Mrs.Disney
By Stephen Schochet
Warren Beatty once observed," That if you get married
in Hollywood, you should always do it before noon. That
way if it doesn't work out, you don't kill your evening."
But in 1925 Walt Disney, still getting his feet wet in Tinseltown
was not interested in pampered starlets. His eye was on
a employee of his named Lillian Bounds, originally from
Lewiston, Idaho who worked for him as ink paint girl making
fifteen dollars a week. She reminded him of the hard working
girls he knew growing up in Missouri. For her part she found
him charming, the way he grew a mustache to look older in
business meetings, and how he refused to call on her until
he could afford a new suit. Since he was more gentile around
women than men, she was spared from the temperamental swearing
that he did around his animators. Walt later joked,"
I didn't have enough money to pay her, so I married her
instead."
Early in their marriage Lillian loved going to movies with
him and would listen attentively as he criticized his competitor's
cartoons
and shared his own exciting ideas. But as time went by she
became
more challenging. Perhaps she understood he needed a sounding
board, he was surrounded by yes men who were frightened
of him. I don't like the name Mortimer, she told him in
1927. Why don't you call your mouse Mickey? She agreed with
his business partner and brother Roy in 1934 that making
the first feature length cartoon, Snow White And The Seven
Dwarfs would ruin them. When it turned out to be a smash
hit, Walt took great pleasure in hearing Lillian admit she
was wrong. But then he scared her again. "Why would
you want to build an amusement park?" She asked him.
"Amusement parks are dirty. They don't make any money."
His reply didn't make her feel better. "That's the
whole point. I want a clean one that will." But she
was at Disneyland the night before it opened with a broom,
sweeping up the dust off the Mark Twain Steamer.
Walt was a good provider for Lillian and their two daughters
even if he had to be in debt to do it. It pained her when
he had to sell his
Mercedes during the depression to meet the studio payroll,
or when old friends would call on him for a loan and he
was so tapped out he had turn them down. They were both
content to spend evenings at home avoiding the publicity
glare of Hollywood parties. When times were better she put
up with Walt called his "one sin" owning six polo
ponies, which he paid for dearly by taking a nasty spill.
He became a life long scotch drinker to dull the reoccurring
pain in his neck. His next hobby annoyed her more, a miniature
railroad in the backyard that ran through her flowerbed.
She gave in only because the it seemed to give him a release
from studio pressures. Sometimes she thought maybe he was
using the rides to hide out and avoid facing overwhelming
problems. Later, Disneyland would provide him with a bigger
train giving Lillian more peace at home.
Lillian didn't worry about Walt cheating on her with another
woman but would sometimes get jealous of his work. Often
he would come home late, choosing instead to spend the night
at the studio prowling around his animator's desks, even
going through their trash cans to pull out their best ideas.
One time he arrived late for a date and drunk. Angrily she
locked him out of the house. He made amends the next day
by presenting her with a female puppy in a hat box. That
event later became the basis for the Disney classic Lady
And The Tramp (1955).
The Disney's were world travelers. Lillian was thrilled
to get the
call from Walt to pack up for their next surprise vacation
and marvel how he would turn their experiences into Disneyland
attractions. They fell in love with skiing in Switzerland
and it lead to the Matterhorn Bobsled Ride. They enjoyed
buying antiques in the French Quarter, inspiring the creation
of New Orleans Square. They learned about hidden treasure
on a island near Cuba sparking the construction of The Pirates
Of The Caribbean, which Walt did not live to see completed.
Lillian fell short of her own dream. She did not share
Walt's love
of classical music, preferring to listen to Lawrence Welk.
But she
felt his pain when Fantasia (1940) failed at the box office.
In
1987, 21 years after he passed on, she donated fifty million
dollars
to build the Walt Disney Concert Hall which would be the
new home for the Los Angeles Philharmonic. What better legacy
than to bring Beethoven and Mozart to the masses just like
Walt wanted. But she became discouraged when her idea for
a simple brick building became much more elaborate in the
hands of architect Frank Gehry. Soon the fifty million was
gone and she wanted it back fearing she had wasted her money
on an incomplete boondoggle. Her daughter Diane convinced
her that Gehry's design was wonderful but she died six years
before the hall opened.
One great thing about Walt building Disneyland was that
he and
Lillian got to play tour guide to world leaders. But Mrs.
Disney was very disappointed when the head of Russia Nikita
S. Khrushchev and his wife failed to come to the park in
1960. The Anaheim police said they could not provide enough
security. The Soviet Prime Minister grumpily settled for
a star studded luncheon at Twentieth Century Fox instead.
During the meal Frank Sinatra was informed of Mrs. Khrushchev's
disappointment at missing out on The Magic Kingdom. Old
Blue Eyes slammed his fist on the table. "Screw the
cops. I'll take the old broad down there and watch her myself."
He grabbed her by the hand and was near the door when he
was stopped by the KGB. Back at Disneyland Walt told Lillian
he was just as disappointed as she was. He was dying to
show the Communist ruler his new submarine fleet.
About the Author
Stephen Schochet is the author and narrator of the audio
books Fascinating Walt Disney and Tales Of Hollywood. The
Saint Louis Post Dispatch says," these two elaborate
productions are exceptionally entertaining." Hear real
audio samples of these great, unique gifts at www.hollywoodstories.com.
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