Over her long and
storied career, which included 12 Academy Award
nominations and a record four wins for Best Actress,
Katharine Hepburn personified a peculiarly American,
dignified grit.
And with her
100th birthday approaching on Saturday, she's being
celebrated for the Kate we knew, even as hidden elements of
her personality continue to surface.
Turner Classic
Movies is remembering Hepburn, who died in June 2003 at
96, by showing several of her films--from her 1932
debut, A Bill of Divorcement, to 1967's Guess Who's Coming to Dinner, which earned her the second of her
Oscars.
Robert Osborne,
the channel's host, believes her appeal came from ''her
class and her oddity and her uniqueness. She was a wonderful
role model for women, being independent, being her own
person. She was one of those like Bette Davis, like
Barbara Stanwyck--she gave license to women to be
independent. I think that's one of the great things she did.
''That was a
different era then,'' he added. ''Even common farm women
wanted to be classy. Today, everyone wants to be
unclassy-- people show up in restaurants in
major cities looking like hell. In those days people
came to New York and they brought their best clothes and
they dressed up and went out. It's so alien to the way
they feel today. People loved Hepburn because she was
so classy--she was somebody to aspire to.''
That's an image
she crafted with great calculation in the name of fame,
William J. Mann says in his recent biography, Kate: The
Woman Who Was Hepburn. From her real birth date to just how
wealthy and wacky her New England family was to the
true nature of her longtime relationships with women and
with Spencer Tracy, Hepburn projected a very
specific--and not always truthful--version
of herself, Mann says.
Over three years
of research, which included letters and documents
released after her death, Mann was surprised to find that
''the real Katharine Hepburn turned out to be even
more fascinating than the one we had on the movie
screen. She was far more ambitious, far more driven, far
more shrewd and more honest and more human too than we
thought.
''I think she
would have had an army of publicists around her today,'' he
continued. ''In her day, she did it all herself, which makes
the creation of the mythic Hepburn even more
impressive. She was able to create this legend about
herself, she turned herself into this paragon, and she did
it pretty much single-handedly.''
Despite the
laurels and admiration she received as her career
progressed, she wasn't always known for the quality of
her acting. She was, after all, the inspiration for
the phrase ''box-office poison,'' which a theater
chain owner dubbed her after a series of flops in the mid
1930s.
''She was a great
personality--I think she was a really good actress but
a great personality,'' Osborne said. ''She became a
star because of her personality and also because of
her daring to be different, doing it by her own rules.
I think she made up her mind she was going to be a success
and forced it on all of us.''
Osborne mentioned
the June 2004 auction of Hepburn's personal items in
New York--things she kept from long ago because she
knew she would be important someday and that they'd be
worth something.
''It is
[arrogance] but not misplaced arrogance,'' he said.
Mann got the idea
for his book after seeing the emotional response to her
death. While many books had been written about
her--and she'd come up with one of her own,
1991's Me: Stories of My Life--he
realized a full, true biography of Hepburn could never have
been written while she was alive.
''She had
transcended that idea of being a star of Hollywood movies
into being something much more. She had really become
a symbol of American character. I saw that by the way
people reacted to her death--there was such an
outpouring. I remember being in San Francisco promoting
another book and people were crying in the hotel lobby
looking at the television. Then I got back to New York
and the flowers were piling up outside her house in
Turtle Bay.
''This woman,''
he wondered, ''how did she do it? How did she become this
institution?''
''She said, 'The
public thinks of me as an old building,''' Osborne
recalled. ''And I think it's true. They would take her for
granted, they really liked her.''
He believes her
best work was in Alice Adams (1935) while Mann
points to Holiday and Bringing Up Baby, roles in 1938 that crystallized her
career.
''In both films
you got a sense of the real Hepburn--subversive,
rebellious Katharine Hepburn, always upending
expectations,'' he said. ''The African Queen
(1951) transformed her into what we think of her
today--the noble, gruff spinster, afraid of
nothing.
''She didn't have
the range of roles Bette Davis or Barbara Stanwyck did,
or Meryl Streep,'' Mann added. (Or as Dorothy Parker
famously put it, Hepburn ''ran the gamut of emotions
from A to B.'') ''But when she played close to
herself, she was so good. In something like Little
Women (1933) or Sylvia Scarlett (1935), she was
so good because she was essentially playing herself.''
Hepburn found she
could be herself off-screen, as well, in the coastal
Connecticut town of Old Saybrook, where she summered with
her family as a tomboyish child and spent her final
days as an adult. The town is celebrating her life
Saturday with a benefit birthday party--giant cake
and all--with the money raised going to the Katharine
Hepburn Cultural Arts Center and Theatre, which is
scheduled for completion in 2008.
''A lot of press
have asked me why we kept her so secret--she was one
of our own, I think. She had a life here,'' said
Linanne Lee, executive director of the Old Saybrook
Chamber of Commerce. ''You'd see her playing golf or
tennis, riding her bike. Sometimes she'd have dark glasses
on and a beautiful scarf.
''You'd be in a
store and you'd hear that voice,'' Lee said. ''It was
very distinctive, you could definitely hear her.''
If Hepburn were
alive today--young, vibrant, and about to burst onto
the scene in Hollywood--she might not have
become an actress at all, Osborne said.
''She'd be the
head of Vogue magazine. She'd be like Tina
Brown, running something, running a corporation,'' he said.
''Most of the parts offered to women, and the public seems
to want women in, wouldn't appeal to Katharine
Hepburn.''
But if she were
to become an actress today, Osborne suggested, she'd
likely have a meaty, eclectic career similar to that of Cate
Blanchett, who won an Oscar for 2004's The
Aviator for playing--that's
right--Katharine Hepburn. (Christy Lemire, AP)