- CONVERSATIONS IN THE RAW -

- Dialogues, Monologues, and Selected Short Subjects -

By Rex Reed

- The World Publishing Company, 1969 -

Excerpts from pages 273 - 286

LEONARD WHITING AND OLIVIA HUSSEY

(ROMEO AND JULIET)

 

 

Once upon a time...

It was Saturday morning in London, one of those marble-gray, rainy- wet-cold-windless mornings in March when everybody sleeps late and traffic moves slowly in a soupy haze of muted headlights. But on this particular rainy morning there was excitement in the air. The Nazi Party holding a rally in Trafalgar Square, 3,000 anti-Vietnam demonstrators were marching on the American Embassy, Her majesty Queen Elizabeth was bickering with Rhodesia and over at the Savoy Hotel two teenagers were getting ready to play Romeo and Juliet.

They had been playing the star-crossed lovers for almost a year in front of the wide- screen Technicolor cameras of Italian super-colossal movie director, Franco Zeffirelli, and now they would play the parts once more for an even bigger audience. In three days their film would be paid the supreme tribute in England of being the one highly exalted film of 1968 chosen for the 22nd Royal Film Performance. This is the biggest movie event of the year in London. The Royal Family comes. And although past years have seen the unveiling of such all-time cinematic masterpieces as ROB ROY and MOVE OVER, DARLING, hopes were especiall high this year, since one of England's all time most cherished Shakespearean plays would be given the "Zeffirelli" treatment, making 1968 the second year in a row for such a phenomenon. (In 1967, the film was Zeffirelli's TAMING OF THE SHREW.) What's more, Romeo and Juliet would be played for the first time on screen by teenagers. What's more, they do a nude love scene. The press is flying in from all over the world to interview them (not necessarily because of the nude scene.) Pratically everyone has forgotten about the Nazi rally and the angry marchers at the American Embassy and Rhodesia have temporarily moved to page 4 of the Daily Express with a new page-one headline: QUEEN TO SEE NUDE JULIET! Sells papers.

 

 

They're here! The press agent leads the way to Juliet's suite and rings the bell, listening for lovely medieval madrigals played on a four-string lute. Instead, the walls jump with Otis Redding wailing funky soul music on a portable phonograph. "Your ringing the wrong bell, that's the bell for the maid," said the vision behind the door. Olivia Hussey, 17, is beautiful, like one of the milkmaids in 16th century tapestries. Creamy porcelain skin, dark, voluminous avocado-colored eyes and a tiny turned-up nose stare out freshly scrubbed from long burnished brown hair. It looks like a carefully embroidered wig, but it's real. She is nervous and speaks in a husky womanly voice in a rush of childish giggles and half-sentences. She rushes about in a beige wool jumper and brown turtle-neck sweater from Wally's Boutique, nibbles on a pear, and constantly tugs at her hair, which hangs in a long droopy pony tail tied with a white shoe string. "Is this an interview? Shouldn't we wait for Romeo? Do you want to ask me any questions or anything? I hate interviews." She changes the record to Cream, the hottest new recording group in London, and begins dancing the Shing-a-ling all by herself. I could hardly wait to meet Romeo.

I didn't have to. He bound in the room like a young colt. Leonard Whiting, 18, looks like a young Rimbaud. Deep sensitive eyes like pools of sea water, long hair twisting around his neck and ears like the unruly mane of some thoroughbred at Ascot. He's wearing a white turtle-neck ski sweater he paid 15 pounds for at Lord John in Carnaby Street. Together they are like new puppies, jumping, dancing, leaping, crawling across the floor to fight over a banana. "Franco saw about 200 girls and 200 boys before he choose us. We've been Romeo and Juliet for nine months," says Leonard, "now it's time to be ourselves." " Have you seen the movie?" asks Olivia. "I took my best friend Annabelle to see it last night and we cried all the way through it." "Did you cry in the death scene?" asks Leonard. "Oh yes, Annabelle cried too."

"Shall we have tea?" asks Leonard. Paramount is paying for everything for the whole weekend, then we have to go back home, so we might as well have tea."

 

 

 

Leonard is a London boy with a cockney accent that he worries about a lot (Romeo is not supposed to be common) who lives with his family in a suburb called Woodgreen. Olivia was born in Buenos Aires, the daughter of an Argentine opera singer who died when she was two and an English mother who works as a secretary and lives with Olivia in a tiny flat near the tower of London. For this particular weekend, they are both on their own.

"This is a super room," says Olivia, biting the ends of her hair. We all look around at the suite, with portholes, Thirties chrome lamps and slipcovers right out of old Myrna Loy movies. "I hate mine," says Leonard, "it overlooks a brick wall. I'm going to ask Franco if I can get it changed to one of those suites that overlook the Thames." Both of them are typical British teenagers, the kind who throw Granny Smith apple cores at bobbies in Picadilly Circus. Ten minutes with them and you know they aren't Romeo and Juliet.

Tea arrives, as Leonard lapses into a deep discussion with the photographer, who is trying to snap pictures as he leaps about the room like a cocker spaniel. "Is that a Nikon? Could I work it?" "I hate tea," says Olivia.

 

 

Up in Franco Zeffirelli's suite, the kids collapse on a Victorian sofa giggling over their press clippings. It is clear at once that both of them adore Zeffirelli, a cherubic- looking man with soft blond hair falling across his forehead who sits regally in a lavendar rosewood chair in a room that looks like the inside of an Easter egg. "I saw 800 girls and 800 boys before I chose Olivia and Leonard. They had the exact qualities. She had to be strong and he had to be gentle. I created a chemistry in this pair. I didn't want stars. The screen needs new images and new idols, and they are total unknowns." (Well not exactly. Leonard was the Artful Dodger for 15 months in the London production of OLIVER! and appeared with Laurence Olivier for 13 months in LOVE FOR LOVE. Olivia appeared for two years with Vanessa Redgrave in THE PRIME OF MISS JEAN BROADIE.) "I had to train them to have confidence. There were problems__" looking at them sternly__"but for every keyhole there's a key. This is basically a story of young people finding identity in a troubled era, just like today. You believe it. The main problem was to make them feel natural in every scene. I didn't want actors who could pretend to be Romeo and Juliet, I wanted them to be Romeo and Juliet. It's amazing. I watched them change cells, change bones, grow in the process of tragedy. They started like babies and ended up mature, with the tenderness of young animals. They are so dear, like young virgins." Well, not exactly. Leonard has been out until 2:30 in the morning at the Bag of Nails, a popular London discoteque, and keeps complaing of a hangover. Zeffirelli shoots him shut-up looks as his assistant, a pretty English girl in a powder-blue suit, names Sheila Pickles, announces they must all break for a luncheon interview. "I feel sick," moans Olivia, as the door to the Easter egg closes.

 

 

At 2:45, I'm back at the Savoy waiting for the kids to be shuttled off to the BBC for a television interview. Leonard appears in a new Edwardian suit of navy-blue corduroy with an Aunt Jemima bandana around his neck. Olivia wears a simply A-frame mini-dress. We pile into the Limousine and head up the Strand, around the National Gallery and up toward Buckingham Palace. "Is the flag down? The Queen must be out of town." "She'll be there monday night, won't she?" "I've never met the Queen. I'm scared to death."

Olivia sits silently, smoking Benson and Hedges, staring out the window in a mood. Leonard sings a pop song loudly. Zeffirelli says something shocking to Sheila Pickles in Italian and Leonard laughs. "You little bastard, you're not supposed to understand Italian !" Zeffirelli grins, "They picked it up in Rome."

After we arrive at the BBC, the kids are led off to the studio where the interview will take place and Sheila turns to me: "Olivia is very shy. She doesn't talk about herself. Leonard's all right, but she is very difficult. She did a radio interview the other day and the lady said, "Here you are with a plum role thousands of girls would love to have, how does it feel?" and Olivia said, "It's OK." We've had a time with them in interviews. Everyone expects them to be Romeo and Juliet, but they're just ordinary, healthy, well- adjusted English teenagers and it's hard for them to be something the're not. We'll all be glad when it's all over."

From the control room we can see the announcer, Tony Bilbo, trying to warm them up over the color monitors. "I'll start with you, Mr. Zeffirelli, and then continue with Miss Hussey." "Oh no!" cries Olivia, "I don't want to...You won't ask me very much, will you?"

Leonard is picking his nose. Olivia bites her fingernails. "Well," says Bilbo, "then I'll ask young Whiting here how he got started as the Artful Dodger." "I just went in and did my bit," says Leonard. We all wince. "Well, says Bilbo frantically, "what kind of TV do you watch?" "I never watch TV." "Do you not like it or what?" "I can't afford to buy one." Miss Pickles moans audibly.

Crisis! Olivia needs some chewing gum. "Give her a chew of Tobacco," quips one of the engineers, who receives a hard stare from Miss Pickles. "Leonard's got a runny nose, anybody got a tissue?" Leonard comes into the control room, blowing his nose. "It reminds me of the time we did a telly in New York," says Miss Pickles gaily, trying to soothe everyone's jumbled nerves, "and it was very tense. Five-four-three-two-one....then the announcer said, "Many good things come from Italy, one of the best is'__and Franco got up to be introduced__'spaghetti. Ronzoni Spaghetti' We all were so embarrassed."

 

 

Out on the set, the announcer is trying to cheer Olivia. "Have you seen the new Bet Davis film?" (The British always mispronounce Bette as "Bet.") "It's very funny." No response. "They clamp a red eye-patch on her eye." Olivia frowns. "I didn't see it." Bilbo dashes into the control room. "She's warming up."

They're all warming up now. Franco is cool, reading the paper. Leonard is humming. Olivia is tapping her foot. "Now Olivia, the first thing we'll ask__" "Don't ask me anything, I get so muddled."

The show begins anyway. Olivia looks like Dresden china in color. She quickly stubs out her cigarette. (Juliet must not be seen smoking.) Five-four-three-two-one....

Mr. Zeffirelli, how many actors did you see for the roles of Romeo and Juliet? "It was about 80 each for boy and girl." (It had been the third mention of the number that day-- each time the number changed.)

Olivia Hussey, had you read the play? "No."

Leonard, had you read the play? "No."

Do you agree with Mr. Zeffirelli that it is a contemporary drama? "Yes, acting in it you forget the age." Do you think young people will go to see it? (Pause.) Well, yes or no? " Yes, I think so."

There was a lot of publicity surrounding the making of the film in Italy. Were you polite to the journalists? "We just sat and listened. They didn't know what to ask." What about the publicity, Olivia, involving the nude scene? Today's paper carried a headline that read QUEEN TO SEE NUDE JULIET. "It's all boring, really."

How can top ROMEO AND JULIET? Have you made any plans for the future? "No."

It was a total disaster. The control room went wild. "Do it again." said one engineer. "Lead them in a community sing." yelled another, beating his temples.

Darling, you've got to relax!" Zeffirelli stared at the ceiling. They started all over again with a new video tape. This time they began with Zeffirelli, who sounded off about the movie: "The way Shakespeare portrayed these kids, it is similar to kids today. This general breaking of the rules and patterns was revolutionary then, because if you think of them in the setup of Renaissance society, they were quite revolutionary."

How many aspirants did you see? "About 5,000." (Miss Pickles covered her head in the control room. "The number gets bigger each time," she said)

 

 

At least Leonard was talkative this time. "I find Shakespeare very boring, but in Franco's film there's a lot of action, so I don't think of it as poetry at all. The only time the photographers bothered us was during the hard scenes, then Franco would throw a big Italian fit and throw everybody off the set."

Zeffirelli stalks toward the limousine, smiling for photographers' flashbulbs. "I don't think people are going to understand what you were talking about," said Olivia. "Not everbody is as stupid as you are," snaps Zeffirelli. "Did I sound too cockney?" asks Leonard. The car speeds back to the hotel in hostile silence.

"Freedom at last," sighed Olivia, closing the door and kicking off her shoes. "I can't stand it when people talk all the time. I hate interviews. I just want to be with my friends." Olivia's best friend, Annabelle, came bounding into the room wearing penny loafers, slacks and a boy's crew neck sweater, looking very American. "Americans expect all English girls to be dollies. Were not mod, were just modern." Annabelle's mother had given her permission to move into the Savoy for the weekend, to share Olivia's excitement.

"We're too young to go to nightclubs in London, but we manage to get in somehow. There's always some boy who lies and gets us in." Their favorite clubs are the Revolution and the Speak Easy. They dig modern jazz and own lots of Jimmy Smith, Ramsey Lewis and Oscar Peterson records. They also like Vanilla Fudge and what they call "fuzzybox music"--fuzzy electric guitar with a beat "played by anybody." Annabelle put on "Disraeli Gears" by Cream. Olivia began to dance about the room like a wood nymph. "We don't smoke hash just because our friends smoke. It makes you dizzy," she said.

Olivia has really matured since she went to Italy," said Annabelle.

"I was scared to death and homesick at first. We lived in Franco's villa for nine months and it was super, but they assigned this chaperon who was 75 years old and I had to be in bed every night at seven. I couldn't go out. Every time I wanted to go to the toliet I had to say, 'May I be excused, please?' Leonard didn't have a chaperon at all. I finally raised so much hell they got rid of her and got me one who was 25 and after that we went dancing every night at the Titan."

 

 

Olivia left the room to try on some of her new clothes and Annabelle kept talking. " Olivia is a super actress. She was Rossano Brazzi's daughter in THE BATTLE OF THE VILLA FIORITA." We just love movies. Did you see VALLEY OF THE DOLLS? I had to go into the ladies' and have a good blabber in that one."

Olivia came back into the room modeling a Marlon Brando motorcycle jacket purchased for $20 at the Chelsea Antique Market. She wears no makeup except mascara and washes her hair everyday.

Was she nervous about playing Juliet? "No," she shouted over the stereo, "I just did it. But the nude scene bothered me. I had flesh-colored panties at first, but Franco made me take them off because they showed. Everybody left the set except the electricians and they turned their backs. I don't think they saw anything." Annabelle giggled. "If you want to be an actress, you gotta get used to that. I'll probably have to do it before I am old."

The door swung open and two Italians popped in fresh off the train from Rome. "They're two guys we met while we were making the film. They can't speak English. Listen, I've got to wash my hair now. I am tired of talking about Juliet anyway. I think the first thing I'll do when all of this is over is get my appendix taken out."

Annabelle, who couldn't speak any Italian, went into a fast watusi with the Italians, who couldn't speak any English. Olivia went into the bathroom and locked the door. Everyone seemed to be communicating just fine.

 

 

Sunday morning at 11:30 the autograph hounds lined up in front of London's massive Odeon Theatre in Leicester Square as the stars arrived for the dress rehearsal. You don't just say hello to the Queen. You have to rehearse. "We have a jolly nice ending for the two stars of the evening," said a merry little Charles Dickens character from the stage. "Take the lineup order from center position. Danny Kaye will be on Miss Hussey's left."

A full orchestra was lowered into the orchestra pit as Richard Attenborough introduced David Hemmings to the tune of "Camelot." Hemmings introduced Lynn Redgrave, who plodded onstage several months pregnant in a black miniskirt. One by one, they took their positions and practiced their bows: Karl Malden in a turtle-neck sweater, Joanna Pettet in a cowboy hat, Richard Chamberlain in long Shirley Temple hair (Even the Queen watches television) not looking too happy about being introduced as "a refugee from Blair Hospital," to the tune of "Hi-Lili-Hi-Lo," Joan Collins, Peter Ustinov, Tommy Steele, etc., etc. Leonard and Olivia huddled together in the empty theater like startled robins imprisoned in a shoe box. " Nobody introduced us to anybody," wispered leonard. "Which one is Carol White?" "Shh," said Olivia, punching him in the arm.

Three hours later, when the bows and curties were perfected, the doors opened to the press and the entire assemblage was thrown to the lions. "Is it true you had a romance in Italy?" one pushy British journalist kept yelling, following Olivia into the ladies' room.

By five o'clock, Romeo and Juliet had completed three more television shows and been interviewed by 25 people. Back at the hotel, I found Leonard in his new room overlooking the Thames, with a sweeping view that took in everything from the Old Vic up to Tower Bridge. "Super, don't you think?" he asked with his mouth full of tooth-paste. "I never thought they'd leave me alone long enough to brush my teeth. God, it tastes good. Ever since I got into this movie my life has been lived in two parts. About 30 percent is very happy and the other 70 percent tells me I am going buggy. Then I have to sit down and ask myself what's happening. The more success I get, the more insecure I become. I just talked to a friend on the telephone. Not an especially good friend, just someone I knew in school, but now I find I need him. Then I hung up the phone and looked in the mirror and said, "You just played Romeo. Christ, who are you?' I'm a very ordinary person. I live in an ordinary house with my parents. After all this is over Monday night I'll go back home. When I go home I can spill tea on the carpet and say, oh hell, and nobody cares, but when I'm around all these movie people I can't spill anything because everybody's watching me all the time. I feel like I'm losing touch with everything that is real. Do you want to order something? They told me I could order anything I wanted."

 

 

We ordered Cokes with lots of ice (you can't find ice in England unless you ask, not even at the Savoy) and he sretched out on the bed adn told me about Leonard Whiting. 'I live in a suburban neighborhood with two sisters. Very normal. Dad works in a store. He said, "If they don't want you any more you can always come and work with me in the store.' I've been Romeo for a year now without stopping and I hate Shakespeare. I don't even know what I am thinking anymore. In Italy we lived in Franco's villa. It was OK. My mum always made spaghetti Bolognese for Saturday afternoon treat, so I loved that part of it. But I couldn't drive--no license. So I couldn't go out much. I want to save money and buy a car. A red car. I used to walk two miles to school everyday uphill and watch all the people drive by in cars and I made a vow I'd never walk anywhere when I got money. Now I've become suspicious of thinking phony thoughts and I don't know what I feel. I never had much money as a kid so it was a great feeling when I first started acting and I had pocket money. I had an uncle who was trying to get a pop group started and he used to make me sing at Jewish weddings. Then one day during one of his recording sessions one of his boy's voices broke and I tried singing his part and this guy heard me and said why didn't I go and try out for one of the boys in OLIVER! and I got the part of the Artful Dodger. I made $35 a week and saved $25 of that and put it in the bank. When I had saved enough, I made a down payment on my family's house. I still don't have any money. Do you know what they paid us for making Romeo and Juliet? We got 1,500 pounds each (about $3,600)--enough to bring my parents to Rome for two weeks. They had never seen a movie set or met people like Jane Fonda before. They had a super time." He sucked a piece of ice, then threw it in the bathtub. "Deep down inside I don't like change. I have a lot of growing up to do yet. I'm not vain. People have been telling me I'm pretty since I was a baby. But look, my nose turns up on one side ." He went to the mirror to see if his nose was still turning up, hoping it would be. It looked fine. "Women always have to look good. Men don't. Look at that pimple."

I asked him what he expected from his future. "I don't know. Ambition frightens me. I don't want to be cruel and ruthless. I always lived in a clique neighborhood and I love just being around kids I grew up with. Listen to me, already I am beginning to sound like Michael Caine. Now suddenly I'm in a business I used to respect for its art and I'm doing a nude scene. I don't think they put that nude scene in the movie for any other reason but money and publicity, and that bothers me. So I don't know if I can become an actor like Orson Wells and Marlon Brando, because you have to do a lot of things you don't believe in to get anywhere. I don't want to be a star. I guess I'll get married, but the idea of forever terrifies me. The more one sees of life before marriage the more one learns. Once you're married, what can you learn? I don't want to get married until I am at least 40. I'm not much of a conformist. Hey, you want to see what I am wearing to meet the Queen?"

 

 

He brought out his suit (black Edwardian tails, shirt with a detachable stand-up collar and tapestried vest, rented from a theatrical costume company). He couldn't tie one of the three white ties the costume company had sent along, so I helped him. He had put the collar on backward and we had to take out the stays and collar buttons and start all over. "See what I mean?" he groaned. "I don't want to be a star."

But he was. Thousands of people fought for his autograph, three girls got trampled in the street and it took 25 policemen to keep the uninvited public behind the barricades when his limousine drove up on opening night. Not only did he meet Her Majesty the Queen and Prince Phillip, Duke of Edinburgh, but Prince Charles showed up too, with a nod to his tutor for giving him the night off. It was a royal flush. The stars and movie magnates formed a circle while more than a thousand people sat in their expensive seats and watched the whole thing on closed-circuit television. without my help, the last minute crisis had arisen to get Leonard into his rented suit and it had taken three hours to get Olivia into the apricot-colored silk gown designed especially for the occasion by Zeffirelli himself, made in one week by Capucci and flown in from Florence. But they looked like the stars of the evening.

Prince Charles talked to them so long the Queen had to send Prince Phillip to tell him to "Get a move on." "I think I am being left behind," he said, bowing deeply to Juliet, who giggled. Then with the pomp and mostrous circumstance reserved only for crowns and legends, the orchestra played "God Save the Queen" and everyone bowed and curtsied once more and the stars were led backstage to be presented to the entire audience. Leonard was all fingers. "How does that music go again? Are we supposed to come out right after Danny Kaye or what?" "Don't be silly, I'll tell you," Olivia, shoving him into the spotlight.

Although some sourpuss movie critics had a few harsh words to say in the next newspapers (How dare an Italian tell the British how to jazz up Shakespeare?) it was a night when nobody cared about critics. It was Romeo and Juliet's night. Women cried, med patted them on the back, they shook about a million hands and at 2 a.m., when everybody else started turning into pumpkins, they stood in the middle of a lavish ballroom at Claridge's holding the magic as long as they could. Dazzling under the chandeliers like uncut diamonds, Romeo pulled off his tie, tore into that damnable collar, and lit into his third souffle'glace grand marnier, and Juliet kicked off her slippers, stepped all over the train of her Cappuci gown, and thrashed away the night with Prince Charles, heir to the throne of England, in one last sweaty Funky Broadway......And they lived happily ever after.

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