Ronnie and Nancy_ Their Path to the White House - Bob Colacello [324]
55. Richard Gully, to author, October 1, 1999.
56. E. Morris, Dutch, p. 718; Edwards, Early Reagan, p. 192.
57. E. Morris, Dutch, p. 720.
58. Edwards, Early Reagan, p. 193; Quirk, Jane Wyman, p. 43.
59. Wills, Reagan’s America, p. 145.
60. Quirk, Jane Wyman, p. 42.
61. McClelland, Hollywood on Ronald Reagan, p. 46 (citing a 1944 Movieland article co-authored by Jane Wyman).
62. Edwards, Early Reagan, p. 193.
63. Ronald Reagan with Hubler, Where’s the Rest of Me? , p. 87.
64. McClelland, Hollywood on Ronald Reagan, p. 6.
65. E. Morris, Dutch, p. 162.
66. Edwards, Early Reagan, pp. 197–98.
67. E. Morris, Dutch, p. 163.
68. Edwards, Early Reagan, pp. 199–200. See also E. Morris, Dutch, pp. 161–64; Eells, Hedda and Louella, pp. 190–91.
69. Leonora Hornblow, to author, February 10, 2000.
70. Maureen Reagan, First Father, First Daughter, p. 36.
5 2 2
Notes
71. Edwards, Early Reagan, pp. 200–201; E. Morris, Dutch, pp. 165–66; Fine Collins in Vanity Fair, April 1997, p. 368.
72. Leonora Hornblow, to author, February 10, 2000.
73. Eells, Hedda and Louella, p. 23.
74. Jane Wyman, to author, February 21, 1999.
75. Quirk, Jane Wyman, p. 45.
76. Edwards, Early Reagan, p. 213; E. Morris, Dutch, p. 725.
77. E. Morris, Dutch, p. 185.
78. Movie-Radio Guide, September 20, 1941, “The Ten Richest Women in Movies,”
quoted in Schultz, Irene Dunne, p. 253, entry B-319.
79. Ronald Reagan with Hubler, Where’s the Rest of Me? , p. 86.
80. E. Morris, Dutch, p. 185.
81. Nancy Reagan, to author, July 10, 2000.
82. Schary Zimmer (now Jill Robinson), With a Cast of Thousands, p. 110.
83. Current Biography 1941, “Benny, Jack.”
84. McClelland, Hollywood on Ronald Reagan, p. 26.
85. Leonora Hornblow, to author, February 10, 2000.
86. Edwards, Early Reagan, p. 230.
87. Maureen Reagan, First Father, First Daughter, pp. 27–28.
88. William Frye, to author, October 27, 1999.
89. Wright Cobb and Willems, The Brown Derby Restaurant, pp. 7, 72–73.
90. Robert Stack, to author, March 16, 2000.
91. Ibid.
92. Vaughn, Ronald Reagan in Hollywood, pp. 105–6. Other sources say that the film’s budget was $750,000.
93. Ronald Reagan with Hubler, Where’s the Rest of Me? , pp. 97–98.
94. Ibid., p. 81.
95. Maureen Reagan, First Father, First Daughter, pp. 60–61.
96. Ibid., p. 61; E. Morris, Dutch, p. 177.
97. Maureen Reagan, First Father, First Daughter, p. 61.
98. Vaughn, Ronald Reagan in Hollywood, p. 39.
99. Edwards, Early Reagan, pp. 245–50.
100. Vaughn, Ronald Reagan in Hollywood, p. 39.
101. Spada, Ronald Reagan, p. 39.
102. E. Morris, Dutch, p. 184.
103. Ann Rutherford, to author, January 22, 2001.
104. PBS Online, American Experience: Lindbergh, special features, “Fallen Hero: Charles Lindbergh in the 1940s,” http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/lindbergh/
sfeature/fallen.html.
105. Affron, Lillian Gish, pp. 285–86.
106. Schlesinger Jr., A Life in the 20th Century, p. 242.
107. Gabler, An Empire of Their Own, pp. 351–53.
108. Billingsley, Hollywood Party, pp. 70–71; Koch, Double Lives, pp. 78, 225.
109. Billingsley, Hollywood Party, p. 75; Koch, Double Lives, p. 225.
110. Gabler, An Empire of Their Own, p. 354.
111. Buhle and Wagner, Radical Hollywood, p. 56.
112. Lardner Jr., I’d Hate Myself in the Morning, p. 98.
113. E. Morris, Dutch, pp. 157–59, 719.
Notes
5 2 3
114. Leonora Hornblow, to author, February 10, 2000.
115. Vaughn, Ronald Reagan in Hollywood, p. 93.
116. Affron, Lillian Gish, p. 291.
117. Gabler, An Empire of Their Own, p. 345; New York Times, September 12, 1941,
“Lindbergh Sees a ‘Plot’ for War.”
118. Edwards, Early Reagan, p. 258.
119. Vaughn, Ronald Reagan in Hollywood, pp. 99–100.
120. Ibid., p. 34.
121. Ibid., p. 35.
122. Ibid., p. 67.
123. Ibid., p. 79.
124. Ibid., p. 72.
125. Ibid., p. 70.
126. Ibid., p. 67.
127. Ronald Reagan with Hubler, Where’s the Rest of Me? , p. 102.
128. Vaughn, Ronald Reagan in Hollywood, p. 68.
129. Ibid., p. 102.
Chapter Six: Nancy at Smith, 1939–1944
1. Nancy Reagan with Novak, My Turn, p. 82.
2.