Shirley Temple, R.I.P.

He swept the Democratic primary and would have won the race if not for the groundbreaking union of big business leaders, conservative GOPers and Dems, religious leaders, and most of the Hollywood moguls. Irving Thalberg even went out and created the first attack ads for the screen--faked anti-Sinclair newsreels.
Anyway: the book also shows how Shirley Temple, then the country's most popular film star, was wooed by the right-wing moguls to get her--at age five--to come out against Sinclair and endorse Frank Merriam, the dull incumbent. It's a pathetic, if funny, tale and ultimately she, sort of, did go along with that. "It may hearten the cause of conservatism," a wire service reported, "to know that Shirley Temple has decided, after grave deliberation, that she disapproves of the Sinclair EPIC philosophy and is backing her opposition with a day's salary, even if she can not with a vote." Unstated was that this day's pay was not a request but a demand from the studio. Jean Harlow had recently caved in the same manner.
And so a lifetime as a key Republican was set...Shirley re-appears as a lively character in the new musical based on my book, Campaign of the Century.
Published on February 11, 2014 05:34
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