 Mrs.
Disney
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Warren Beatty once observed, "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, an ink paint girl who made 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. She loved
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
gentile around women, 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 enjoyed going to movies with him. She would
listen attentively as he criticized his competitor's cartoons and shared
his own exciting ideas. But as time went by she began to challenge him.
She understood he needed a sounding board, he was surrounded by
frightened yes men. I don't like the name Mortimer, she told him in
1927. Why don't you call your mouse Mickey? In 1934 she agreed with his
business partner and brother Roy 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." In spite of her doubts, 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 when he took on debt. It pained her when he sold his
Mercedes during the depression to meet the studio payroll. Old friends
would call on him for loans when he was completely tapped out. The
Disneys were content to spend evenings at home avoiding the publicity of
Hollywood parties. When times were better Lillian 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, a
miniature railroad in the backyard that ran through her flowerbed. She
tolerated it because it gave him a release from studio pressures.
Sometimes she thought he was using the rides to hide out and avoid
facing overwhelming problems. Later, Disneyland provided 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 spent 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 came home late and drunk. Angrily she
locked him out. He made amends the next day by presenting her with a
female puppy in a hat box. That event helped lead to the development of
the Disney animated 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. From a tour guide the Disneys heard
about Buccaneer's hiding treasure near Cuba, which sparked the creation
of The Pirates of the Carribean, which Walt sadly didn't live to see
completed.
Lillian fell short of her own dream. She did not
share Walt's love of classical music, preferring the easy listening
sounds of Lawrence Welk. But she shared his disappointment when Fantasia
(1940) failed at the box office. In 1987, 21 years after his death, 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 Tchaikovsky to the masses just
like her late husband 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. Mrs. Disney was very disappointed when the head of
Russia Nikita S. Khrushchev and his wife didn't 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." The
singer grabbed her by the hand and was near the door when he was stopped
by the KGB. Back at Disneyland Walt made Lillian smile by telling her he
was just as disappointed as she was. He was dying to show the Communist
ruler his new submarine fleet.
| Stephen Schochet is the
author of the upcoming book
Hollywood Stories: Short, Entertaining Anecdotes About the Stars and
Legends of Hollywood.
He is also
the author of two acclaimed audiobooks
Tales of Hollywood and Fascinating Walt Disney.
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