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- <text>
- <title>
- (Aug. 31, 1992) Woody Allen:Scenes from a Breakup
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Aug. 31, 1992 Woody Allen: Cries and Whispers
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER STORIES, Page 54
- WOODY ALLEN
- Scenes from a Breakup
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A storied love affair crashes in shards as Mia Farrow accuses
- Woody Allen of incest and child molestation. For the prurient,
- it was a delight; for Allen and for Farrow's motley family,
- a piteous descent into hell.
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Corliss--With reporting by Georgia Harbison/New
- York, with other bureaus
- </p>
- <p> Woody and Mia. No last names, please, for the king and
- queen of Manhattan's glitterati. For a decade they were the
- wax-doll couple atop a cake at the wedding of popular art and
- social responsibility. He made, and she starred in, movies that
- played like fantasies of their partnership. Offscreen, their
- liaison produced the portrait of an ideal postmodern family.
- Unmarried, they lived apart yet loved together. While nurturing
- a rainbow coalition of privileged American kids and children
- salvaged from the Third World, Mom and Dad lived the city's most
- public private lives. Tout New York was their movie set, Madison
- Square Garden their all-star playground, the chic eatery
- Elaine's their kitchen. Central Park was their shared backyard.
- From their respective apartment windows on opposite sides of the
- park, they would wave love at each other.
- </p>
- <p> That patch of green is now their DMZ. Woody Allen,
- America's most revered and introspective filmmaker, and Mia
- Farrow, the waif who matured into a madonna in reel and real
- life, are at war. What began as a skirmish over custody rights
- of three children escalated early last week when Allen declared
- that he was in love with one of Farrow's adopted daughters,
- Soon-Yi Farrow Previn. Then the tabloid artillery went
- ballistic. The Connecticut police were investigating a complaint
- of child molestation against Allen. It was revealed that Farrow
- discovered the infidelity when she found nude photos of Soon-Yi
- that Allen had taken. Farrow was mobilizing her loyal kids,
- sending them to newspapers and TV shows, to defend her
- motherhood. Those close to Allen charged Farrow with beating
- Soon-Yi upon learning of the affair, and of mistreating her
- adopted brood. Each day's accusations were grotesque--and, as
- they say, growing tesquer.
- </p>
- <p> This was not mere celebrity dish; this was rancid food for
- thought. The clash raised troubling questions for every nouveau
- Brady Bunch family, every jerry-built alliance of siblings who
- are more like classmates and parents who may be only lovers.
- What is incest? How affectionate can a man be to those in his
- care? What is a father? How much distance must he put between
- himself and his unofficial children before he is free to date
- one of them?
- </p>
- <p> The battle of Woody and Mia has already claimed
- casualties, real and figurative. Allen's life and eminence seem
- permanently branded; the only major filmmaker since Charlie
- Chaplin to be commonly referred to by his first name is now
- likely to be remembered in part, as Chaplin is, as a despoiler
- of young women. Manhattan divorce attorney Raoul Felder,
- alluding to another disgraced director, says of Allen, "He can
- put his career in an envelope and mail it to Roman Polanski."
- </p>
- <p> Farrow's reputation as an All-World Mother, selflessly
- adopting children to show them a good life and maternal love,
- is shrouded in suspicion. Soon-Yi, who says she is 21, has
- tumbled at least in her siblings' eyes from child-woman to Other
- Woman. Dylan, the seven-year-old girl adopted by Farrow and
- Allen, is scarred by the accusations of child abuse. And the
- other children must be suffering psychic retinal damage from the
- blinding heat of the infotainment dragon. Another casualty is
- the fond notion--held by many otherwise cynical folk on both
- coasts and by not a few people in between--that the Woody-Mia
- story was a liaison for the ages. This was the last light that
- failed.
- </p>
- <p> The moral: Never believe in the fairy tales movie people
- create. They will buoy your spirit and, with the flick of a
- headline, crush it. Another moral: Don't always heed what you
- read. The tabloid newspapers, especially in New York City, have
- feasted on this fracas, one-upping each other daily in the body
- count of revoltin' developments. With all the soiled laundry of
- unverified allegations, the facts are hard to determine, let
- alone the truth. Every journalist is, perforce, a garbologist.
- </p>
- <p> So what can we find in the rubble?
- </p>
- <p> Allen and Farrow have been a couple since 1980. For the
- first five years, their affair was carried on mostly at his
- apartment, rarely at hers, which for years has been overflowing
- with kids and pets: Farrow now has four biological and seven
- adopted children. "She likes to spend tons of time with kids,"
- he told author Eric Lax in a biography published last year, in
- enumerating the opposites that attracted him to her. "I like to
- spend...only a limited time with kids." But the warming
- intensity of their companionship led Allen to a decision he had
- avoided in two marriages, to Harlene Rosen and actress Louise
- Lasser, and in a long affair with actress Diane Keaton: to have
- a child. Satchel (named for ageless pitcher Satchel Paige) was
- born in 1987. In this Allen found the joy of fatherhood--and
- of his relationship with Farrow. Mia, Woody told Lax, "has
- brought a completely different, meaningful dimension to my
- life."
- </p>
- <p> Allen, by all accounts, radiated a fatherly devotion
- toward Satchel and the two children he adopted with Farrow:
- Dylan and 14-year-old Moses. Says an old friend, TV personality
- Dick Cavett: "He completely rearranged his man-killingly busy
- life so that he could lavish time and money and attention on the
- children, probably more than many orthodox parents do. He'd get
- up at 5 and religiously make it over there seven days a week."
- And Farrow was devoted to his devotion. But after Satchel's
- birth, the romance began to wane. Their partnership has been
- platonic for four years, Allen says, and it is not known what
- efforts either party made for sexual companionship in the
- interim.
- </p>
- <p> Allen frequently escorted Farrow's children to sports
- events, movies, the circus. Two years ago, Allen, who says he
- had previously paid little attention to Soon-Yi, began taking
- her to Knicks games at the Garden. Allen said in an interview
- with TIME that their sexual relationship blossomed late last
- year. It was not until January that Farrow learned of the
- affair. Yet the director and his star continued working on their
- new film Husbands and Wives, due to be released on Sept. 23.
- </p>
- <p> A few weeks ago, Allen visited Farrow's family in her
- Connecticut home. Shortly thereafter, Farrow talked with Dylan,
- and recorded the conversations on videotape, to determine
- whether the child had been abused. Farrow took Dylan to a
- physician, who, obliged by Connecticut law to do so, reported
- the claim of abuse to the police, and Allen was a candidate for
- questioning. Within a week he filed for custody of his three
- children. And early last week he publicly announced his love for
- Soon-Yi. In a phrase echoing his declaration about Farrow, he
- said Soon-Yi "has and continues to turn around my life in a
- wonderfully positive way."
- </p>
- <p> It didn't stay wonderful. As New York Newsday blared in
- its Tuesday headline: IT'S GETTING UGLY. The Connecticut
- charges hit the papers, and Farrow's support team started
- spreading the bad news. Her friend Maria Roach released a Farrow
- letter, eloquent in its rage and despair: "I have spent more
- than a dozen years with a man who would destroy me and corrupt
- my daughter, leading her into a betrayal of her mother and her
- principles, leaving her morally bankrupt with the bond between
- us demolished. I can think of no crueler way to lose a child or
- a lover." Another adopted daughter, Lark, 18, visited the
- offices of the New York Post, telling of a traumatic powwow
- Farrow held with her older children during which Soon-Yi was
- told to choose between Woody and Mommy.
- </p>
- <p> In addition to the lawyers advising her on the custody
- case, Farrow retained attorney Alan Dershowitz, who has acquired
- the odor of a Lamborghini ambulance chaser for his showboating
- defenses of the rich and heinous (Claus von Bulow, Leona
- Helmsley, Mike Tyson). Dershowitz contended that Allen's custody
- suit was "concocted" to obscure the issue of child molestation.
- He denied Allen's charge that Farrow, who took no alimony in her
- divorces from Frank Sinatra and composer-conductor Andre Previn,
- was demanding $7 million as a payoff to retract the child-abuse
- accusation. "Baloney," said Dershowitz; Farrow only "wants her
- family back. She wants to protect her children from Woody. She
- does not want him to have unrestricted visitation. Protection,
- not money, has been her main concern."
- </p>
- <p> In midweek the Allen empire struck back. His lawyers
- pointed out, as Allen had, that child abuse is an issue often
- spuriously raised in custody cases and that the filmmaker had
- passed a polygraph test on the issue of molesting his kids.
- Farrow had recently adopted Tam, a blind Vietnamese girl, and
- Isaiah, a crack baby. "To bring all these children with various
- disabilities and other factors into the family is of great
- concern to him," said one of Allen's attorneys, Harvey Sladkus,
- painting his client as more concerned for the young children's
- welfare than Farrow was.
- </p>
- <p> Friends and family rushed to defend Allen and attack
- Farrow. The day after she allegedly learned of her child's
- molestation, she made a date with the costume designer of
- Allen's next film--not the behavior of a woman who believed
- her ex-lover and director to have preyed on her daughter. Farrow
- was a daft and brutal mother, the Allen camp said: she beat
- Soon-Yi and tore up her clothes in anger at the girl's affair.
- They whispered, as Soon-Yi finally said publicly, that the other
- children had fallen into "theft, alcohol, arrests, severe
- truancy and other symptoms."
- </p>
- <p> Allen's sister, Letty Aronson, a vice president at
- Manhattan's Museum of Television and Radio, catalogs Farrow's
- sins: "Mia adopts children in a manic nature--not for their
- needs but for hers. She favors her biological children while
- treating the older adopted kids as servants. I think Mia always
- had a grand plan to meet Woody, have a relationship with him,
- be in his films and eventually have his child. Once she did,
- things began to deteriorate. But even after she knew about
- Woody's affair, she still wanted to continue her relationship.
- If he gave up Soon-Yi, Mia would make the children accessible
- and drop the charges. She'd even want him back."
- </p>
- <p> Aronson denies that Allen was a father figure to Soon-Yi.
- "Andre Previn was her father," she says. "He supported her; he
- visited her; they saw him on vacations." She also disputes the
- image of Farrow as an Earth-Mother Teresa. Early this year,
- Aronson says, Mia journeyed to Vietnam to adopt a boy, and she
- "dragged Satchel along--he wasn't even four--exposing him
- to illnesses and disease." The adoptee was using a wheelchair.
- When Mia returned, says Aronson, she took the boy to a doctor
- and learned he might also be slightly retarded. "That was not
- a handicap that suited her, so she pawned him off on another
- family. She gave him back to the woman who had arranged the
- adoption."
- </p>
- <p> Attending to this misery, thoughtful people feel sick.
- Then they pose questions--not whethers but whys: why Allen
- stayed with Farrow through her adoption obsession; why Farrow
- remained allied with Allen after discovering the affair; why
- both are forcing or allowing their families, including their
- children, to shill for them in the media. And of course, why
- Allen could not have shown the slightest moral etiquette,
- resisted temptation and kept his hands off Soon-Yi.
- </p>
- <p> Allen's argument goes like this: Once upon a time, he and
- Mia were together, adopted kids, had one. When they stopped
- having sex, it was as if they were divorced but retained joint
- custody of the children. He was surely divorced emotionally; he
- could see no betrayal of Mia by turning to Soon-Yi. Perhaps Mia
- was still in love with him, assuming she had any love left
- over. But if Farrow's love turned to total obsession--the
- woman-scorned syndrome, which could provoke fantasies of child
- abuse--Allen's had long since become total detachment. That
- is why he admits not the slightest ethical error or ambiguity
- in his affair with Soon-Yi. It is also what blinds him to one
- crucial fact: he may not have considered himself Soon-Yi's
- father; but he must have known that Farrow considered herself
- Soon-Yi's mother.
- </p>
- <p> It is said, perhaps too easily, that we marry our parents--fall in love, that is, with people who resemble them. It is
- also said that we repeat our parents' behavior. Children of
- alcoholics are more likely to be alcoholics; abused kids too
- often become abusing parents. In this case we can see, or at
- least surmise, some piquant re-enactments of unusual life
- stories.
- </p>
- <p> Mia was born into Hollywood royalty, the third of seven
- children of actress Maureen O'Sullivan (who played an
- unflattering version of herself in Allen's Hannah and Her
- Sisters) and director John Farrow (whose films include Sorority
- House, Full Confession, Married and in Love and Easy Come, Easy
- Go). As a child Mia had do-gooder dreams of becoming a
- Schweitzer-like doctor in the tropics; each Christmas she staged
- a pageant and sent the proceeds to the March of Dimes. The
- actress scored hits as a moody teen on TV's Peyton Place and a
- wife giving birth to the devil's son in Rosemary's Baby. At 21,
- Soon-Yi's present age, Mia married a famous entertainer in his
- 50s: Sinatra. After the divorce she was befriended by songwriter
- Dory Previn; she had an affair with Previn's husband Andre and
- became pregnant. They married, had three biological children and
- adopted three more. Soon-Yi was one of them.
- </p>
- <p> Allen was born into Bronx serfdom, the son of Martin and
- Nettie Konigsberg, still happily married after 62 years. His
- psychograph is to be found mainly in the emotional autobiography
- he has transformed into comedy routines and then movie art. As
- Ice-T can attest, it is treacherous to mistake the singer for
- the song. And it is presumptuous for the public to believe it
- "knows" Woody Allen. And yet Allen's work presents itself as so
- nakedly, ostentatiously about himself that it seems fair to
- subject it to a critic's equivalent of the psychoanalysis he has
- undergone for decades. Many of his monologues and films have
- dealt not just with middle-aged men falling in love with
- teenagers or infantile women but with the titanic, tragicomic
- struggle of intellect and lust.
- </p>
- <p> It is a struggle, his films say, of man with himself.
- Women are the objects, the prizes, the threat. Perhaps this is
- why he has often portrayed them as voracious or vapid, why a
- hint of misogyny courses through his oeuvre. Allen's first wife
- brought a $1 million suit charging Allen with "holding her up
- to scorn and ridicule" after finding herself, as French critic
- Robert Benayoun writes in a sympathetic biography of Allen, "the
- source of numerous stories [that] turned her private life into
- a national joke." Keaton and Farrow, his two longtime romantic
- companions and frequent co-stars, often played neurotic
- child-women, stuttering to finish a sentence, in wry awe of the
- man in their grasp: Woody Allen. He may have idolized them too,
- but with the indulgent devotion of a grownup to his precocious
- daughter.
- </p>
- <p> These days, as notorious gentlemen from Rob Lowe to
- Clarence Thomas have proved, every scandal is a career move.
- Indiscretions that movie stars once paid to suppress they now
- discuss on Oprah and Arsenio; those modern-day analysts' couches
- have become celebrities' thrones. Allen the filmmaker can use
- this publicity; his recent movies have been flops. (An industry
- axiom: everybody knows Woody Allen, but nobody goes to his
- movies.) It is even likely that the brouhaha will boost Husbands
- and Wives at the box office, at least until people decide
- whether they like it or not. For Farrow the actress, the spin
- is not so profitable. For years she has taken the exclusive role
- of Allen's Galatea. Now that's over. She has been replaced in
- his next project, Manhattan Murder Mystery, by another actress:
- Diane Keaton.
- </p>
- <p> The human heart is a dark forest. Most of us are strangers
- to one another and to ourselves. At this late date in human
- devolution, we should be surprised by no atrocity, no anarchic
- spasm of the emotions, no paternal love turned to lust, no
- feelings of rejection twisted into an urge to revenge. We should
- be surprised only by our surprise. The innocent prurience of our
- tabloid souls suggests that a deep part of us craves for people
- to be good and for beginnings, at least, to be happy.
- </p>
- <p> So think of Allen as Woody, the movie gnome taking
- pleasure in the pinwheeling of his mind and in the lust for
- romantic love. And think of Farrow as Mamma Mia, years ago, just
- after she had adopted Soon-Yi. To her friend (and onetime
- stepdaughter) Nancy Sinatra, Mia wrote this: "My children are
- a continuous joy. The latest is Soon-Yi (aged 6, 7 or 8--we're
- saying 7). She's from Korea--was found abandoned in the
- streets of Seoul--with rickets, malnutrition--even her
- finger nails had fallen off, she had lice and sores everywhere.
- Now she speaks English and is learning to read, write, play
- piano, dance ballet & ride a horse. She is also learning that
- people can be believed in and even loved. These are golden times
- and I am aware of that every single second."
- </p>
- <p> The thing to be astonished by, every single second, is not
- that love can be tarnished but that times can ever be golden.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-