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| Life After
Little Edie: Grey Gardens Gets A Makeover |
As seasoned
renovators and admirers of residential architecture and gardens, we are
completely fascinated with the story of Ben Bradlee and Sally Quinn's purchase
and restoration of Grey Gardens.
There have been several magazine articles
devoted to their story over the years, and each account has offered a special
glimpse into the behind-the-scenes saga.
The archival photographs that
Sally Quinn recently shared with The New York Times spellbind us.
The exclusive
slideshows feature never-before-seen interior photos of the home as Little Edie left it, along with
shots of the overgrown exterior and garden.
Additional commentary can be found in
New York Magazine and W Magazine. |
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You will note in
one photo that Little Edie hung a birdcage wired with a light above her bed.
We
all know that Edie's astute eye for fashion and design was often ahead of its
time.
Today, a similar fixture can be purchased online at The Well
Appointed House.
There is also a photo of a curio cabinet stuffed
with many of Little Edie's collectibles, which included Donald Duck figurines,
cat-themed items, and seashells.
Ms. Quinn restored the cabinet and kept many of
Edie's treasures, and it is still on display in the home.
We took a photo of it
when we attended a cocktail party at Grey Gardens back in 2007.
In the
photo with the piano, you can see the drop-leaf dining room table in the
background.
Ms. Quinn also restored this piece, and today it greets visitors in
the foyer as you enter Grey Gardens.
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Additional
articles on the restoration of Grey Gardens can be found in:
"Sally Quinn and Ben Bradlee on Grey
Gardens" from The Southampton Press by Oliver Peterson on September 3,
2007
"Grey Gardens: Quinn and Bradlee's
Hamptons Haunt" from The New York Post by Jennifer Gould Keil on August 17,
2006
"What it took to restore the magic and
beauty of Grey Gardens" from Town & Country, Sally Quinn, June
2003
"Grey Gardens Back In The Pink" from
Newsday, James A. Revson on September 11, 1986
"Restoring the Beauty of Grey Gardens"
from Architectural Digest, Sally Quinn, December 1984
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Name that
tune…”Grey Gardens” edition!
Many of you have inquired about the
song that Big Edie sings in the Maysles documentary, and that is also featured
in the HBO movie as a duet between Big Edie (Jessica Lange) and Gould (Malcolm
Gets).
The song is called
“We Belong Together,”
and is the closing tune
from the relatively obscure 1932 Broadway musical, Music In The Air.
The
lyrics to this number were written by Oscar Hammerstein II, with music composed
by Jerome Kern.
Coincidentally, the musical teaches the age-old lesson,
‘there’s no place like home’- a message that Big Edie certainly tried to
reinforce in Little Edie to keep her from leaving Grey
Gardens. |
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The Brunswick Record Corporation issued
“We Belong Together”
as a single in 1933 with vocals by Lew Sherwood and
music
by Eddy Duchin & his Central Park Casino Orchestra.
Have a listen: http://www.library.yale.edu/musiclib/hsr/hsr_ind_brunswick_6517.html.
The
other famous ‘GG’ number is “Tea for Two.”
This song is from the 1925 musical
No, No, Nanette with music by Vincent Youmans and lyrics by Irving
Caesar.
One famous interpretation of the song is Tommy Dorsey’s cha-cha-cha
version, which became a top ten hit in 1958.
The song has become a reliable
standby for dance routines that call for “soft shoe” bits – a light form of tap
dance performed in soft-soled shoes.
The Beale music repertoire also
includes classic American songs by Irving Berlin, George Gershwin, Harold
Adamson, Victor Young, Dana Suesse, Edward Heyman, and Richard
Rodgers. |
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First look at the official
“Grey Gardens”
poster featuring Jessica Lange and Drew Barrymore!
Thank you to Cristin Curry/HBO Films
for sharing this with Grey Gardens Online.
(Click on poster to
enlarge.) |
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Lois
Wright art exhibit at the National Arts Club, New York CityLois
Wright, artist and Grey Gardens insider, will be celebrated with the first ever
New York City art exhibition of her paintings at the National Arts Club at
Gramercy Park, April 29 through May 13, 2009. Celia Maysles of Corra Films and
Rebecca Cooper of The Gallery Sag Harbor curate the exhibit.
A special
opening night “Grey Gardens” themed party will be held Wednesday, April 29 from
6-8pm.
In honor of Lois, guests are encouraged to dress as their favorite “GG”
character. |
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Lois’ paintings capture the essence of
Grey Gardens, its eccentricities, and the wonderful spirit (both literally and
figuratively) of the characters that inhabited the Beale mansion.
She was a
dear friend to the Beales, and even lived at Grey Gardens for 13 months
beginning in 1975.
Her popular published journal, My Life at Grey
Gardens, is an intimate account of this time period.
She also hosts “The
Lois Wright Show,” a television program that airs on the Long Island television
network, LTV.
Rebecca Cooper curated the first ever
gallery show of Lois Wright’s paintings in 2008 at The Gallery
Sag Harbor. The show was a huge success, selling every painting that was
offered.
Celia Maysles is a celebrated director
and producer for independent documentaries.
She has worked with Corra
Films since 2004. Maysles met Lois Wright while filming Wild Blue
Yonder, her provocative, award-winning, first-person account documentary
that chronicles her quest to get to know her father, famed documentarian David
Maysles, who died when she was only seven. Lois has been like an aunt to Celia
ever since.
The National Arts
Club is a private club whose membership is dedicated to furthering art and
artists in America. The Club is located at 15 Gramercy Park South between Park
and Irving Place in New York City.
For more information about the “Grey
Gardens: Paintings by Lois Wright” exhibit, please visit www.thegallerysagharbor.com or
call 212-772-3483. |
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I had the
opportunity to recently interview Robert Beyer,
who is originally from Sag
Harbor and used to deliver groceries to the
Beales at Grey Gardens. I appreciate
him sharing his memories and observations,
and I hope you will enjoy this fun
interview! |
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GG: How long did you work at Newtown
Grocery?
During the spring, summer, and fall
of 1965.
GG: What were your main
responsibilities there?
Package orders of gourmet and other
foods and deliver them.
The truck was a noisy Chevy Suburban.
There was
another guy who drove another truck, so we had two running deliveries each
day. |
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The store was
owned and run by Harry Moylan who lived in Sag Harbor near the home of my
parents.
There were a couple of other employees who along with Harry have
since passed away. We worked alongside Dressen's Market; we helped each other
with deliveries and orders. There were even openings in the walls between the
shops! |
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GG: Were you living in the Hamptons
at the time?
Yes, with my family in nearby Sag
Harbor (after being away in tech school, and was already signed up on a delayed
enlistment into the Navy for January 1966).
GG: How old were you?
I was 19 to 20 years old during that
time (I was 20 in September 1965).
GG: How often did the Beales receive
grocery deliveries?
We actually didn't get that many orders
from them…definitely not each and every week. |
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The Beales did not order much food.
Some of it was caviar, pates, crackers, etc.
Most of their ordering was for
LOTS of CAT FOOD!
Once a month Harry would give me Mrs. Beale's trust fund
check to give them.
I believe that was about all they had to live
on.
GG: How were the groceries ordered
(by phone)?
Yes, by phone. Although, I saw Little
Edie come into the store once.
She was wearing her black turban and I think a
sweater.
GG: How were they paid
for?
I can't say for sure, but most likely
mailing a check
GG: Did you ever speak with Little
or Big Edie?
Oh, yes! But it took awhile.
Little
Edie eventually peered out the window when I had been
their "delivery boy" for a
while.
I saw her and gave her my typical big smile and waved.
Not long after that she came onto the
porch and we got talking.
She and her Mom would then talk to me a lot by
phone…
oh how I wish I had taped some of that.
I thought, “Wow! What characters,
but such nice characters.
They would eventually call me at home.
Little Edie
would make the call, and then say, "Mother wants to speak to you."
We talked
about this and that, and the sad state of things…they would go on,
and I just
seemed to be someone they enjoyed talking with.
Little Edie told my Mom what a nice lad
I was.
I started to realize that they were very lonely
as most people in town
avoided them.
Though, by the same token, they were sort of hermits and
didn't
mingle with the neighbors anyway.
They were lonely for the most part due to
their own self-induced isolation.
After I went in the Navy I would get
letters from them.
They told me that they were sad to see me go.
Sometimes
they would report some "news" on Caroline and John John,
but I knew they didn't
have much direct communication with the rest of the
family. |
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GG: What do you remember about the
house?
Oh, it was much worse than it looked in
the Maysles documentary.
The entire front yard was overgrown, and weeds
wrapped
and engulfed a very sad looking late 30's to early 40's Cadillac
Sedan that was
once black but at that time was so faded it was blue!
The car was just rotting
away; it was probably taken
away when the town started with the threats of
eviction.
The place was pretty scary. |
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On my first trip out there, the guys in
the store said,
“Just run fast through the weeds and high grass,
dump the box of
groceries on the seat on the porch and RUN!”
Whenever Little Edie would meet me
at the door, I could
only see into the front hallway…it was awful and it really
stunk in there.
I never went in past that entryway.
Some years later after getting out of
the service and
going back to school and working, I was helping a friend
with an
electronics store in the Hamptons.
We got Edie’s radio to work on (the same
turquoise-colored
one that you see in the Maysles documentary).
How we got it?
I don't know.
Maybe they had someone bring it in for them?
Man, did that radio
smell foul! It was a
tube model, and their cats more than likely peed on it
several times.
We somehow repaired it and sent it back.
Later I saw the
documentary in the theater and noticed the radio in the film
(by the time the
Maysles documentary was released I had already moved to California).
GG: Did other people at Newtown
Grocery talk/gossip about the Beales?
To some extent; the Beales were known as the
"Cat Ladies”
and people said they were loony.
For example, people would say
things like,
“Do you know they are related to Jackie Kennedy?
Can you
imagine? Did you know the house is full of inbreeding cats?
That place should
be condemned! The old lady flipped out
when her husband took off on
her.” |
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GG: Out of curiosity, do you
know whatever happened to Newtown Grocery?
It stayed in business I think
into the early 1980’s.
Harry died too young; he was a great guy, a typical
Irish Catholic family man. You would see him in church every Sunday ushering
the parishioners to their seats.
Rudy DeSanti who owned the meat
market on the other side of Newtown Grocery passed away early too…then his son
took over the family business. When the big chain supermarkets came in like
Gristedes, and the little mall in Bridgehampton, the original independent stores
in town found it hard to survive.
Remember the great blackout in New York in
November 1965? I will never forget going to switch off the neon sign in Newtown
Grocery's window around 5 p.m. and the whole town immediately went
dark! |
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Muffie Meyer
submitted these great photos from her wedding.
Little Edie attended and even
sang a song!
Thank you so much for sharing your special day with us,
Muffie! |
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David Lewis
shared with me his interesting experience with Little Edie.
He was Edie’s
accompanist at Reno Sweeney and today is one of New York's foremost musical
directors and arrangers.
He recently released "Patti LuPone at Les Mouches," a
digitally restored recording of the iconic 1980 club act that was co-created and
co-written by Lewis.
The CD is available for purchase online at Amazon.com.
ONSTAGE WITH “LITTLE” EDIE BEALE by DAVID
LEWIS
Pianists and musical accompanists always try to form a musical as
well as emotional collaboration with the singer with whom they are performing.
Nothing, however, could have prepared me for my first encounter with Edie Beale,
with whom I was to create a cabaret act for her New York debut at the Greenwich
Village club, Reno Sweeney, in 1977. |
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I did in fact have
a few clues about Edie Beale.
For many years I had bicycled past Grey Gardens,
the decrepit and decaying mansion in East Hampton
surrounded by the most
expensive real estate in the country.
I had seen the Maysles brothers’
documentary about
“Little” Edie and her mother living in virtual squalor
with
their dreams and fantasies.
I knew that her famous relative, Jacqueline Kennedy
Onassis,
had financially saved the Beales and their home from
eviction just
before the death of “Big” Edie.
And as I had also accompanied and arranged for
diverse personalities such as Diane Keaton, Joan Hackett,
Holly Woodlawn and
Butterfly McQueen at the club, I thought I
would be able to handle and
understand this intriguing woman. |
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Our first meeting was shocking and a
bit disturbing.
She met me in a darkened village living room dressed completely
in black with no makeup and an expressionless visage.
I could hardly get her to
speak and she avoided eye-to-eye
contact completely.
Desperate to continue, I
tried to start a conversation about her
cats, of which I knew she had many.
She
finally looked at me and began a strange
and muddled conversation graphically
detailing feline sexual proclivities.
The room suddenly seemed smaller and I was
beginning to sense
that either this woman was quite damaged
or that she was
testing me in some way.
I didn’t see how this could ever be presented on a
stage.
It was then that I spotted on the piano
a ragged stack of sheet music which
looked as if it had spent one too
many East
Hampton winters by the ocean.
When I opened the music, I recognized songs
written by the best of the
era - George Gershwin, Cole Porter, Vincent Youmans,
and Jerome Kern.
Edie told me that she knew all the lyrics
to the songs and
that her two favorites were Porter and
Noel Coward.
A dialogue had finally
begun between
us through music, and we began to rehearse.
If some of the pitches
in higher registers were approximated at best,
I decided to overlook them.
She
seemed painfully vulnerable and I
could only imagine the courage it had taken
her to get this far. |
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Opening night at
Reno Sweeney’s
was packed with a few fashionistas, a few people from the
theatre,
and many of the very curious.
I sensed a strange, nervous vibe from
the audience.
I knew they were trying to suppress their laughter in
anticipation
of an eccentric freak show.
I was unnerved and rushed back to the
dressing room to
find a very calm Edie putting the final touches to her makeup.
I resolved to do everything I could to prevent Edie
from becoming a
laughingstock and the
evening from turning into a debacle.As I stepped to the stage and played the
overture,
I could feel the tension building.
“Ladies and Gentleman, the cabaret
debut of Edie Beale”
was announced and Edie slowly stepped into the spotlight.
The audience gasped.
Through her original outfit, blazing red
with a died-rust
bouquet of silk leaves
complimenting her turbaned face, and an
inner beauty, she
appeared to be either a soft romantic specter
from the past, or a portend from
the future.
Something very original was happening.
In a very soft,
patrician
voice she began the VERSE of “Tea For Two.”
I’m discontented
with
homes that are rented
so I have invented my own.
With that first line, Edie Beale had captivated
the audience,
and had transported them into her own “invented” fantasy.
They
were nothing short of spellbound.
During the question and answer section in the
middle
of the show, she convulsed the audience
with her frankness and her
slightly
self-deprecating humor.
“What is your favorite department store?”
“Mays!”
“What do you think of television?”
“It’s very good for national
emergencies.”
“What’s your opinion of pre-marital sex?” “I think it’s very
economical.”
She answered
all questions about the Kennedy’s
and her romantic relationships, especially
with Joe Kennedy, Jr.
She speculated that if she had married him,
she would
probably have become First Lady, not Jackie.
One night she spotted Jackie’s
sister and
also her cousin, Lee Radziwill, in the audience
and asked Lee to
stand up and acknowledge the crowd.
Lee nervously stood to the applause of the
audience.
I looked at Edie and noticed a slight glimmer of satisfaction on her
face.
At the end of the
evening she sang what I felt
was the high point of the show, Noel Cowards’
beautiful and tender song,
“Zigeuner.”
The audience cheered her at the finale
of
the show and no one was laughing.
At the end of the week’s engagement, we
toasted to her success.
I never saw her again.
She didn’t seem to have
any friends or a social life.
A possible future as a singer or performer wasn’t
even brought up.
I was quite upset when I heard she had died in 2002 in
Florida.
I only wished she could have seen and participated in
her resurgence
as a fashion and theatrical icon thanks to the musical
“Grey Gardens” and the
new Maysles documentary.
Even after 30 years, I still remember a beautiful
otherworldly woman softly singing Noel Coward’s lyrics to a hushed
audience:
All I ask of life is just to listen to the songs that you
sing,
My spirit like a
bird on the wing
Your
melodies adoring --- soaring, Call to me with some barbaric
tune,
Now you hold me in
your power,
Play to me
for just an hour,Zigeuner! |
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Based in
Florida, Lee Schrager is the Director of Special
Events & Media Relations at
Southern Wine & Spirits of America, the largest distributor of alcoholic
beverages in the United States, the creator and guiding force behind the Food
Network South Beach Wine & Food Festival, and, most recently, launched the
Food Network New York City Wine and Food Festival. In 2008 he received the
FOODARTS Silver Spoon award in recognition of his unique combination of business
acumen, showmanship, enrichment of the wine and culinary milieu and his numerous
philanthropic efforts.
I was thrilled when he took a few minutes out of
his busy schedule to answer questions about his friendship with Little Edie. He
owned Torpedo, one of the hippest clubs on the South Beach scene, and Edie
performed there one evening. |
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GG: How did you meet Little Edie
and how long was your friendship?
LS: I met Edie 29 years ago
when
I was living in East Hampton. Michael Braverman, a good friend of mine,
was friendly with her and introduced me.
I knew her for about 15
years.
GG: I understand that you hosted
an
AIDS benefit with a "Grey Gardens" theme
at your South Beach nightclub
Torpedo in
1987. Edie was 69 years old at the time.
Little Edie attended and
played the piano and sang.
What can you tell me about this special
evening?
LS: She sang “My Heart Belongs
to Daddy”
and “Hard Hearted Hannah.”
I recall her liking to sing, not playing
the piano.
When she performed at Torpedo, she was
very nervous and wanted to
cancel.
We wanted to send a car to pick her up, but she wanted me to do it
myself. |
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GG: Edie is often characterized
as "reclusive" and "eccentric;"
however, she was in fact very outgoing and was
definitely in her element
when she had a captive audience.
What was your
impression of Little Edie?
What is you most fond memory of her?
LS: Most fond memory:
when she moved to
Florida she would
come to my apartment because she loved the water.
She would
sit on my terrace for hours talking.
I also love the letters she used to write
to me—
her penmanship was beautiful! |
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GG: Little Edie's fashion
genius
has influenced countless designers.
You introduced Edie to Gianni Versace.
How
did Versace feel about Edie? And did he ever indicate that Edie inspired any of
his work?
LS: He never commented that she
inspired any of his work, but he adored her.
He thought she was one of a
kind.
GG: How do you think Little Edie
would feel about the incredible surge in interest in Grey Gardens over the past
few years?
LS: She would
be in heaven—she loved attention. She would just be in heaven! |
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The East
Hampton Star shared
photos of Jackie Onassis on her way to
Big Edie’s
funeral exclusively with Grey Gardens Online. |
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I sent Lois Wright a few questions
that some of my readers were
curious about.
I was surprised when she decided to
answer a
few of the questions on her television program, “The Lois Wright Show,”
which
airs weekly in the Hamptons.
I transcribed the answers from the DVD of
the program that she sent me.
In classic Lois style, she was very
frank and did not mince words.
I hope you enjoy this as much as I did! Thank
you, Lois,
for sharing your memories and candid observations with Grey Gardens
Online.
And I should mention that the views
expressed by Lois
do not necessarily reflect those of Grey Gardens Online or its
owner. |
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GG:
You met with Michael Sucsy
and Drew Barrymore regarding the new HBO film. What was your impression of
Drew?
What kinds of
questions did she have for you? How do you feel about a
feature film version based on the life of the Beales?
LW: Drew is a charming,
delightful
person. She came to
my place, and then we went over to my friend
Doris
Francisco’s house in Montauk.
Drew brought flowers to my apartment.
I was
speaking with Michael Sucsy
and Drew went into the kitchen area
to find a vase.
She arranged the
flowers in water and everything.
I wouldn’t have done that.
I
think it was very nice for her to do that. |
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She is very dedicated to her Barrymore
background.
She really intends to become a dramatic actress.
You know I saw
one of her films. I didn’t care very much for the
silly films she has been
doing. She should do more dramatic films.
This is what you think of when you
think about Ethel, let alone
Lionel and John. I
hope she does live up to the
name.
She has her own production company, Flower Films.
She asked me lots of questions, like
what it was like to live in the house with
Little Edie and Big Edie.
But, she
particularly wanted to know more about Edie’s accent.
It’s a cultured accent
crossed with some
New York City accent.
Then there’s that whispering she would
do.
Edie had a fascinating way of expressing herself.
It has Southern and a
“private school” touch in there, too.
It’s charming and so natural.
She asked me how to say “mye-o-naise”.
You know Edie said “mye-o-naise” instead of “mayonnaise.”
It’s hard to
duplicate. I used to hear her say all the time to her mother,
“I’ll go
downstairs and get the “mye-o-naise.”
Drew absorbed everything I had to
say.
Michael Sucsy came out to East Hampton
with his assistant and took me out to lunch.
His assistant was very good
looking.
I think he was from Mississippi.
Better looking than Michael Sucsy
(laughs).
Michael made a copy of the manuscript of
my book and took it back to
Los Angeles.
He had my manuscript for three years.
He never met Big Edie or
Little Edie, and I doubt he ever visited Grey Gardens.
I think he absorbed a
lot about the Beales from my book.
I thought when he ran off with the
manuscript I would
get some sort of compensation for it because
he studied it
for three years and wouldn’t send it back.
He even asked me for pages of it
that were missing at the time.
He sent me a contract that I wouldn’t sign
because it was ridiculous.
So that’s how I feel about the movie.
I argued with
him about it.
When we got back to my place from lunch, Drew went
into the
ladies room and I said to Michael,
“Well you didn’t throw me off a Montauk cliff
after all.”
I think I was a nuisance to him with that manuscript.
When we left Doris Francisco’s we
stopped off at the post office.
I had a package to mail. Drew jumped out of
the
back seat of the car and went into mail it for me.
Her appreciation and
manners are wonderful. |
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GG: You have disputed a lot of
the claims that Jerry Torre has made regarding his relationship with the
Beales.
Have you had the opportunity to talk with him regarding this? I heard
that you saw him at a recent party at Grey Gardens. What was that
like?
LW: I saw him at
the Historical Society party at Grey Gardens that Frances Hayward hosted.
No
one knows him in East Hampton.
He just tells one lie after another.
He is able
to do it because he is in the film “Grey Gardens” so much.
He was only there a
couple weeks and he never lived there.
Now he says he was their chauffer and
handyman.
He never was a chauffer and handyman
for them.
He must have got that from “Driving Miss Daisy.”
Anything that
clicks with him he will say he did it.
He tells one lie after
another.
He says he was with Big Edie when she
died in Grey Gardens and he was the only one there.
That’s what started the
lying.
Doris Francisco and I checked
Big Edie into the Southampton
Hospital
where she died and certainly he was never around.
He was a good prop for the
Maysles.
They did not know how to fit me in.
I am this “individualist” and
sometimes I just don’t fit in with the rest of the group.
They could see how
this young boy fit in that arrived on his bicycle.
He certainly didn’t have a
car.
The Beales had no car.
The Cadillac they had was practically sitting by
the front door and it didn’t work. Thankfully it was taken
away. |
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He has delusions.
So, I invited him on my show a few years ago.
I told him he wasn’t telling the
truth.
Then he called me on the phone and asked me
why I was saying these
things.
I told him these things he was saying were easy to check.
He had no
reason to do it.
He was in the film and had enough publicity and fame,
I guess
you could call it.
He had no reason to make up these stories.
I don’t know why
Al Maysles doesn’t stop him.
But Al just lets the chips fall where they may.
He just doesn’t want to get involved as far as I know.
I’ve got a lot more to
say about him, but I think I will end the subject right now. |
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GG: I get a lot of
emails from
people that are interested in knowing why or how Little Edie lost her hair. I
assume that she had a condition
called Alopecia, which caused her hair to fall
out.
Do you happen to know the cause?
And when did it start? Did Little Edie
ever talk about it?
LW: I don’t believe it was a
disease.
And if you want to know more about Little Edie’s hair,
I suggest you
read John Davis’s book where
he claims she set her hair on fire.
It's something
we never talked about.
Edie always had a scarf on.
She started off with
beautiful blond hair.
Some people have said that John Davis
wasn’t correct.
I
don’t like the word “disease.”
So, I would rather the cause be more dramatic
that
that. I certainly would never have asked
Edie what happened to her hair.
And I didn’t. It was just ignored, as it should be. |
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Big Edie is buried
at the Bouvier family plot at the Most Holy Trinity
Catholic Cemetery in East
Hampton.
Part of Little Edie’s cremated remains are interred at Long Island's
Locust Valley Cemetery.
Her grave is next to the grave of her brother Bouvier
“Buddy” Beale.
She reportedly did not wish to be buried near her
mother.
Photos of the gravesites of Big Edie and Little Edie
Beale: |
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