She
comes to mind in our dreams, she comes to mind when we think of
vintage nylons and RHT nylons, garters and such. Her feet
were absolutely perfect and for a time Bettie Page WAS everything
"kinky" in 1950's Middle America. It is a strange
and sad story of her life, but Bettie Page was an inspiration for
thousands of young people then... and now, what, with the "Bettie
Page" style hairdo's that most self respecting Rockbilly, Burlesque
and Goth Chicks just have to have for any night out at the club
and whatnot, is it any wonder that we would decide to feature this
Icon of Modern culture and Pinup Queen here?
Page
was born Betty Mae Page in Nashville, Tennessee, the second child
of Walter Roy Page and Edna Mae Pirtle. At a young age, Page
had to face the responsibilities of caring for her younger siblings.
Her parents divorced when she was 10 years old. After her
father, whom Page would accuse of molesting her starting at age
13, was imprisoned, Page and her two sisters lived in an orphanage
for a year. During this time, Page's mother worked two jobs, one
as a hairdresser during the day and washing laundry at night.
As a teenager, Page and her sisters tried different makeup styles
and hairdos imitating their favorite movie stars. She also learned
to sew. These skills proved useful years later for her pin-up photography
when Page did her own makeup and hair and made her own bikinis and
costumes. During her early years, the Page family traveled around
the country in search of economic stability. A good student
and debate team member at Hume-Fogg High School, she was voted "Most
Likely to Succeed". On June 6, 1940, Page graduated as
the salutatorian of her high school class with a scholarship.
She enrolled at George Peabody College, with the intention of becoming
a teacher. However, the next fall she began studying acting, hoping
to become a movie star. At the same time, she got her first job,
typing for author Alfred Leland Crab. Page graduated from
Peabody with a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1944. In 1943, she
married high school classmate Billy Neal in a simple courthouse
ceremony shortly before he was drafted into the Navy for World War
II. For the next few years, she moved from San Francisco to
Nashville to Miami and to Port-au-Prince, Haiti, where she felt
a special affinity with the country and its culture. In November
1947, back in the United States, she filed for divorce.
Following
her divorce, Page worked briefly in San Francisco, and in Haiti.
She moved to New York City, where she hoped to find work as an actress.
In the meantime, she supported herself by working as a secretary.
In 1950, while walking along the Coney Island shore, she
met Jerry Tibbs, a police officer with an interest in photography.
She was a willing model, and Tibbs took pictures of her and
put together her first pinup portfolio. In the late 1940s,
what were known as camera clubs were formed as a means of circumventing
legal restrictions on the production of nude photos. These clubs
existed ostensibly to promote artistic photography, but many were
merely fronts for the making of pornography. Page entered
the field of glamour photography as a popular camera club model,
working initially with photographer Cass Carr. Her lack of
inhibition in posing made her a hit. Her name and image became
quickly known in the erotic photography industry, and in 1951, her
image appeared in men's magazines with names like Wink, Titter,
Eyefull and Beauty Parade. From 1952 through 1957, she posed
for photographer Irving Klaw for mail-order photographs with pin-up,
bondage or sadomasochistic themes, making her the first famous bondage
model. Klaw also used Page in dozens of short black-and-white
8mm and 16mm "specialty" films which catered to specific
requests from his clientele. These silent featurettes showed
women clad in lingerie and high heels acting out fetishistic scenarios
of abduction, domination, and slave-training with bondage, spanking,
and elaborate leather costumes and restraints. Page alternated
between playing a stern dominatrix and a helpless victim bound hand
and foot. Klaw also produced a line of still photos taken
during these sessions. Some have become iconic images, such as his
highest-selling photo of Page shown gagged and bound in a web of
ropes from the film Leopard Bikini Bound. Although these underground
features had the same crude style and clandestine distribution as
the pornographic "stag" films of the time, Klaw's all-female
films (and still photos) never featured any nudity or explicit sexual
content.
In
1953, Page took acting classes at the Herbert Berghof Studio, which
led to several roles on stage and television. She appeared on The
United States Steel Hour and the The Jackie Gleason Show.
Her off-Broadway productions included Time is a Thief and Sunday
Costs Five Pesos. Page acted and danced in the feature-length
burlesque revue film Striporama by Jerald Intrator. She was
given a brief speaking role, the only time her voice has been captured
on film. She then appeared in two more burlesque films by
Irving Klaw (Teaserama and Varietease). These featured exotic dance
routines and vignettes by Page and well-known striptease artists
Lili St. Cyr and Tempest Storm. All three films were mildly
risque, but none showed any nudity or overtly sexual content.
In 1954, during one of her annual pilgrimages to Miami, Florida,
Page met photographers Jan Caldwell, H. W. Hannau and Bunny Yeager.
At that time, Page was the top pin-up model in New York.
Yeager, a former model and aspiring photographer, signed Page for
a photo session at the now-closed wildlife park Africa USA in Boca
Raton, Florida. The Jungle Bettie photographs from this shoot
are among her most celebrated. They include nude shots with a pair
of cheetahs named Mojah and Mbili. The leopard skin patterned
Jungle Girl outfit she wore was made, along with much of her lingerie,
by Page herself. A large collection of the Yeager photos, and Klaw's,
were published in the book Bettie Page Confidential (St. Martin's
Press, 1994).
After
Yeager sent shots of Page to Playboy founder Hugh Hefner, he selected
one to use as the Playmate of the Month centerfold in the January
1955 issue of the two-year-old magazine. The famous photo shows
Page, wearing only a Santa hat, kneeling before a Christmas tree
holding an ornament and playfully winking at the camera.
In 1955, Bettie won the title "Miss Pinup Girl of the World".
She also became known as "The Queen of Curves" and "The
Dark Angel". While pin-up and glamour models frequently
have careers measured in months, Page was in demand for several
years, continuing to model until 1957. Although she frequently
posed nude, she never appeared in scenes with explicit sexual content.
The reasons reported for her departure from modeling vary.
Some reports mention the Kefauver Hearings of the Senate
Subcommittee on Juvenile Delinquency (after a young man apparently
died during a session of bondage which was rumored to be inspired
by Page), which ended Klaw's bondage and S&M mail-order photography
business. In fact, the United States Congress called her to
testify to explain the photos in which she appeared. While she was
excused from appearing before the committee, the print negatives
of many of her photos were destroyed by court order. For many
years after, the negatives that survived were illegal to print.
However, the most obvious reason for ending her modeling
career and severing all contact with her prior life was her conversion
to Christianity while living in Key West, Florida in 1959, in combination
with the 1957 trials.
On
New Year's Eve 1958, during one of her regular visits to Key West,
Florida Page attended a service at what is now the Key West Temple
Baptist Church. She found herself drawn to the multiracial
environment and started to attend on a regular basis. She
would in time attend three bible colleges, including the Bible Institute
of Los Angeles, Multnomah School of the Bible in Portland, Oregon
and, briefly, a Christian retreat known as "Bibletown",
part of the Boca Raton Community Church, Boca Raton, Florida.
She dated industrial designer Richard Arbib in the 1950s. She then
married Armond Walterson in 1958. They divorced in 1963. During
the 1960s, she attempted to become a Christian missionary in Africa,
but was rejected for having had a divorce. Over the next few
years she worked for various Christian organizations before settling
in Nashville in 1963. She worked full time for Rev. Billy
Graham. She briefly remarried Billy Neal, her first husband,
who helped her to gain entrance into missionary work; however, the
two divorced again shortly thereafter. She returned to Florida
in 1967, and married again, to Harry Lear, but this marriage also
ended in divorce in 1972. She moved to Southern California
in 1979. There she had a nervous breakdown and had an altercation
with her landlady. The doctors that examined her diagnosed
her with acute schizophrenia, and she spent 20 months in a state
mental hospital in San Bernardino, California. After a fight
with another landlord she was arrested for assault, but was found
not guilty by reason of insanity and placed under state supervision
for eight years. She was released in 1992 from Patton State
Hospital in San Bernardino County.
A
cult following was built around her during the 1980s, of which she
was unaware. This renewed attention was focused on her pinup
and lingerie modeling rather than those depicting paraphilias, and
she gained a certain public redemption and popular status as an
icon of erotica from a bygone era. This attention also raised
the question among her new fans of what happened to her after the
1950s. The 1990s edition of the popular Book of Lists included
Page in a list of once-famous celebrities who had seemingly vanished
from the public eye. In 1976, Eros Publishing Co. published
A Nostalgic Look at Bettie Page, a mixture of photos from the 1950s.
Between 1978 and 1980, Belier Press published four volumes
of Betty Page: Private Peeks, reprinting pictures from the private
camera club sessions, which reintroduced Page to a new but small
cult following. In 1983, London Enterprises released In Praise
of Bettie Page — A Nostalgic Collector's Item, reprinting
camera club photos and an old cat fight photo shoot. In the
early 1980s, comic book artist Dave Stevens based the female love
interest of his hero Cliff Secord (alias "The Rocketeer")
on Page.[15] In 1987, Greg Theakston started a fanzine called The
Betty Pages[14] and recounted tales of her life, particularly the
camera club days. For the next seven years, the magazine sparked
a worldwide interest in Page. Women dyed their hair and cut
it into bangs in an attempt to emulate the "Dark Angel".
The media caught wind of the phenomenon and wrote numerous
articles about her, more often than not with Theakston's help.
Since almost all of her photos were in the public domain, opportunists
launched related products and cashed in on the burgeoning craze.
In
a 1993 telephone interview with Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous,
Page told host Robin Leach that she had been unaware of the resurgence
of her popularity, stating that she was "penniless and infamous".
Entertainment Tonight produced a segment on her. Page, who
was living in a group home in Los Angeles, was astounded when she
saw the E.T. piece, having had no idea that she had suddenly become
famous again. Greg Theakston contacted her and extensively
interviewed her for The Betty Page Annuals V.2. Shortly after,
Page signed with Chicago-based agent James Swanson. Three
years later, nearly penniless and failing to receive any royalties,
Page fired Swanson and signed with Curtis Management Group, a company
which also represented the James Dean and Marilyn Monroe estates.
She then began collecting payments which ensured her financial security.
After Jim Silke made a large format comic featuring her likeness,
Dark Horse Comics published a comic based on her fictional adventures
in the 1990s. Eros Comics published several Bettie Page titles,
the most popular being the tongue-in-cheek Tor Love Bettie which
suggested a romance between Page and wrestler-turned-Ed Wood film
actor, Tor Johnson.
The
question of what Page did in the obscure years after modeling was
answered in part with the publication of an official biography in
1996, Bettie Page: The Life of a Pin-up Legend. That year,
Bettie Page granted an exclusive one-on-one TV interview to entertainment
reporter Tim Estiloz for a short-lived NBC morning magazine program
Real Life to help publicize the book. The interview featured
her reminiscing about her career and relating anecdotes about her
personal life, as well as photos from her personal collection.
At Page's request, her face was not shown. The interview was
broadcast only once. Another biography, The Real Bettie Page:
The Truth about the Queen of Pinups, written by Richard Foster and
published in 1997, told a less happy tale. Foster's book immediately
provoked attacks from her fans, including Hefner and Harlan Ellison,
as well as a statement from Page that it was "full of lies,"
because they were not pleased that the book revealed a Los Angeles
County Sheriff's police report that stated that she suffered from
paranoid schizophrenia and, at age 56, had stabbed her elderly landlords
on the afternoon of April 19, 1979 in an unprovoked attack during
a fit of insanity. However, Steve Brewster, founder of The
Bettie Scouts of America fan club, has stated that it is not as
unsympathetic as the book's reputation makes it to be. Brewster
adds that he also read the chapter about her business dealings with
Swanson, and stated that Page was pleased with that part of her
story.
In
1997, E! True Hollywood Story aired a feature on Page entitled,
Bettie Page: From Pinup to Sex Queen. In a late-1990s interview,
Page stated she would not allow any current pictures of her to be
shown because of concerns about her weight. However, in 1997, Page
changed her mind and agreed to a rare television interview for the
aforementioned E! True Hollywood Story/Page special on the condition
that the location of the interview and her face not be revealed
(she was shown with her face and dress electronically blacked out).
In 2003, Page allowed a publicity picture to be taken of
her for the August 2003 edition of Playboy. In 2006, the Los Angeles
Times ran an article headlined A Golden Age for a Pinup, covering
an autographing session at her current publicity company, CMG Worldwide.
Once again, she declined to be photographed, saying that
she would rather be remembered as she was. In a 1998 interview
with Playboy, she commented on her career: “ I never
thought it was shameful. I felt normal. It's just that
it was much better than pounding a typewriter eight hours a day,
which gets monotonous. ” Within the last few years,
she had hired a law firm to help her recoup some of the profits
being made with her likeness. According to MTV, "Katy
Perry's rocker bangs and throwback skimpy jumpers. Madonna's Sex
book and fascination with bondage gear. Rihanna's obsession
with all things leather, lace and second-skin binding. Uma
Thurman in Pulp Fiction. The SuicideGirls Web site.
The Pussycat Dolls. The entire career of Marilyn Manson's
ex-wife Dita Von Teese" would not have been possible without
Page.
According
to long-time friend and business agent Mark Roesler, on December
6, 2008, Bettie Page was hospitalized in critical condition.
Roesler was quoted by the Associated Press as saying Page had suffered
a heart attack and by Los Angeles television station KNBC as claiming
Page was suffering from pneumonia. A family friend said Page
was in a coma, a claim not denied by Roesler. Her family eventually
agreed to discontinue life support, and she died at 18:41 PST on
December 11, 2008. |