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- <text id=91TT2109>
- <title>
- Sep. 23, 1991: First Person Singular
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Sep. 23, 1991 Lost Tribes, Lost Knowledge
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BOOKS, Page 70
- First Person Singular
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By AMELIA WEISS
- </p>
- <qt>
- <l>ME: STORIES OF MY LIFE</l>
- <l>By Katharine Hepburn</l>
- <l>Knopf; 420 pages; $25</l>
- </qt>
- <p> Katharine Hepburn is an odd bird. Hemorrhaging after an
- eye operation, she yells to her chauffeur, "David, take off
- your shoes and socks and your pants--and get into the tub and
- try to get the blood out of the stuff I throw in there." With
- her lover Howard Hughes, two of the skinniest eccentrics of our
- time, she dives naked off the wing of his seaplane. In a
- chapter about another beau, the agent Leland Hayward, Hepburn
- talks about living in Los Angeles' Coldwater Canyon, living in
- Benedict Canyon, finding a snake in her living room, buying real
- estate and embarrassing a young doctor at lunch. And that's the
- story of Leland Hayward. There is also a recipe for currant
- cake, and four pages devoted to changing a tire on I-95. If
- there's someone who has written eloquently about Katharine
- Hepburn, it isn't Katharine Hepburn.
- </p>
- <p> But it's pointless to knock Me. Critics have shot more
- arrows at Hepburn than you might find piercing the sides of St.
- Sebastian. Her voice was usually described in terms reserved for
- plumbing; her breasts were too small, her neck too scrawny; she
- wasn't sexy enough to play Scarlett O'Hara; she was labeled
- "box-office poison." And the toughest critic, Hepburn herself,
- says, "I was a terrible pig."
- </p>
- <p> There is no sensationalism here. Hepburn may not be her
- own Boswell, but neither is she Kitty Kelley. "There's the
- bedroom," a guide to Hepburn's life might say. "And there's the
- bed, and there's the chest of drawers, and there's the vanity.
- They had a great old time here, and it was fun. Ladies and
- gentlemen, this way, please."
- </p>
- <p> She first shared that bedroom with Luddy--Ludlow Ogden
- Smith--her only husband. Though they separated almost
- immediately, he remained a part of her family, and she chastises
- herself for having abused him. "Listen to this," says Hepburn.
- "I made him change his name...to S. Ogden Ludlow. I didn't
- want to be called Mrs. Smith. I thought it was melancholic."
- Her true love, of course, was Spencer Tracy. "He didn't like
- this or that. I changed this and that...Food--we ate what
- he liked. We did what he liked. We lived a life which he liked.
- This gave me great pleasure." With the same warmth that marks
- her film acting, she plays a final love scene that is more
- intimate than any revelation of sexual secrets. As if this were
- their last movie together, she re-enacts the night of his death.
- </p>
- <p> But most of the romantic stuff is pretty dull. Much
- livelier--and full of slapstick--are chapters devoted to
- disaster: the hurricane that demolished her home; the auto
- accident that fractured her ankle. And there is one hysterical
- vision of a day spent weeding with David Lean. "It's absolutely
- no use," says Lean, "unless you get the root."
- </p>
- <p> Me reflects its author's personality perfectly; it even
- replicates the tremor in her voice with dashes and sentence
- fragments. An odd bird Hepburn be, but then so is Rose Sayer
- pouring gin over the side of the African Queen. And Jo March
- sliding down a banister. And Susan Vance singing to a leopard.
- And incredible Tracy Lord--lighted from above, in a George
- Cukor close-up, dressed by Adrian, and kissed by Jimmy Stewart
- in the moonlight. For lovers of film, it's very hard for the
- artist who made these women to lay an egg.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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