SP Times
va Gardner tops tobacco in N.C. town
Smithfield, N.C., is proud as can be of its home-grown movie star, who never forgot where she came from.
By ADRIAN and GEORGIANA HAVILL
© St. Petersburg Times, published February 28, 1999
SMITHFIELD, N.C. -- A few weeks after Frank Sinatra died last year, we went in search of the movie star the tabloids were calling "the love of his life." We knew exactly where to find her.
The woman for whom he left his childhood sweetheart, Nancy, was Ava Lavinia Gardner, and her history was located behind an outlet shopping mall, smack dab in the middle of North Carolina's tobacco country.
Johnston County, N.C., has about 86,000 acres of Bright Leaf fields divided by narrow, and not all paved, roads. Its claim to fame is that the movie star was born, bred and buried here, and the locals make the most of that. There is an Ava Gardner museum, an Ava Gardner birthplace, an Ava Gardner childhood home and an Ava Gardner grave site.
Many former U.S. presidents don't get this much attention or affection from their hometowns after death, but then none of them was as beautiful.
We headed for the museum first. It's in downtown Smithfield, the county seat.
In the window is a poster for one of Gardner's 60 films, The Barefoot Contessa. She was at the top of her four-decade career when it was released in 1954, and the press had dubbed her "the world's most beautiful woman.' The makers of the movie weren't satisfied with even that lofty title and had advanced the Hollywood hype, so the promotional poster was headlined "The World's Most Beautiful Animal."
The old red brick building that houses the Gardner memorabilia is next to the county's only movie theater and across the street from its only French restaurant. Gardner, who lived the last two decades of her 67 years in Europe, spending much of her time in the company of Spanish matadors, probably would have liked her tribute to be at this location.
Gardner's shrine is a chronicle of her early life in Johnston County, her movie career and her tempestuous personal life. The earthy actor married three times (Mickey Rooney, Artie Shaw and Sinatra) and was said to have bested all of her husbands when it came to drinking, swearing, partying and smoking.
She was actually born 10 miles away, at a home, according to museum docent Ruth Linebrink, "on Grabtown Road, the morning of Christmas Eve 1922." She was the youngest of seven, the third daughter of a tobacco sharecropper. Her family struggled during most of her childhood years, moving when she was a toddler so her mother could manage a boarding house for female teachers nearby.
Her father briefly took the family to Newport News, Va., during the Depression when he found work in the shipyards, and he died there while Gardner was in her teens. She, her mother and her siblings came back to Johnston County.
When she was 18, Gardner took a year of secretarial training in an adjacent county, and after graduation she got to go to New York City to visit her married sister, Bappie. Bappie's husband ran a photography studio and snapped a chaste portrait of Ava. The picture wound up in his shop's window and was spotted by a passing MGM talent scout. Smitten, he reached Gardner by phone in Johnston County and offered her a Hollywood contract on the spot.
"I can stay here and be a secretary, or I can go to Hollywood and breathe the same air that Clark Gable breathes," Gardner is said to have told her mother. No contest. Five years later she played opposite Gable in The Hucksters.
Though her face and form were her fortune, her acting was decidedly underappreciated. She did eventually receive an Oscar nomination for her role as Honey Bear Kelly in Mogambo (another part opposite Gable). Her acting in classics such as On the Beach or the Ernest Hemingway adaptations of The Sun Also Rises and The Snows of Kilamanjaro was discussed far less than her stunning physical appearance.
Hollywood advertised her figure as 37-22-35, a statistic given out in those days by movie publicists as commonly as the color of a starlet's eyes. This seemed a bit extreme; she was only 5-foot-4 and said to weigh just 110 pounds. We asked docent Linebrink if she would measure one of Gardner's dresses for us. She immediately pulled out a tape measure and tugged it tight around the waist of one of the mannequins dressed in her movie costumes, this a strapless black taffeta sheath. (This is just one of the pleasures of small museums. Asking a Smithsonian guide to do this on, say, Jackie O's inaugural gown just wouldn't bring the same response.)
Linebrink's verdict came in at 37-25-35.
"They always exaggerated the waist," said our Johnston County expert.
The genesis of the Ava Gardner Museum actually began when Gardner was in her late teens. It seems that when she was attending her secretarial classes, she was regularly heckled and teased by a 10-year-old boy while waiting for her ride home from school. One day, fed up with the harassment, she ran after the youngster, caught him and then kissed the youth on the mouth in front of a crowd of his friends.
The boy, Tom Banks, never forgot the encounter, and a few years later, he saw the girl who gave him the smooch in a Hollywood movie with Mickey Rooney. That was the catalyst for Banks to begin collecting virtually everything Ava. In the 1980s, Banks and his wife donated his 42-year collection to the county, and it is now housed and maintained in Smithfield.
Nearly every native of Johnston County from her era has some sort of Ava Gardner tale. Unlike some other celebrities from rural areas, Gardner came home often to visit, sometimes shucking her shoes to wander the fields barefoot. On one such occasion in 1979, she took a dare from a local and climbed up the town's water tower, something she'd resisted doing as a kid.
Between her marriages, Gardner reveled in romance. She was linked to many stars of the day, dumping them before they tired of her. Always good for a quote, she ended her affair with the quirky Howard Hughes by telling the press, "He was only interested in two things, money and breasts."
Which brings us to Frank Sinatra. Sinatra was at the bottom of the show business pecking order in the early 1950s, his career all but over. Gardner, on the other hand, was one of Hollywood's more bankable screen stars when they met at an MGM party.
Still, it was lust, if not love, at first sight. Their six-year marriage was the stuff of tabloid headlines, with Sinatra leaving his first wife, Nancy, to marry her. At one point in the volatile union, Sinatra made headlines by firing a gun into their marriage bed and locking her out of the house.
"She never remarried after Sinatra," Linebrink told us. "And though she didn't think as much of Rooney and Shaw, each of whom she was married to for less than two years, she somehow stayed friends with all three of them."
Sinatra might have been a forgotten crooner when he died last year had it not been for Gardner. It was she who, after he was turned down for the role of Maggio in From Here to Eternity, went to Columbia Pictures' feared dictator, Harry Cohn, and begged the mogul to give Sinatra the role. Her clout and beauty eventually carried the day, getting the legendary singer the part and rescuing his career.
We thought of her relationship with Sinatra while driving out to nearby Sunset Park cemetery, to view her final resting place. Though Gardner died of pneumonia at her home in London on Jan. 25, 1990, she was brought back to Johnston County to be buried as she had always wanted to be, in her family's plot.
Gardner's graveside ceremony mirrored the final scene of The Barefoot Contessa: a driving rain failing on a vast canopy of umbrellas, with nearly 4,000 townspeople showing up to see her off. Flowers were everywhere, but the biggest floral tribute, lavender and white blossoms topped by a flock of carved white doves, dwarfed all the others.
It was signed, "With my love, Francis."
They say here that when the service was over and the final prayer was said, the rain stopped and the sun began shining brightly. It was the kind of ending, the locals will tell you, that usually only happens in the movies.
The Havills are freelance writers who live in Reston, Va.
If you go
GETTING THERE: Johnston County, N.C., is on Interstate 95, about halfway between St. Petersburg and New York City.
BEING THERE: The Ava Gardner Museum is at 205 S Third St. in downtown Smithfield. It's open daily from 1-5 p.m. Admission is $3 for adults; seniors and children 12 and up, $2. Call (919) 934-5830 or see the Web site at
http://www.avagardner.org. Museum souvenirs range from mugs to movies on videotape to mousepads. The docent on duty will give you a map directing you to Gardner's birthplace, childhood home and grave site.
There are other things to see and do. At the I-95 exit is Factory Stores of America, a major outlet shopping center large enough to challenge anyone's wallet or walking power. A mobile cart meanders about the nearly 2-mile-long center to take people from one part to another.
Johnston County also has a NASCAR speedway that's open from April to October in nearby Kenly. For Civil War buffs, there are frequent re-enactments at Bentonville Battleground, where 80,000 Union and Confederate troops fought in one of the largest land battles of the South.
To fully understand the local land and its historic farm economy, do not miss the Tobacco Farm Life Museum in Kenly, 11/2 miles from Smithfield. Admission is $2 for adults; $1 for seniors and children.
Big doings: the Ham & Yam Festival in April, with a 5K run, live entertainment and cooking contests.
WHERE TO STAY: Most chain motels are right off I-95. There are independents such as Waverley's Bed & Breakfast, (919) 989-2161; the popular Becky's Log Cabin, which has tennis courts, (919) 934-1534; and the Village Motor Lodge. Our room there was not deluxe, but it was quite clean and delivered free cable, for $26.99 a night. A word of warning: Its 101 rooms were filled by 6:30. The Village's number is (800) 531-0063.
WHERE TO EAT: Across the street from the Ava Gardner Museum is the Cafe Monet, whose menu and decor looked very appealing, but our first stop had to be for genuine N.C. barbecue, which is roasted pork in a vinegary dressing (no tomato sauce). We went south from Smithfield on Bright Leaf Boulevard (Highway 301) to a highly recommended place called Holt Lake Bar-B-Que & Seafood. We stood in a line on hot black asphalt wondering if we had lost our minds in the heat, but the queue moved fast and businesslike. Inside, we sampled some of the best Carolina-style barbecue we've ever had. One "large" dinner cost $5.65. One of us had the fried chicken/barbecue combo for $5.15. The slaw and hushpuppies were super; only the steak fries were undistinguished. The fried seafood being served around us looked excellent.
Afterward, we searched for the Sel-Pine Ice Cream Shop (on A-70 a mile behind the Holiday Inn Express), which we heard made 52 types of milkshakes and had 40 flavors of ice cream. There we had a quite fine cone and a hot fudge sundae for a total bill of $2.67.