Tuesday, August 12, 2025

The Manufacturing of a Hollywood Star

 


By Kathy Kovach

It can be said that Hollywood stars are not discovered, they’re manufactured.

As I’ve mentioned in a previous article, some Hollywood stars didn’t start out glamorous. Cary Grant had been a rough and tumble kid from Bristol, England determined to join an acrobatic troupe. His demeanor was uncouth, his language unrefined, and no doubt, his fashion sense was non-existent. However, once Hollywood got hold of him, she polished up his accent, put him in a tuxedo, and somewhat tamed his exuberance. Because of Hollywood, he became the suave and sophisticated gentleman we all grew to love. One could assert that Cary Grant, born Archibald Leach, wasn’t discovered; he was manufactured.

Have you ever listened to Cary Grant, Katharine Hepburn and others to determine where their accents are from? Well, good luck. The practice of dropping the ‘R’ and softening the vowels makes one wonder if it’s an English accent or American. In fact, it’s both. And it’s fake. This mid-Atlantic accent, also known as the Trans-Atlantic accent, was a manufactured form of speech that early studios taught to their young actors. Rather than a decidedly Boston accent or one bourn of the upper crust of royal society, it imparts a general sophistication and wealth without adding backstory. Check out this clip from The Philadelphia Story. It's a good example of both Hepburn and Grant, as well as the child actress Virginia Weidler, speaking as if they weren’t from Hartford, Connecticut, Bristol, England, and Eagle Rock, California, respectively. 

Physical image seemed important, as well. Just as Cary Grant went from street urchin to James Bond wannabe, others underwent changes. In some cases, quite drastic.

Rita Cansino 1935, Rita Hayworth 1942
Rita Hayworth was one of many actresses who, in her raw form, was not Hollywood material. Born Margarita Carmen Cansino (1918-1987), her Hispanic origins limited the roles that studios were wanting to fill. Her exotic looks got her typecast as a visiting foreigner. Her first speaking role was that of an Argentinian girl in Under the Pampas Moon (1935). She also played an Egyptian in Charlie Chan in Egypt. She eventually signed a seven-year contract with Columbia Pictures, whereon studio head Harry Cohn decided her image was too Mediterranean, and he set about to change her appearance.

A natural beauty, she underwent painful electrolysis to raise her hairline and broaden her forehead. Her dark brown hair was died ginger. She took her Irish/English mother’s maiden name and became Rita Hayworth. Throughout 1940, she enjoyed steady work with her breakout role happening in 1941 opposite Fred Astaire in You’ll Never Get Rich.

Rita Hayworth became a Hollywood icon, punctuated by the honor of having her picture hanging in many a lonely soldier’s tent. She was the first of two pin-up girls during WWII, the other being Betty Grable in 1943.

Not all manufacturing had to do with appearances. Lauren Bacall, known for her deep, sultry voice, didn’t always sound that way. Just as Hollywood refined Cary Grant’s accent, Bacall was put through vocal training to create the persona she’s known for today. Director Howard Hawks instructed her to read out loud when she was alone. In her memoir By Myself she recalled, "He felt it most important to keep the voice in a low register.” He went on to state, “When a woman gets excited or emotional ... there is nothing more unattractive than screeching" (via Vulture). Here's a link of Bacall quoting her most famous line, "You know how to whistle, don't you?" 

Riders of Destiny 1933, El Dorado 1966
Marion Robert Morrison (John Wayne) wasn’t always the tough, leather vest wearing cowboy with a swagger. Discovered while a prop boy, which the actor Tom Mix arranged, at Fox Film Corporation in the 1920s, director Raoul Walsh took to him right away. Neither Walsh, nor the studio, could envision their new star with the name Marion Morrison. The name Anthony Wayne, inspired by an American Revolution general, was bandied about, but the studio felt it sounded too Italian. Walsh then suggested the name John Wayne, and an American icon was born. You’d think Wayne would have been in the room while these men discussed this major change, but you’d be wrong. After attempting to shed his given name of Marion for a couple of decades, he no doubt had little trouble accepting the new moniker.
Wyatt Earp
The next thing to change was the walk, which Wayne did have a say in. Tom Mix had a friendship with the historic figure Wyatt Earp, who lived long enough to be an advisor on many of the early western movies. Stories differ on whether he introduced Wayne to Earp or whether Wayne merely heard him talk about his friend, but it’s clear that Wayne adopted his larger-than-life persona from Earp.

Laurel and Hardy
While we’re talking about manufactured stars, many of the comic actors of the day could arguably portray themselves with two different personas, one on stage and one in private. Abbott and Costello, the Three Stooges, and most notably, Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy—brilliant men who played buffoons.

After starting out individually in vaudeville, Laurel and Hardy each had film careers as actors, writers, and directors, with Stan also billed as a producer. However, it wasn’t until they were paired together in the silent film The Lucky Dog (1921) that their iconic chemistry and unforgettable images exploded into glittering giggles and gargantuan guffaws. Off stage, Stan Laurel, whose character portrayed the weak weepy one, was actually the driving creative force of the comedy team. Often, when Oliver Hardy was asked about a particular routine, he would say, “Ask Stan.”

One cannot talk about manufactured comedians without mentioning the top-notch, killer-diller, A-1 comic genius ever (today we’d say he’s the GOAT—Greatest Of All Time) Charlie Chaplin.

Charles Spencer Chaplin (1889-1977) was born in London, England and tragically lived on his own from age fourteen due to an absent father and a mother relegated to a mental asylum. He found solace in the entertainment industry, in which he’d been involved since the age of eight as a traveling troupe member. At age nineteen, he came to America via the Fred Karno company, the owner known for slapstick and popularizing the pie-in-the-face routine. Chaplin developed his identity, the Little Tramp, and was henceforth known for his down-trodden appearance and somber facial features.

Behind the scenes, Chaplin was ingenious and a shrewd businessman. Not only did he invent his iconic role, becoming the highest paid and most known personality of his generation by 1918, he went on to co-found the United Artists Corporation with actors Douglas Fairbanks, Mary Pickford, and D.W. Griffith, giving him complete control over his films. He was an actor, writer, director, producer, editor, and composer.

Charlie Chaplin’s personal and professional personas were so different that he could pass you on the street and you’d never know you were in the presence of an icon.

Little has changed in regards to the manufacturing of Hollywood stars. The person on the screen is rarely synonymous with who they are in real life. Like Cary Grant, many have changed their appearance, their speech, their image, and in the case of Chaplin, they became an entirely different person.

And this is why we pay the big bucks at the box office.



A TIME-SLIP NOVEL

A secret. A key. Much was buried on the Titanic, but now it's time for resurrection.


Follow two intertwining stories a century apart. 1912 - Matriarch Olive Stanford protects a secret after boarding the Titanic that must go to her grave. 2012 - Portland real estate agent Ember Keaton-Jones receives the key that will unlock the mystery of her past... and her distrusting heart.
To buy: Amazon


Kathleen E. Kovach is a Christian romance author published traditionally through Barbour Publishing, Inc. as well as indie. Kathleen and her husband, Jim, raised two sons while living the nomadic lifestyle for over twenty years in the Air Force. Now planted in northeast Colorado, she's a grandmother and a great-grandmother—though much too young for either. Kathleen has been a longstanding member of American Christian Fiction Writers. An award-winning author, she presents spiritual truths with a giggle, proving herself as one of God's peculiar people.





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