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Let’s Pretend You’re Mrs. Humphrey Bogart
^ [Continued from page 43]
make-up but lipstick, bounce around in shorts or slacks and usually skin your hair back in braids like a child.
Your husband has his paradoxical side too. A screen tough guy, he likes breakfast in bed. Says it relaxes him.
Your household is very informal. But you have a colored butler who talks with an Oxford accent like Ronald Colman, and calls you and your husband “M’lady” and “M’lord.”
You were always an ambitious career girl. You were born* in New York, worked as a fashion model and trudged from one theatrical office to another trying to get a stage break. Now that you’re a star, you’ve given it second place to your marriage. If career interferes with your domestic life, the career gets the hoot. Because your husband loves to live on his boat, you gave up all kinds of opportunities last summer for interviews and photo spreads, which w’ould have meant valuable publicity to your career, to stay on the boat with your husband. You’d like, more than anything, to have children.
\Vhen you first met your husband, on the set of To Have and Have Not, you were a little frightened of him and prepared not to like him. You thought he would be rough, unfriendly and a bit of a tough guy. To your surprise you discovered he was extremely thoughtful and kind, understood that you were nervous and tried to make you feel at home. Besides, you learned he was an extremely well-informed and well-read person.
Your husband never proposed to you. You just decided to be married on Louis Bromfield’s rambling farm in Mansfield, O. You wore a dusty pink suit, your husband a gray flannel suit— the first new suit he’d bought in a year.
Your husband is very indifferent about clothes. He likes his suits freshly pressed every day, but that’s the extent of his sartorial demands. He owns only one coat, a trenchcoat. He had another, but lost it on a train and never bothered replacing it. He owns but four suits, including the gray flannel one he was married in. He has one pair of moccasins which he wears all the time. He hates to go near a store. You buy his shirts, ties and socks. His tailor has his measurements and you help him select the material, so that he can get a suit with a minimum of fitting.
His food tastes are Spartan, and never change. For years he’s ordered the same lunch, eggs and bacon. He often takes his lunch to the studio from the house. You prepare it. It’s a cinch. Just hardboiled eggs. He’s a small eater. For dinner give him hamburgers and green
onions seven nights a week and he’s happy. His other favorites are spaghetti, steaks and curried foods with chutney. He doesn’t touch desserts. You like lemon meringue pie.
The most difficult adjustment you had to make when you became Mrs. Humphrey Bogart was learning how to run a large house with servants. Having been an apartment dweller all your life you were unprepared to tackle a large establishment. You made every mistake possible at the beginning. You gave the servants confusing orders and weren’t sure of yourself. Your husband was very patient, smiled and explained without fuss what to do. He makes no demands around the house. He asks only that the house look comfortable. The servants are crazy about him. The maid. May, has been with him twelve years. May’s son plays the piano for you at many of your parties.
You do most of the talking at home. You’re as enthusiastic as a child and your husband likes to have you talkative and gay. He’s taciturn and unemotional by nature, and says little. When he comes home from the studio, he gets into a sport jacket and shirt without a tie, and into his moccasins. You wear slacks or Chinese pajamas.
You used to wear very tailored suits. Your husband likes softer touches, so now your clothes are more feminine. You own two hats, a beret and a sequin skull cap for evening which you’ve never worn.
When he thinks you look nice he says very little except, “You look cute tonight.” But his pleased expression says more than the most extravagant compliments. But if he doesn’t like what you’re wearing, he tells you so.
Your husband’s friends have become your friends, and it’s to your credit that you’ve been able to fall in with his crowd so easily because they’re an older group, liberal thinkers, writers, newspapermen, intellectuals, people who have traveled a lot and men who talk and argue. Among his closest friends are novelist Louis Bromfield, the Mark Hellingers, Thornton Delehanty, the writer, Peter Lorre and his wife and Jules Buck, the photographer, and his wife. When you entertain, dinner is usually followed by a spirited and uninhibited gabfest in the living room where ever)'one stays up late arguing politics and the finer facts of life with good-humored, robust talk. You have the proper refreshments at hand, but you yourself never touch anything stronger than tea.
You’ve adapted yourself thoroughly to your husband’s tastes. Because he’s crazy about boating, you’ve become quite an
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