
It was said of
Bacall tried to keep up with Bogie, but she had to know she was the warm-up act, not the main event, and there were times when she clearly resented it. "I think I've damned well earned the right to be judged on my own," she once said, but wouldn't have had to say it if it were true. Hers was a derivative fame despite her claim to being a star in her own right
Even that trademark pose of hers, the downcast look, the soft purr, the seductive layer of toughness, she owed to one of her first scenes with Bogart: "My hand was shaking, my head was shaking, the cigarette was shaking, I was mortified. The harder I tried to stop, the more I shook. ... I realized that one way to hold my trembling head still was to keep it down, chin low, almost to my chest, and eyes up at Bogart. It worked and turned out to be the beginning of The Look." Her naturally low voice didn't hurt, either. It was effective, but you wouldn't confuse it with natural, while Bogart was ... Bogart.
Ah, yes, The Look. It didn't have to be spelled out, as in this more explicit age. It was a subtler and therefore sexier era. You might as well compare
Hard-boiled New Yorker or not,
Tough but tender, and utterly devoted to him, she would see the stoical Bogart through his last, terminal bout with cancer. He would die at 57. And she would go on, a still familiar figure, contented, maybe, a proud mother of three, involved with her four grandchildren, still working now and then, but ... never as happy as she was with Bogart.
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Paul Greenberg is the Pulitzer-winning editorial page editor of the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette.
