Paperback cover of Star: How Warren Beatty Seduced America, by Peter Biskind, 2010. |
Author Peter Biskind. |
Actor. Writer. Producer. Director. Sex symbol. Family man.
Warren Beatty is all of these things and more, as Peter Biskind shows in his
2010 biography of Beatty, Star: How
Warren Beatty Seduced America. Biskind examines the full scope of Beatty’s
life and career, and Star features
interviews with numerous people who know Beatty or have worked with him.
Biskind is obviously an admirer of Beatty’s talent, but he doesn’t turn a blind
eye to Beatty’s faults.
Star is not an
authorized biography of Beatty, but Biskind was able to interview Beatty for
the book. In the introduction Biskind spells out his relationship with Beatty,
and one of the ground rules that Biskind set out for himself was that he would
not dig into Beatty’s personal life during his marriage to Annette Bening. I
can understand Biskind setting this rule, as he knew that he needed to keep his
access to Beatty. But it weakens the book, because that’s the part of Beatty’s
story that’s missing. How is it that Hollywood’s most famous ladies’ man for
thirty years suddenly became a steady and stable family man? That’s a very
interesting change, and I wish there was more about it in the book.
Jeremy Pikser, who wrote the screenplay for Bulworth with Beatty, gave his own
theory as to how Beatty went from bachelor to family man: “I don’t think there
was a great sea change in Warren, other than it was time. He never gave up the
idea of having a family, and being a movie star he was able to delay that much
longer than a normal person could. If somebody said to me, ‘You can fuck as
many beautiful women you want until the age of fifty, and then you can get a
beautiful thirty-year-old woman to marry you, and have children with you’-
who’s gonna turn that down? Annette was the perfect person, with a strong
family background of her own, who was relatively stable, not a nut job, and a
good actress.” (p.463)
If you want dirt on Beatty’s serial womanizing before he met
Bening, you’ll get plenty on that in Star.
Well known for his many high profile relationships, Beatty dated actresses Joan
Collins, Natalie Wood, Leslie Caron, Julie Christie, Diane Keaton, and Isabelle
Adjani. He also had relationships with singers Michelle Phillips of the Mamas
and the Papas, and Madonna.
Perhaps the most ridiculous paragraph in the book is the one
in which Biskind attempts to calculate how many women Warren Beatty has slept
with. There’s a quote from Beatty in which he supposedly said he couldn’t go to
sleep without having sex. Biskind takes Beatty literally, and so he arrives at
the figure of 12,775 women. (p.160) Contrary to what Biskind says in the book,
that figure does not account for time that Beatty was in a relationship and
having sex with the same woman night after night. Biskind simply took 35 years,
from 1956 until Beatty met Annette Bening in 1991, and multiplied 35 times 365
days a year. I find it pretty unlikely that Beatty actually slept with a
different woman every single night for 35 years. That would tire out anyone.
Beatty’s reputation as a ladies’ man, and the attending
attention his love life has received from the press, has threatened to
overshadow his reputation as an actor and a filmmaker. It’s ironic that Beatty’s
private life has drawn such attention, because Beatty actually is a very
private man, who only gives interviews with great reluctance, and goes to great
lengths to avoid actually saying anything in those interviews. But if Beatty
didn’t want so much attention to be focused on his private life, he shouldn’t
have dated so many famous actresses.
One of the best stories in the book comes from Dustin
Hoffman, who co-starred with Beatty in the ill-fated 1987 comedy Ishtar. Hoffman and Beatty were on
location in Morocco, and Hoffman noticed that Beatty’s attention suddenly
drifted to a woman who was walking on a sand dune hundreds of yards away.
Hoffman asked Beatty, “Theoretically, is there any woman on the planet that you
would not fuck? If you had the chance?”
“That’s an interesting question…Is there any woman that I
wouldn’t fuck? No, there isn’t.”
“Theoretically, you would fuck any and every woman…”
“Yes.”
“You’re serious.”
“Yes.”
“Why?”
“Because…you never know.”
Hoffman said, “I thought that was the most romantic thing
I’d ever heard a man say, because he was talking about spirits uniting.”
(p.357-8) It’s a great anecdote that goes a long way towards explaining the
mindset of Warren Beatty. Why sleep with another woman when you've slept with
so many already? Because you never know, the next one might be the perfect one.
Why shoot another take after you've shot 25 or 30 takes? Because you never
know, the next one might be the perfect one.
Beatty is well-known for being a perfectionist on the set of
his movies, a trait that can drive some people nuts. Buck Henry, who
co-directed Heaven Can Wait with
Beatty, had this to say about working with him: “Except for actors, everybody
{who works with him} ends up so bitter that they have a skewed vision of what
actually takes place, and you never can quite piece it together.” (p.234-5)
Biskind has interviewed many people who have worked with Beatty on various
movies, and they offer valuable insights into Beatty’s working habits and his
complicated personality. However, as Buck Henry’s quote above shows, their
stories need to be taken with a grain of salt. There are a lot of stories from
people who have worked with Beatty who basically say, “He’s a perfectionist, he’s
annoying,” and eventually it becomes quite repetitive.
Beatty’s chronic
indecisiveness and his perfectionism have hampered his ability to finish film projects,
and Beatty’s filmography is quite small. Beatty has made just 22 movies since
his screen debut in 1961. Fortunately for Beatty, among those 22 movies are
some truly great ones, like Bonnie and
Clyde, Shampoo, Heaven Can Wait, Reds, and Bugsy. Beatty has long been a favorite at the Academy Awards, and
he is the only person to be nominated for four Oscars for a single film more
than once, for his films Heaven Can Wait and
Reds. Beatty won the Oscar Best Director
for Reds in 1981.
Biskind has a lot of material in his book on Beatty’s successes
like Heaven Can Wait and Reds, and also a lot on Beatty’s disasters
like Ishtar, Love Affair, and 2001’s Town and Country, which remains Beatty’s
most recent movie. (Beatty has apparently finished filming his long-gestating
movie about Howard Hughes, but there’s no release date yet.) If you’re looking
for stories about Warren Beatty being a perfectionist, there are many of those
in this book.
Star is an excellent
book, and it will probably stand as the definitive biography of Warren Beatty,
unless a future biographer gains Beatty’s full cooperation and access to his
personal archives.
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