DOB:
6th August 1911
DOD:
26th April 1989
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Known
for: Actress, Comedian, Producer and first
female studio executive
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Lucille Ball has become a bit of a legend in the comedy and television world with shows like I Love Lucy. She became a household name in the 1950s because for four of the six seasons I Love Lucy was the most watched show in the United States. Lucille and her husband started a production company called Desilu Productions, which resulted in Lucille becoming the first female studio head in Hollywood.
Lucille
was born in New York, and despite being a daddy’s girl, she lost her father to
typhoid fever at only 4 years old, her mother was pregnant with their 2nd
child. As a child Lucille was known as a tomboy partly because her father would
rough-house with her encouraging her rambunctious behaviour. To help control
Lucille energy, her mother DeDe would encourage Lucille to perform in theatre
and even made her entertainment debut on the counter of her local butcher.
Despite
being a born performer, Lucille actually suffered from extreme shyness,
resulting in her getting tongue-tied when on stage. Due to this her time at New
York City Drama School was not fun, while her mother fully supported her, her
teacher did not, she was compared unfavourable to the star pupil at the time,
an little known actress called Bette Davies (sarcasm). Lucille however never
gave up.
To
help her with her confidence she turned to modelling along with retail
positions, for her early modelling gigs she was known as Diane Belmont named after
a racecourse in New York. Lucille was diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis as a
teenager, which caused swelling, pain and stiffness in joints usually hands,
feet and wrists. When these symptoms would flare up Lucille would go home,
during one of these flares she dyed her natural light brown hair to bright
blonde.
As a
newly dyed blonde bombshell Lucille tried to make it on the ‘Great White Way’
aka Broadway. This failed badly with Lucille being told again that she lacked
the confidence and talent to make it as a star. But she never gave up even
after her arthritis flared up, forcing her to stop working for a full two
years. She still returned to New York, changed her name back to Lucille Ball
and gained a nationwide advertisement campaign for Chesterfield Cigarettes in
1933.
Hollywood
sat up and took notice of the girl with a ‘face for the camera’ After
Chesterfield’s advert she was offered a small role as Goldwyn Girl in Roman
Scandals, she had to shave her eyebrows for this role, they never grew back. In
1943 Lucille dyed her hair to her trademark red hair, the shade was called
“Golden Apricot” and was a henna rinse but the exact formula was kept secret to
ensure that no one else had Lucille’s precise shade. Lucille went on to appear
in 72 movies throughout the 1930s and 40s, appearing with stars like Katherine
Hepburn, Ginger Rogers and Cuban singer Desi Arnaz.
Desi
Arnaz would go onto to become a major part of Lucille life, career and legacy.
When Lucille was younger her romantic type was taller and older men, she may
have been engaged to an Oscar Broderick Crawford though a rumour persist that
this may have been staged to cover an affair she had with a married studio
producer. Desi and Lucille first met on the set of Too Many Girls, Desi himself was not impressed with Lucille
initially as she had the makeup and costume to match a fight scene that she had
just filmed for the film Dance, Girl,
Dance. However, it was when she was out of costume and having lunch with
Maureen O’Hare he became instantly smitten. Lucille was 28 and Desi was 23 when
they married six months after meeting, Lucille herself was uncertain about the
marriage “Everybody gave it about a year and a half. I gave it six weeks.” this
was at least partly due to Arnaz’s reputation as a womanizer. The marriage may
have even come about because of his other women as Lucille heard a rumour that
Desi had been seen with his ex Betty Grable just before the announcement of the
elopement.
The
marriage did survive 6 weeks, though their early marriage life was strained. Friends
noticed that Lucille’s headstrong, independent personality started to change as
she placed Desi’s wants above her own. Their relationship was very passionate
but all relationships have cracks. Lucille was at the peak of her film career
and was busy in Hollywood. Desi was travelling the country on tour promoting
his music, not getting home or too the hotel until early hours of the morning.
On top of this Desi would regularly drink and continue flirting (possibly more)
with other women. They also suffered from three miscarriages before they
separate for some time in the 1940s with Lucille filing for divorce, though
they did reconcile this time. Lucille was down but determined to try anything
to save her marriage.
While
Desi was away, Lucille started to a live radio show called My Favorite Husband this became the starting point of I Love Lucy. When Lucille was asked
about developing the radio show for the TV she had one condition. Desi would
play her husband. This was so Lucille could keep him home instead of travelling
but producers were not sure about having an interracial couple during the 50s
in America. To prove that not only was America ready but Desi could do it,
Lucille put together an I Love Lucy vaudeville
act that received rave review. Producer could not argue against the evidence
that the match of Lucille physical comedy and Desi’s charm and attractiveness.
They would go onto become the most beloved couple in America.
1951
became a turning point year for the couple not only did I Love Lucy premiere introducing them to all of America, they
started their own production company Desilu (more about that later) but they
finally had a baby. Lucie was born in July and Lucille would later claim that
children strengthen their bond. Desi even stopped seeing other women perhaps
(if only for a short time) his daughter was the only other female he needed. William
Asher (director of I Love Lucy) would
later say “When they were having the baby and we did the show about the birth
of Little Ricky [their second child], Desi was terribly emotional about her. He
really was crazy about her. You could feel how they felt.”
Desilu
production helped keep most of the control for the sitcom with Desi and
Lucille. This resulted in I Love Lucy being
the first show that used multiple cameras using three and a live studio
audience to capture a more stage like affect with fewer takes. Desilu also
insisted on recording the show onto tape allowing reruns to occur and film
rights to be held by Desilu, which is seen by many as the shrewdest moment of
foresight in the history of the silver screen as all of the profits from these,
resulted in Desilu becoming the No. 1 independent TV production company in the
U.S. by 1967. Desi and Lucille started with equal shares of 25% each with Desi
taking the position of President and Lucille as his Vice President, the first
woman to hold such a position.
I Love Lucy established not only the
first interracial couple on TV but became one of the earliest example of a
pregnancy on TV. Producers insisted that the word pregnancy would never be used
and Lucy was only “expecting” this was because they were afraid that people
would be offended and it would insinuate that Lucy and Ricky had had sex even
though they had separate beds, the 50s was a special time. By coincidence, the
character of Little Ricky was born in the episode that aired the same day that
Lucille had the caesarean birth of her own son Desi Jr. which was also the same
day as President Eisenhower’s inauguration (Little Ricky had a larger TV
audience). Lucille was well aware of the affect the show was having on American
culture as a whole and made sure to feature strong and positive female
friendships as well as focusing a lot of the comedy around her own facial
expression and body language.
Despite
the fact that they portrayed a happy family with small problems that could be
solved in ½ hour or so, the marriage was falling apart. While they had been the
strongest they had ever been at the start of the show by the end of the show in
1957 they were arguing all the time. Those early cracks that they believed had
been plastered over started to grow due to Desi’s alcoholism, his wandering eye
and stress resulted from the Desilu production company as well as the pressure
of keeping up appearances. Desi later suggested that he struggled to be known
as “Mr. Ball” that resulted in the return of his wandering eye. Lucille would
be at her happiest when the camera was on but as soon as the take ended they
would start fighting. Possible due to the negative feelings towards the title
“Mr. Ball” they created a spin-off show known as The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour however the day after filming the 13th
episode (which was directed by Desi) in 1960 Lucille filed for divorce.
Despite
a turbulent marriage, their divorce was very amicable, they split their TV
empire equally, split their 4 houses equally and agreed to joint custody with
her receiving $450 a month in child support, all this without getting a single
lawyer involved. Lucille really struggled in the immediate aftermath of the end
of the twenty-year marriage, she felt she had let not only herself and her
family down but also the American people. Lucille would later buy out Desi of
their production company, as he would step back for entertainment after the
divorce. They did however stay friends for the rest of their lives; friends
would say that they never really got over each other even though they both
married again. When Desi was fighting cancer in 1986, Lucille supported him
even calling him two days before he died, it would have been their 46th
wedding anniversary. His last words to Lucy on the phone is said to be “I Love
you too, honey. Good luck with your show”. Despite not many people thinking the
relationship wouldn’t last 2 years including the bride, their love persevered for
nearly 50 years and changed the way sitcoms were recorded.
Lucille
would on to marry comedian Gary Morton in 1961, they had a less passionate but
more tender and loving towards each other, they were together for over 25 years
longer than her first marriage. Lucille did not think she’d return to acting
but she did returning to TV with Here’s
Lucy and rather than her real life husband she was joined by her children.
Lucille would later take full control of Desilu, which would go onto produce
The Dick Van Dyke Show, The Untouchables
Mission: Impossible and Star Trek. The
cost of Star Trek was one of the
reasons she had to sell the company to Paramount in 1967. She suffered a heart
attack in 1988 and later died on August 6th 1989.
Lucy
has become a legend and an inspiration for many people but particularly women
in comedy, business and production. She was known as a perfectionist and a
workaholic but what she gave to the world is insurmountable. The joy, laughter
(Some of the laughing tracks used by sitcoms even know was recorded during the
filming of I Love Lucy) and the pure
escapism that she gave a country during the cold war and even now is priceless.
Yes, you can still watch many of Lucille’s shows in syndication even now, with many
turning to it in times of pain and anguish.
Why is Lucille an inspiration?
Lucille
never let other people’s opinion stop her from doing what she loved and being
who she was. She worked hard for everything she had, she used her initiative to
change the TV scene forever. For the first time ever Lucille put real life on
the TV and allowed people to laugh over and over again. She took what she was
good at, comedy and expressive facial expression, and worked hard until she was
seen as the best of those by everyone.
Learn more about Lucille in
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Love Lucy by Lucille Ball
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A Book by Desi Arnaz
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Lucy & Desi:
A Home Movie
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Lucille
Ball’s one and only autobiography. Some of her claims are disputed by varying
people however it is interesting to read what she wanted her legacy to be.
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Desi
Arnaz’s memoir about his life including his marriage to Lucille, the by-line
is even states “The man who loved Lucy” it is interesting to learn about the
marriage from the side of the wronged party.
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A
Documentary of home footage from Lucille and Desi’s marriage complied
together by their daughter Lucie with interviews from those that knew them.
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What can I say without her there would be no star trek universe
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