Love Goddess Info
In 1948 Ava began a stormy and very public relationship with a married man. Already a controversial figure and an incorrigible philanderer, he was egocentric, volatile and undisciplined. He was also extremely talented. His name was Frank Sinatra.
At the beginning of his relationship with Ava, Sinatra's career had dipped for a variety of reasons, but the press was still following him closely. By now Sinatra had proved conclusively that he was nothing like his public image of a shy, romantic dreamer leading a quiet family life, and the press knew that spreading gossip about him would sell newspapers and magazines. As Ava was never one to hide her light under a bushel, there was little chance their relationship would proceed discreetly. The press was not alone in taking an interest. The Catholic Church decided this was a matter for them, and denounced both parties. (Sinatra and his wife were Catholics.) Some members of the church instructed their flock to boycott Sinatra's records and Ava's movies. Sinatra was vulnerable and his record sales plummeted, but Ava's career was blossoming and she suffered little damage. At first, however, there was concern in Hollywood about the impact on her career, and this too was exploited by the media. "Can Ava survive the Sinatra scandal?" asked "Screen Stars" on its front cover.
She could indeed, and this was demonstrated by other studios continuing to request her services. RKO borrowed her for "My Forbidden Past" opposite two of Hollywood's finest: Melvyn Douglas and Robert Mitchum. Ava held her own in such elevated company, playing the mischievous and amoral Barbara, who inherits a fortune and uses it to try to break up the marriage of the man she loves. Director Robert Stevenson and cinematographer Harry Wild - Jane Russell's favourite - subjected Ava to an onslaught of searching close-ups, and she did not falter in any of them. In each the audience knows what Barbara is thinking, in each the audience notices that Ava is exceptionally beautiful. It may not have been acting with a capital A, and it was not the kind of acting that wins awards, but it was more than good enough to make the movie work.
Ava's unforced style of acting was not appreciated by critics who, throughout the '40s and '50s acknowledged acting talent in good-looking actresses only if they were lady-like or child-like. (Deborah Kerr and Grace Kelly in one camp and Marilyn Monroe and Audrey Hepburn in the other were never slighted by critics in the way Ava, Linda Darnell and Elizabeth Taylor were.) In addition the Sinatra publicity and Ava's still growing beauty distracted attention away from her work while nevertheless strengthening her box-office potency and making her more attractive to producers.
Ava was now frequently cast in roles where outstanding beauty was required. For example, in "Pandora And The Flying Dutchman" she played a woman with whom various men fall in love and who sacrifices herself for a sailor who is three hundred years old and cannot die! (Ava's co-star James Mason, in a sober autobiography containing neither malice nor generosity, allowed himself the book's one passage of fulsome praise: "Jack Cardiff was the cameraman and he did a great job. He gave us Ava Gardner on the crest of her great beauty. For some spectators no doubt the slow pace of the sequences in which she appeared was not unwelcome.")
In that same year, 1951, Ava and Sinatra were married, but as Ava admits in "My Story", this did not bring trust or tranquility to their relationship. However, the tide was turning for Ava's career, and she was at last given substantial parts in major productions, both at MGM and on loan-out. In the early 1950s Ava made five films which stand the test of time, and which show that Ava was not only a magnificent screen presence but also a capable actress.
In "Showboat" Ava very persuasively played the tragic half-caste Julie, and once again MGM refused to use her singing voice. However Ava's own voice had to be used on the soundtrack album, and this revealed that MGM's judgement was severely faulty. (On the Rhino CD of "Showboat", listeners can hear both versions of "Bill" and "Can't Help Loving That Man", and for many Ava's performances are not only acceptable, but are actually superior.)
20th Century Fox borrowed Ava for "The Snows Of Kilimanjaro", her second Hemingway movie. Ava was excellent as a self-assured and liberated woman, and fully conveyed the personality of the character. Back at MGM Ava played a different kind of independent woman in "Mogambo", a film that was dismissed by critics, despite being hugely entertaining. The contrast between Ava's freewheeling showgirl and Grace Kelly's sexual hypocrite is particularly enjoyable, partly, it must be said, because Grace Kelly was superb.
United Artists borrowed Ava for "The Barefoot Contessa", which was ahead of its time in making the heroine's sex drive the pivot of the plot. Writer/director Joseph Mankiewicz created a story of a Spanish slum girl who is taken to Hollywood, becomes a movie star, yet remains unimpressed by success and stardom. While indulging her sexual appetite secretly, she spurns the offers of jet set wolves, sensing that romantic fulfillment lies elsewhere. Eventually she meets her Prince Charming and marries him, but fate has a cruel joke in store. Again photographed lustrously by Jack Cardiff, Ava gave an excellent performance, radiating vibrancy and beauty while fully bringing out the conflicts felt by Maria. It is difficult to imagine any other actress embodying the role so convincingly. (When, in August 1982, Joseph Mankiewicz discussed his career at London's National Film Theatre, he was defensive about "The Barefoot Contessa", and emphasised that censorship had forced him to be circumspect in his delineation of Maria's sex drive. He seemed to feel the film did not work properly, and insisted that if he had made the movie twenty-five years later, a better film would have resulted. In fact, Mankiewicz was right when he made the film and wrong when he reminisced. The discreet approach works perfectly, and most members of the audience grasp what is involved. Today's blatancy would not serve the subject well.)
MGM then gave Ava the role of Victoria Jones, another half-caste, in "Bhowani Junction", set in India during the last days of the British Empire. Once again, Ava's unshowy brand of acting revealed to the audience her character's inner turmoil.
By now Ava was established as big star who appeared in large-budget, Cinemascope, colour productions shot on location with top directors like John Ford, George Cukor and Henry King. Cinema-goers responded by acknowledging that Ava was a more than adequate actress as well as being awesomely beautiful, and Ava became in the mid-1950s a major box-office attraction. However she did not achieve recognition from the critical establishment which continued for the rest of Ava's career to insist that she was merely a glamorous screen presence. They were supported in this by scandal and gossip magazines which delighted in printing stories that Ava was unhappy and was desperately searching for elusive fulfillment. Ignoring the fact that Ava had dumped Sinatra, they wrote routinely that she was pining for him. There were constant references to excessive drinking, although there was no deterioration in her looks to give credibility to such stories. On the contrary, in the mid and late 1950s, Ava became a byword in beauty, a yardstick by which other actresses were judged.