Humphrey Bogart proclaimed in 1950. “If everyone
in the world would take three drinks, we would have
no trouble. If Stalin, Truman and everybody else in
the world had three drinks right now, we’d all
loosen up and we wouldn’t need the United Nations.”
He’d have been more honest if he’d said
the world was about twelve drinks behind.
Bogart probably learned to drink from his upper-class
but hard drinking parents. He carried the habit through
a number of upscale academies and prep schools, managing
to get routinely expelled for poor marks and a strong
anti-authoritarian streak. Cast adrift at eighteen years
of age, Bogart joined the Navy in 1918, hoping to see
action in the Atlantic and a different kind of action
in Paris. He missed the party by a month.
Decommissioned after the Armistice, Bogart found
himself with few plans and less ambition. He took on
a number of low-tier jobs in New York City, wiling away
months as a biscuit factory worker, tugboat inspector
and a message runner until he found steady employment
as an office boy at William Brady’s Theatrical
Office. Falling in with the boss’s playboy son,
Bill Brady Jr., Bogart came into his own as a hard drinker
the same year they passed Prohibition. Not that this
daunted the headstrong young man.
Liquor might have been illegal, but in wasn’t
hard to get in Manhattan. Bogart dove headfirst into
the Jazz Age lifestyle, always up for late night revels.
He and Brady became notorious drinking companions, managing
to stretch their nightly tours of illegal speakeasies
until dawn. When his meager wages were exhausted, he’d
play chess against all comers in arcades for a dollar
a match (he was a brilliant player) to fund his outings.
When that money dried up, he used his natural charm
to establish immutable and long-standing bar tabs. As
much as he enjoyed the glamorous speakeasies, he wasn’t
above spending time in less chic joints like Tony’s
on 52nd Street, especially when he was broke. The owner
Tony Soma was infamous for granting credit to people
he liked and he like Bogart. He liked him so much he
kept his tab open for over 18 months. Bogart eventually
paid it.
It was during this time Bogart most likely got his
trademark lip scar and slight lisp. Though the movie
studios would later say he received the wound from,
alternatively, (1) a shard of shrapnel while his ship
was being shelled by a Hun submarine (impossible since
Bogart didn’t make it to sea until after the Armistice
was signed), or (2) a prisoner he was escorting to the
brig asked for a smoke then smashed him in the mouth
with his handcuffs. According to his New York drinking
cronies, he most likely got the wound in a speakeasy
brawl. Bogart had the habit of drinking until he passed
out at the table, and when somebody roused him he woke
up cracking wise, which as often as not led to a fistfight.
Bogart never concerned himself with the scar, and his
career didn’t seem to suffer, transforming his
too-pretty face into something with a hint of danger.
When he wasn’t carousing with friends,
he was content to sit alone at the 21 Club, bent earnestly
over a notebook, smoking a pipe and drinking scotch,
fancying himself a budding playwright. His taste in
booze was the same as most teenagers. A true democrat,
he careened wildly between scotch, Black Velvets (equal
parts Guinness and champagne), bathtub gin martinis,
beer and Jack Rose cocktails.
Working for a theatre company, it was only a matter
of time before he caught the acting bug. He thought
a great deal of the carefree acting lifestyle, which
appeared to consist a few hours on stage, then a lot
of hours at the Players Club, drinking with attractive
actresses with rather loose morals.
His first role was as a Japanese butler carrying
a tray of cocktails and his later roles leaned toward
variations on what was called a “white-pants Willy”—the
handsome but callow young fellow who was a staple of
many drawing-room comedies. His early reviews were not
especially promising, his acting slighted as “what
is usually and mercifully described as inadequate.”
One of his friends would later say her most vivid
remembrance of Bogart was of him sitting alone at a
table at Tony’s, drinking steadily with a weary
determination, his head drooping lower and lower. By
the time she left he’d fallen into exhausted sleep
with his head sunk in his arms. “Poor Humphrey,” she
told her companion, “he’s finally licked.”
And he was. Well, at least until the following evening.
Drinking was a priority and he preferred to drink until
dawn, sometimes at the expense of his stage performances.
Fired from several productions for showing up so hungover
he blew his lines, Bogart shrugged it off, by now he
was well known on Broadway and not lacking for work.
Bogart soldiered through and the reviews got better.
In what some biographers call a career move, Bogart
married Helen Menken in 1926. An established Broadway
actress, she did help his career. As equally
ambitious as he, the two focused more on their careers
than their marriage and it mercifully ended in less
than a year.
Following the divorce, as if he needed a reason,
Bogart cranked up the hooching. His nightly path could
be traced straight from the stage to the nearest speakeasy,
where he drowned his sorrows with cocktails and chorus
girls. He would later say, “I had had enough women
by the time I was 27 to know what I was looking for
in a wife the next time I married.”
The next time was a year later. He married another
established actress named Mary Phillips. An accomplished
drinker, she could keep up with him and in her he found
a willing comrade in his quest to drink every bottle
in Manhattan.
With Mary’s help, Bogart got choicer parts
and in 1930, at the age of thirty-one, Bogart was signed
by Fox Studios to make films. Certain this was the break
he’d been waiting for, he went to Hollywood to
be a star. Mary stayed in New York.
Hollywood was not the fair mistress he thought she
would be. Eager to please, Bogart cut down on his carousing
and toed the line. He played bit parts in forgettable
movies for eighteen months, then beat it back to Broadway
in time to watch his father die.
Melancholy after the funeral, Bogart
turned to the bottle with such vigor some of his friends
suspected him suicidal. He continued to build on his
already magnificent tabs at a half-dozen nightclubs,
always able to stave off payment with promises that
the next big break was right around the corner. Ironically,
it was because of his heavy boozing he would get the
role that would resurrect his life and career.
Asked
to try out for the role of a cynical gangster at the
end of his rope in the play The Petrified
Forest, Bogart showed up for the audition with
a world-class hangover. Unshaven, bedraggled, puffy-eyed
and completely apathetic about getting the part, he
came off as exactly what the director envisioned the
character should be. The play was an overnight sensation,
earning Bogart so many rave reviews that Jack Warner,
the president of Warner Brothers Studios, took a train
from Hollywood to attend a performance. Bogart was
immediately signed to a one-year contract.
Now thirty-six years old, Bogart meant to make the
most of the opportunity. He relocated to Hollywood to
reprise his role in the film version of the play and
again his wife remained behind to focus on her Broadway
career. Never effusive with his emotions, Bogart kept
his own counsel, hooking up with some of the old New
York drinking gang who’d also made the leap. He
moved into the infamous Garden of Allah, a rambling
hotel and bungalow colony off Sunset Boulevard. It was
a wild place, housing some of the finest drinkers in
the world, and to keep them happy the on-site bar stayed
open twenty-four hours a day.
While on the set Bogart was the
consummate professional, obsessively punctual and always
ready with his lines (he possessed a near-photographic
memory). He limited his drinking on the job to a single
can of beer he packed in his lunchbox. A cog in the
movie factory that was Warner Brothers, he cranked
out a movie every six months, usually playing a subsidiary
role as a brooding gangster.
When he got off work it was a different
story. He would walk into his dressing room, shout, “Scotch!” and
his well-trained hairdresser would make drinks for
Bogart and whatever guests he brought with him. On
the way home he’d stop at Chasen’s or the
Brown Derby for drinks with pals who tended to be writers
more often then actors. When he got home he would relax
with a few more, then call around to see who was up
for some carousing. After organizing his drunkard army,
he would march resolutely out to seize the night.
When he wasn’t working on a
movie, he started drinking at noon, usually at his
favorite haunt, Romanoff’s.
He’d enjoy a scotch while waiting for his
lunch, two glasses of beer with the food, and a Drambuie
as an digestif. Then he’d shift to the Brown
Derby where he’d plan the evening’s activities.
“Bogie had an alcoholic thermostat,” screenwriter
and drinking comrade Nunnally Johnson said. “He
just set his thermostat at noon, pumped in some scotch,
and stayed at a nice even glow all day, redosing as
necessary.”
When his wife Mary finally came out to see him, Bogart
was already involved with his next wife, actress Mayo
Methot. If Mary was a giant among drinkers, then Mayo
was Godzilla. With a temper to match.
After a speedy divorce, Bogart married Mayo in 1938.
The wedding was held at a friend’s estate and
quickly set the tone for the rest of their relationship.
The celebrity-studded affair, fueled by Black Velvets,
quickly denigrated into a drunken orgy, culminating
with an explosive battle between the betrothed. Mayo
fled in tears to a girlfriend’s house, Bogart
took off with his best man and several of the groomsmen
to Tijuana.
This was the first act in a long-running production
that
was to become know throughout the world as “The
Battling Bogarts”. Whereas Bogart was generally
a supremely controlled boozer, Mayo was the classic
caricature of the bad drunk. Hollywood soon became acquainted,
scandalized, then amused by their booze-fueled public
battles, usually involving thrown plates and glassware.
It got so bad many clubs issued standing orders against
the pair being on the premises at the same time.
Perhaps on some level, Bogart needed Mayo. He loved
to argue and drink and she was a master at both, if
much more given to physical violence. She also helped
his career—when they met she was at her cinematic
height and could lend a hand up. And up he went, while
she started a sullen spiral downward. One critic claimed
their volatile relationship helped “set fire to
his acting.” She also set fire to their house.
And if he needed a little extra inspiration, Mayo was
more than willing to come through with some casual gunplay.
Writer Robert Massey and his wife were having cocktails
with Bogart in his living room when gunshots rang out
from upstairs. “Forget it,” Bogart told
his startled guests as he poured himself another drink. “It’s
just Mayo playing with her gun.” On another occasion,
after Bogart announced he was going to go away for a
few days, Mayo produced her pistol and chased him into
the bathroom. After threatening to shoot through the
locked door, she instead shot his suitcase full of holes,
much to the hilarity of Bogart. He called his publicist
(never the police) and by the time he arrived, scared
out of his wits, Bogart was relaxing in the bathtub
with a cocktail.
She eventually stabbed him in the back. Literally.
Bogart came home after a night of bar-hopping and Mayo,
convinced he was returning from a whorehouse, lunged
at him with a kitchen knife, stabbing him in the lower
back. Faint from blood loss, he called his agent Sam
Jaffe (never a doctor).
“Sam, we have a problem.”
“What’s the matter?”
“I think you should come over here.”
“Why?”
“Mayo stabbed me.”
“Jesus!”
A studio doctor was summoned then bribed not to tell
the police. On the advice of Jaffe, Bogart took out
a hundred-thousand-dollar life insurance policy. Mayo
was not the beneficiary.
Bogart did seem to find at least some inspiration
in the constant warfare, turning in some of his finest
performances, playing every stripe of drunkard from
the noble existentialist drowning his past in Casablanca,
to the brooding and violent screenwriter in In A
Lonely Place.
The roles weren’t much of a stretch, and the
public started having a hard time separating the real
Bogart they read about in the gossip columns from the
over-the-top roles he played on the screen. He was transforming
into a larger-than-life character that unapologetically
shoved his way into the American Psyche until he seemed
to almost stand astraddle Hollywood, casting a tall
shadow that stretched across the entire country.
A shadow that would sometimes touch his fans when
they least expected it. Once, after a long night of
drinking, Bogart found himself at dawn staggering through
unfamiliar Hollywood streets. Hammered, unshaven and
disheveled, he noticed a light burning in one of the
windows. He approached, drawn by the smell of frying
bacon, and looked inside to see a woman cooking breakfast
for her family. He stood there a while, leering drunkenly,
until the woman noticed him and let loose a scream.
“My God! It’s Humphrey Bogart!”
“What about him?” her
husband asked..
“He’s standing in our front yard.”
“Well, invite him in.”
Bogie sat down with the family, enthralling them
with ribald tales of Betty Davis, Errol Flynn and James
Cagney. He finished breakfast, called a cab and left
the family with a story their friends would never believe.
It was during this period Bogart
met a man who would also become a Hollywood titan—and
his greatest drinking buddy. Bogart crossed paths with
screenwriter/director John Huston on the set of High
Sierra. Two like minds
recognized each other immediately and from their first
martini lunch they became legendary drinking companions.
With matching wits and a
kindred love of drinking, the two would collaborate
again and again, assembling some the finest movies
of all time in between prodigal bouts of boozing. Their
wives began to suspect the pair made movies merely
as an excuse to get together and drink, and they might
have been right. During the shooting of The Maltese
Falcon, To Have And To Have Not, Treasure of Sierra
Madre, Beat The Devil and The African Queen they
could be found raising hell in Hollywood night clubs,
Florida beach bars, Mexican cantinas, Italian cafes
and African tents.
America’s entrance into World War II didn’t
appear to have any negative effects on Bogart’s
drinking. He demanded to be sent to North Africa and
Italy to entertain the troops and Mayo went with him.
They took their public brawl on the road and never missed
a beat. Good liquor wasn’t always available but
they made due. “All we get is plenty of lousy
cognac that tastes like fried oil,” Mayo wrote
to her mother. “But we drink it.”
Bogart enjoyed pounding booze with the enlisted men,
if not the officers, and the grateful troops would often
give him guns. He and Mayo would return to their USO
quarters fantastically drunk and, in the patriotic spirit
of the times, would shoot holes in the roof until the
guns were wrestled away by startled officers.
As always, Bogart had run-ins with authority. On
one occasion, after getting locked out of his room after
a drunken battle with Mayo, a colonel confronted him
and tried to dress him down (Bogie was wearing a USO
uniform). Asking for his name, rank and serial number,
Bogart replied. “I’ve got no name. I’ve
got no rank. I’ve got no serial number. And you
can go to hell.”
Later, when Bogart was reprimanded for insulting
the uniform of the United States Army, he apologized
to the colonel by stating, “ I didn’t meant
to insult the uniform. I meant to insult you.”
He would wind up in hot water again when a party
he was throwing for some enlisted men got out of hand.
When a general from across the hall told him to quiet
it down, Bogart yelled back, “Go fuck yourself!” Soon
after Bogart was asked to return to Hollywood.
Bogart made a detour on the way home. Instead of
reporting to Hollywood to start filming a new movie,
he went AWOL in New York, ditching Mayo and shacking
up with ex-wife Helen Menken who accompanied him on
a week-long bender. When he finally did return to the
set, he brusquely explained he’d lost his calendar.
Bogart loathed idle talk or anything
smacking of phoniness. Walk in with a pretension in
your heart or a lift to your snoot and he would expertly
deflate you. The man loved to needle. To test your
cool. He drank with fast company, and some of the fastest
minds of the business. The riposte over drinks was
as fleet and furious as a firefight, and newcomers
entered into the tempest of wisecracks at their own
peril. Many a star was reduced to tears or driven to
white-faced rage when they tried to mix in. Some, like
actor William Holden and director Billy Wilde, didn’t
care for the rough treatment and became lifelong enemies.
Those that possessed the intellectual skills and courage
to defend themselves and counter-attack—sometimes
physically—would
be quietly admitted into Bogart’s exclusive circle.
They knew they made it when, often teetering on the
brink of fisticuffs, Bogart smiled at them and
said, “Kid,
you’re all right.”
Some thought him unreasonably cruel,
but Bogart ascribed to a form of conversational Darwinism.
If you couldn’t
survive the pressure, you could beat it back to your
tea party. He didn’t care much for teetotalers
either. “I don’t trust a bastard who doesn’t
drink,” he was fond of saying. “They’re
afraid of revealing their true selves.”
As their marriage shambled on, the
drinking and fighting with Mayo intensified to the
point it began to spill over into his work. He
began showing up on the set hungover and sometimes
still drunk. Not that it mattered much--in the middle
of filming of Passage
to Marseille,
he arrived on the set weaving and cockeyed. The crew
and cast stood in horror, thinking they would have
to reschedule shooting, but when the director yelled
action, Bogart stepped into character and delivered
his lines as if he were stone cold sober. Other times
he needed a little help. During the shooting of the
desert war picture Sahara he’d sometimes
come in so hungover he’d refused to leave his
dressing room until Mayo showed up with a thermos full
of martinis. He slugged them down and, now steady as
a rock, would turn in a superlative day of acting.
The hallmark of a good drinker, he
liked to say, was “he can get absolutely stiff
and the fellow next to him doesn’t know it. You
had to handle it, it shouldn’t handle you.” And
for the most part it was true. Though he would out-drink
everyone around him (Huston, Errol Flynn and Richard
Burton would often give him a run for his money), at
the end of the evening he usually seemed the most sober.
After another especially heavy night of drinking
he showed up on the set in his pajamas and refused to
work. Instead he rode around the lot on a bicycle shouting, “Look,
no hands, no hands!” Finally Jack Warner himself
had to come out and speak to him.
“Bogie, what the hell are you doing?”
“Riding my bicycle.”
“It’s time to go to work.”
“I don’t feel like working.”
“You don’t, huh?”
“That’s right, I don’t.”
“Well,” Warner said, “ there’s
a lot of people in there who feel like working and they
get paychecks that are less than what you spend on scotch.”
Ever sensitive to the plight of the
working man, Bogart sheepishly got off his bike and
went to work.
On yet another occasion he was to
give a public speech at an Easter Service at the Hollywood
Bowl. At four in the morning, when he was supposed
to show up, Mayo called the studio to report Bogart
was still out drinking. He was tracked down to a friend’s
house, “drunk
as a skunk, unshaven and smelling badly.” Once
at the Bowl, however, he stepped on stage and recited
the Lord’s Prayer with such sublime emotion he
moved the huge congregation and assembled clergy to
tears. When a mob swarmed to congratulate him afterwards,
his only comment was, “Where can I puke?”
Aside from a few indiscretions, he
rarely caused trouble on the set. The notable exception
was during the shooting of Sabrina. Directed
by Billy Wilder and co-starring William Holden and
Katherine Hepburn, Bogart became increasingly angry
as the shooting went on, eventually calling his agent
and threatening to walk. His agent finally got down
to why his client was so upset—Wilder,
Holden and Hepburn were going out for drinks after
each day’s shooting and not inviting him.
To someone who regarded drinking as a sacred ritual,
this was the supreme insult.
It was in 1945, during the shooting
of To Have
and to Have Not that Bogart met his fourth and
final wife, Lauren Bacall. A nice nineteen-year-old
Jewish girl, twenty-four years his junior and not
an especially talented drinker, she seemed an unlikely
choice for Bogart. But after many bitter years of
warring with Mayo, he appeared tired of battle and
was ready for a little peace. And, for perhaps the
first time, he genuinely appeared to be in love.
Bacall was as seductive as Eve,
as cool as the serpent. Where Mayo fanned the flames
of his carousing, Bacall seemed to have a calming effect.
In her he found not only a beautiful and intelligent
woman, but also a wife who never complained about his
drinking, late-night sessions or hangovers. She would
join him in the early hours of clubbing then retire
before midnight, leaving Bogart to carry on his very
personal war against scotch. When he entertained at
home, which was practically every night he didn’t
go out, she played hostess, expertly mixing pitchers
of martinis and making with the rip-crack repartee.
While he didn’t cut down much on his drinking,
he did cut down on his selection of drinks. Long time
pal and producer Mark Hellinger told him “he was
drinking like a boy” and Bogart figured he was
right. He stopped mixing his drinks he tried to stick
to scotch.
Bogart and Bacall eventual settled into a beautiful
fourteen-room house in Bel Air. In the heart of their
home was the ‘butternut room’, a wood-paneled
study filled with bookcases, comfortable chairs and,
of course, a well-stocked bar. This room would become
the geographic and spiritual center of Hollywood’s
drinking intelligentsia, attracting the greatest minds
and personalities of recent history. On a typical evening
you’d find Richard Burton with a glass of scotch
and his current wife, Sinatra and Bacall throwing together
martinis behind the bar, David Niven and John Huston
talking movies in the corner, Noel Coward getting catty
with Judy Garland. And in the center of it all, cracking
wise, needling the new faces, holding court, was Humphrey
Bogart, their spiritual leader.
This group would initially call itself
the Freeloaders Club but the name was changed in 1955
after a wild week in Vegas. The Bogarts, Frank Sinatra,
Judy Garland, her husband Sid Luft, and David Niven
jetted down to catch Noel Coward’s show, kicking
off a sleepless bender of drinking and gambling. By
the fifth day Lauren Bacall, probably the soberest
of the lot, announced, “You look like a goddamned
rat pack!”
The name stuck. Officially the Holmby Hill’s
Rat Pack, they went so far as to draw up a charter,
appoint officers and create a coat of arms consisting
of a rat biting a human hand. Undoubtedly the hand that
fed it. Their motto? “Never rat on a rat.”
“Rats are very well behaved,” Bogart
explained, but they were also “for staying up
late and drinking lots of booze.”
Though Bogart did much of drinking at home now, he
still found time to terrorize clubs on both coasts.
Bogart and Peter Lorre once got so drunk at Chasen’s
they made off with the restaurant’s immense safe,
which they rolled out the door and abandoned in the
middle of Beverly Boulevard.
This was also the time of the notorious Panda incident,
Bogart’s first true run in with the law and first
time he would go to court, divorces aside. After dropping
off Bacall at the hotel at 10 p.m., Bogart and an old
Broadway drinking buddy decided to continue the revelry
at New York’s chic El Morocco Club. En route they
picked up a pair of large stuffed animals, pandas, to
serve as their drinking dates. At about 3:45 in the
morning a pair of young ladies, a model and a socialite,
decided they would make off with the pandas. In the
process of thwarting the attempted panda-napping, Bogart
may or may not have shoved the women to the floor. A
brouhaha ensued, with Bogart trading a volley of plates
with the socialite’s boyfriend, an actual gangster.
Bogart was dragged into court the next morning to
face charges of assault and battery. Flippant and cool,
he suggested the ladies were merely publicity seekers
and the pandas had done them no wrong. The case was
dismissed. At least in the eyes of the law.
Asked by the press if he was “stiff” during
the incidence, Bogart replied, “Who isn’t
at 3 o’clock in the morning? So we get stiff once
in a while. This is a free country isn’t it? I
can take my panda any place I want to. And if I want
to buy it a drink, that’s my business.” And
besides, he said, “Errol Flynn and I are the only
ones left who do any good old hell raising.”
The president of New York’s
Society of Restaurateurs responded with dire threats,
telling the press that Bogart, Errol Flynn and any
other celebrity hell-raisers would get the “bum’s
rush” if they dared “get
stiff and raise hell” in a New York restaurant,
club or bar. Bogart was then promptly banned for life
from the El Morocco and a dozen other clubs in town,
adding to his rather impressive list in Los Angeles.
“You got to hand it to him,” Bacall would
later say. “When he gets barred, he gets barred
from all the right places.”
Bogart fired back at the club owners: “Some
people think the only thing I’ve done is get involved
in barroom bouts. Why, I’ve been in over forty
plays. I’ve done some lasting things too. What
they are I can’t think of at the moment, but there
must have been some.”
It probably seemed a good time to leave the country
and Bogart reunited with Huston for another film, The
African Queen. A fanatic for realism, Huston built his
set deep in the jungles of the Congo, far from civilization.
There were few creature comforts, but Huston did have
the foresight to build a “saloon tent” in
the center of their camp, where you could buy a shot
of liquor for a quarter. Playing the role of a gin-swilling
riverboat captain, Bogart stayed in character off camera,
except he substituted scotch for gin. “The food
was awful so we had to drink scotch all the time,” he
explained to an interviewer.
His co-star was the rather temperate Katherine Hepburn
who tried to seize the moral high ground after the first
day of shooting. She stormed into the saloon tent to
lecture Bogart and Huston on the evils of drink. When
she finished Bogart smiled and said, “You’re
absolutely right, Kate. Now pull up a chair and have
a drink.” She declined. Hepburn viewed Huston
and Bogie as “rascals, scamps and rogues,” and
they did all they could to reinforce this belief, staging
pretend fistfights and behaving like old Irish drunks.
Ironically (to some), it was evil drink that would
be the savior of Huston and Bogart—midway through
shooting everyone but the pair came down with dysentery.
The camp’s supply of bottled water turned out
to be tainted with parasites. Hepburn, who had hoped
to shame the drunkards by drinking nothing but water,
was the sickest. As Hepburn put it, “those two
undisciplined weaklings had so lined their insides with
alcohol that no bug could live in the atmosphere.”
“I built a sold wall of scotch between
me and the bugs,” Bogart agreed. “If a mosquito
bit me, he’d fall over dead drunk.”
Hepburn was forced to take to champagne. “It
really was a very good joke on me,” she said .“ Especially
as privately I had felt so completely superior to that
unhealthy pair.”
The African Queen also had the distinction of being
the first movie to utilize product placement—Gordon’s
Dry Gin, fittingly enough. You’ll find Bogart’s
character not only guzzling it by the bottle, but cases
of the stuff thrown overboard by Hepburn’s teetotaling
character.
For his performance Bogart would earn his first and
only Oscar. After the award ceremonies he celebrated
with an impromptu game of football on his lawn with
Huston, a screenwriter and a studio exec. Still wearing
their tuxedos, caked with mud, smashed quite out of
their minds, they used a grapefruit in lieu of a football.
This was a man over fifty years of age.
Like a scarred veteran returning from decades of
war, Bogart took on the calm demeanor of a man confident
with his cups and more than willing to say so. Though
Bogart was always a very self-contained man, possessed
of a tightly wrapped aloofness even Bacall failed to
penetrate, he was very open about his love of drink. “Scotch,” he
would say, “is a very valuable part of my life.” When
asked if he had ever went on the wagon he replied, “Just
once. It was the most miserable afternoon of my life.” By
all reports, he wasn’t exaggerating.
Unlike today’s celebrities, who wouldn’t
admit to being a drunkard if you held a gun to their
collective heads, Bogart reveled in the title, never
bending an ear to critics of his public behavior. “People
who live in glass houses need ear plugs and a sense
of humor,” he said. “When I chose to be
an actor I knew I’d be working in the spotlight.
I also knew that the higher a monkey climbs the more
you can see of his tail. So I keep my sense of humor
and go right on leading my life and enjoying it. I wouldn’t
trade places with anybody.”
Latter-day biographers and armchair psychologists
all had a crack at why he liked to drink so much. They
blamed inner insecurities, the stress of the celebrity
life, his dysfunctional childhood, and so forth. What
none of them seem to understand is that some people
simply like to drink. That it adds a missing quality
to life, makes grey days shine like gold, makes tedious
situations seem interesting.
George Bernard Shaw summed it up best when he said, “No
man who is occupied in doing a very difficult thing,
and doing it very well, ever loses his self respect.
The common man may have to found his self-respect on
sobriety, honesty and industry; but an artist needs
no such props for his sense of dignity.” In other
words, having accomplished his goal of becoming the
world’s paramount actor, Bogart didn’t give
a damn what the world thought of his personal habits.
Time magazine called him “one of a handful
of old-timers whose acting reputation and box office
value is indestructible, and whose Hemingwayish philosophy
tends to make him morally indestructible in that nothing
he does or says will surprise or scandalize anyone—an
enviable spot these days when high-earners in Hollywood
are afraid to spit on the sidewalk lest they cut industry
grosses by a third.”.
Not surprisingly, Bogart’s legend has overshadowed
all of his image-conscious contemporaries. For good
reason. As actor Rod Steiger pointed out, “Bogart
has endured because in our society the family unit has
gone to pieces. And here you had a guy about whom there
was no doubt. There is no doubt that he is the leader.
There is no doubt that he is the strong one. There is
no doubt with this man that he can handle himself, that
he can protect the family. This is all unconscious,
but with Bogart you are secure, you never doubt that
he will take care of things.”
Bogart was diagnosed with cancer of the esophagus
in January of 1956. He underwent nine hours of surgery
then convalesced for months. True to his code, he never
spoke of the disease that made his body waste away,
and he never stopped drinking. As soon as he got back
from the hospital he climbed off the wagon, although
he did switch from scotch to martinis. He and Bacall
still held sessions in the butternut room and famous
drinkers the world over came by for a drink and pay
homage to their dying king.
The cancer returned and Humphrey
Bogart died January 4, 1957 at the age of fifty seven,
with nothing left to prove. His last words were about
drinking: “I
never should have switched from scotch to martinis.”
Delivering Bogart’s eulogy, John Huston
declared: “Bogie’s hospitality went far
beyond food and drink. He fed a guest’s spirit
as was well as his body, plied him with good will until
he became drunk in the heart as well as his legs.”
—Frank Kelly
Rich