Take a trip
back to the early days of Hollywood and the flickers (movies), when you read The Girls in the Picture.
I read the
book right after a presentation by Melanie Benjamin about her most recent book.
This novel is timely, published just before the Oscars and during the
discussions of “me-too” and “women’s voices in Hollywood.”
The title
didn’t come from the idea of movie pictures, Melanie said, but from old photos
where Mary Pickford and Frances Marion were often the only women in the room
(surrounded by men) during important events, such as the founding of United
Artists.
Besides
giving us a close-up view of the new movie industry, she tells this story
through the voices of two powerful women who became friends, during that time,
imagining what they were thinking and how the movies changed.
The book is
fiction, just as their movies were, but often truth can be revealed through
fiction. Each person seeing a movie or reading a book sees it through their
eyes.
Silent movie
star Mary Pickford and writer Frances Marion met during the confusion that was
early Hollywood and became best friends and movers and shakers in that world.
As a writer,
I could identify more with Frances and her view of this emerging new method of
communication. Some thoughts from the fictional Frances Marion that I could
identify with:
”How fun-how freeing- it had been to put myself in other
people’s shoes! To imagine their lives, their relationships, what they might
say, even if it was merely party chatter. I wasn’t acting only one role, I was
acting several—all of them—all intoxicatingly different.”
“This is it, this is what I was looking for, waiting for, all
those years. This flowering, this opening of hearts and eyes and minds, great
vistas, all through the creation of people like me – people whose imaginations
were too big for real life, so we had to build another.”
“Perhaps the simplest formula for a plot is: invent some
colorful personalities, involve them in an apparently hopeless complication or
predicament, then extricate them in a logical and dramatic way that brings them
happiness.”
These two
women were very different, but both loved this new world, Hollywood. Mary could
bring the emotions alive in front of the camera and was an astute business
woman, while Frances was a writer and director.
Mary and
Douglas Fairbanks married, became the king and queen of Hollywood during that
era. Pickfair was like the Buckingham Palace of California and they entertained
royally. Frances and Fred Thompson married and the four honeymooned together.
Both women
were far more than just their jobs. Besides their movies, they were
instrumental in forming United Artists,
the Screen Writers Guild and the Academy Awards and other Hollywood
institutions. Pickford won the second Academy Award and Marion won two Academy Writing
Awards.”
I had
trouble putting this book down, although I knew it was not going to be a happy
story all the way to the end. Life happens to all of us and not necessarily the
way we want. I hope you enjoy “The Girls in the Picture” as much as I did.
Thanks to Melanie Benjamin for a wonderful story and a good presentation and
compliments to Penquin Random House, Carroll Community College and Carroll
County Public Library.
I’ve also
enjoyed Melanie’s books, The
Autobiography of Mrs. Tom Thumb
(which I read in 2012) and The Aviator’s
Wife (2015) and look forward to reading more of her books. Okay. For those who have stuck with me, here is another quote from Frances Marion who volunteered and went to war (WWI).
“It was odd, I knew; I’d come to war for a lot of reasons,
one of which, if I were being honest, was to gain experience; experience to
write about. Because that’s what writers did; they lived, then they wrote about
that living.”
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