Hollywood-1947-2004
The Way THEY
Were-The Way THEY Are
By Lisa
Sarrach
The
The majority of, yesteryear’s
Whatever went on behind closed doors, the
outside world would see none of it. And
most certainly, political activism was frowned upon as expressed at the time by
Samuel Goldwyn, “If you want to send a
message, call
This leads us to ponder, what’s the real
story behind today’s dominance of Liberalism in
On its face, one could conclude quite
easily, based on historical facts and reference that the moral turpitude
rampant in the Hollywood community together with their virulent insistence that
they will never again be forced to live their lives of decadence in a closet that leads them to embrace a progressive ideology
and today’s Democratic Party.
But where does the hate come from? Looking deeper,
The intersection between politics and
The government was deeply concerned with the
new threat of communism as posed by the
The American communists of the early Cold
War were not just members of a party; their organizations were controlled by
the Soviets, some were spying on American citizens, infiltrating labor unions,
and injecting communist propaganda in films.
History has since proven true, many of the allegations of the committees
and the Congress investigating the communist threat at the time. Discussions of Joseph McCarthy’s
self-destruction and overreaching will have to wait for another day.
The first round of hearings in 1947 called
“friendly” witnesses from the film industry.
Walt Disney, Louis B. Mayer, representing the studio heads, and stars
such as Gary Cooper, Robert Taylor, Robert Montgomery, and Ronald Reagan,
representing actors, all appeared, and testified willingly about what they knew
about communists within the entertainment industry.
The second round of the 1947 hearings called
“unfriendly” witnesses thought to be communists and resulted in the infamous
Now here’s where things get
interesting. Two days after the
conclusion of hearings, the various studio heads got together and decided to
suspend the “
That statement, and that statement alone, started
the ten year long, unofficial
In 1951, the hearings returned to focus anew
on
Elia Kazan,
the famed and infamous director, was one of the few during this period to name
names. He was celebrated by the right,
and reviled by the Left, up until the day he died in 2003. In 1999,
when the Academy of Motion Pictures decided it was time to heal old
wounds and give him an honorary Oscar for
lifetime achievement, over half of the audience of Hollywood glitterati sat on
their downs in solidarity with the Left and the communists who lost their jobs
to the Blacklist.
Again and with emphasis, no government
entity blacklisted anyone and no conservative bogeyman fired anyone. The convicting of the
The
Did the outraged, in consolidation with
their comrades who had been blacklisted quit their jobs at the studios enforcing
the blacklist? Well, of course not.
What a bunch of hypocrites. Righteous indignation without
sacrifice - a typical response from the
It would be more accurate to surmise that
celebrity moral outrage is limited to things that directly affect them.
Celebrities who are paid enormous sums of
money to pretend to be someone else, don’t EVER like being told what they can
do or not do, how to behave or not behave, or be limited in ANY fashion by ANY
boss, for ANY reason.
It was true 50 years ago, it’s true
today. Back during the days of the
studio system, actors, writers, and directors had no power. There were under contracts, did the pictures
they were told to do, were paid a weekly salary, got no percentages of the
gross, and were told to behave themselves in public. Millions were spent on public relations
crisis management, if behind the scenes, an actor was a drunkard or used drugs,
or cheated on their spouses, or was gay, to cover it up. Moral clauses were standard. If you didn’t clean up your act, you were
fired. That was the
price you paid to be a star, to live in your mansions and to be adored by the
public.
In the 1950’s events like the Hollywood
blacklist, actors demanding more control over the films they made, their
rebellious nature against authority bursting to be set free, and later with the ramp up of the Vietnam War,
culminated in the explosion of the late 1960’s, that we are still feeling
today.
Today, our studio heads are the product of that
sixties explosion and the ghosts of the
No longer concerned with morals clauses,
content, families, or patriotism,
That, we surmise, is the real reason behind
The Left is in control in
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Lisa Sarrach is president of
Hollywood-Hero (www.hollywood-hero.us), GOPUSA.COM (www.gopusa.com) national
columnist and freelance writer focusing on cultural and domestic policy issues. You can contact her at
lsarrach@hollywood-hero.us.