Jean Ross
Jean Ross | |
---|---|
Born | Jean Iris Ross 7 May 1911 Alexandria, Egypt[1] |
Died | 27 April 1973 | (aged 61)
Occupation(s) | Film critic, writer, singer |
Employer(s) | Daily Worker (film critic) Daily Express (war correspondent) |
Partner | |
Children | Sarah Caudwell[4] |
Relatives | Olivia Wilde[5] (step-granddaughter) |
Jean Iris Ross Cockburn[a] (/ˈkoʊbərn/; 7 May 1911 – 27 April 1973) was a British journalist, political activist, and film critic.[6] During the Spanish Civil War (1936–39), she was a war correspondent for the Daily Express and is alleged to have been a press agent for Joseph Stalin's Comintern.[7] A skilled writer, Ross worked as a film critic for the Daily Worker. Throughout her life, she wrote political criticism, anti-fascist polemics, and socialist manifestos for a number of disparate organisations such as the British Workers' Film and Photo League.[8] She was a devout Stalinist and a lifelong member of the Communist Party of Great Britain.[9]
During her itinerant youth in the Weimar Republic, Ross was a cabaret singer and aspiring film actress in Berlin. Her escapades inspired the heroine in Christopher Isherwood's 1937 novella Sally Bowles which was later collected in Goodbye to Berlin,[10][11] a work cited by literary critics as deftly capturing the hedonistic nihilism of the Weimar era and later adapted into the stage musical Cabaret.[12] In the 1937 novella, Sally is a British flapper who moonlights as a chanteuse during the twilight of the Jazz Age. After a series of failed romances, she becomes pregnant and has an abortion facilitated by the novella's narrator.[13] Isherwood based many of the novella's details upon actual events in Ross' life, including her abortion.[3][14] Fearing a libel suit, Isherwood delayed publication of the work until given Ross' explicit permission.[15][16]
For the remainder of her life, Ross believed the public association of herself with the naïve and apolitical character of Sally Bowles occluded her lifelong work as a professional writer and political activist.[17] Her daughter Sarah Caudwell, who shared this belief, later wrote a newspaper article in an attempt to correct the historical record and to dispel misconceptions about Ross.[18] According to Caudwell, "in the transformations of the novel for stage and cinema the characterisation of Sally has become progressively cruder and less subtle and the stories about 'the original' correspondingly more high-coloured".[18]
In addition to inspiring the character Sally Bowles,[19] Ross is credited by the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography and other sources as the muse for lyricist Eric Maschwitz's jazz standard "These Foolish Things (Remind Me of You)", one of the 20th century's most enduring love songs.[20] Although Maschwitz's estranged wife Hermione Gingold later claimed the song was written for herself or actor Anna May Wong,[21] Maschwitz contradicted these claims.[22] Instead, Maschwitz cited memories of a "young love",[22] and most scholars and biographers posit Maschwitz's youthful affair with Ross inspired the song.[20]
Early life and education
Jean Ross was raised in luxury at Maison Ballassiano in the British protectorate of Alexandria, Egypt,[23] She was the eldest daughter of Charles Ross (1880–1938), a Scottish cotton classifier for the Bank of Egypt and brought up with her four siblings in a staunchly liberal, anti-Tory household.[18][24]
Ross was educated in England at Leatherhead Court, Surrey.[1] As an unusually intelligent pupil who had completed the sixth form curricula by the age of 16, she was profoundly bored and loathed school.[1] She became openly rebellious when informed she must remain at school for another year to repeat her already completed coursework.[1] To gain her freedom, she feigned a teenage pregnancy and was summoned to appear before the school's stern headmistress:
Jean remembered standing by the fireplace, feeling the cold marble under her hand while she debated 'for the longest thirty seconds of my life' whether to tell the truth, which would have condemned her to remaining at the school, or lie and suffer the consequences.[1]
She falsely insisted to the headmistress that she was pregnant and the Leatherhead Court schoolmasters sequestered the teenager in a nearby insane asylum until a relative arrived and retrieved her.[1] When they discovered the pregnancy was feigned, Ross was formally expelled.[1] Exasperated by her defiant behaviour, her parents sent her abroad to Pensionnat Mistral, an elite Swiss finishing school in Neuchâtel.[25] Ross, however, was either expelled or fled the school.[26]
Using a trust stipend provided by her grandfather Charles Caudwell, who was an affluent industrialist and landowner,[25] the teenage Ross returned to England and enrolled in the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA), London.[25] After diligently applying herself in her first year, she won a coveted acting prize that gave her the opportunity to play the lead role in any production of her choice.[1] When she selected the difficult role of Phaedra, she was informed her youth precluded such a tragic role because she lacked the requisite life experience.[25] Hurt by this refusal, Ross left the academy after one year to pursue a film career.[26]
In 1930, at nineteen years of age, Ross and fellow Egyptian-born Hungarian actor Marika Rökk obtained cinematic roles portraying a harem houri in director Monty Banks' Why Sailors Leave Home, an early sound comedy that was filmed in London.[27] Ross's dark complexion and partial fluency in Arabic were deemed suitable for the role.[27] Disappointed with their small roles, she and Rökk heard rumours about ample job opportunities for aspiring actors in the Weimar Republic of Germany and set off with great expectations for Berlin.[28]
Weimar Berlin
Ross's excursion to Weimar Germany proved less successful than she had hoped. Unable to find acting work, she worked as a nightclub singer in Berlin's lesbian bars and second-rate cabarets.[29] When not singing or modelling,[27] she visited the offices of the UFA GmbH, a German motion picture production company, in the hopes of gaining small film roles. By late 1931,[30] she obtained a job as a dancer in theatre director Max Reinhardt's production of Offenbach's opéra fantastique Tales of Hoffmann and played Anitra in Reinhardt's production of Peer Gynt.[31][32]
Reinhardt's much-anticipated production of Tales of Hoffmann premiered on 28 November 1931.[30] The production was reputedly one of the last great triumphs of the Berlin theatre scene prior to the Nazi Party's gradual ascent. Ross and a male dancer appeared together as an amorous couple in the stage background, and were visible only in silhouette during the Venetian palace sequence of the second act.[33] Later, Ross said she and the male performer had capitalised on this opportunity for sexual intimacy in full view of the unsuspecting audience.[b][30][35]
Meeting Isherwood
By late 1931, Ross had moved to Schöneberg, Berlin, where she shared modest lodgings in Fräulein Meta Thurau's flat at Nollendorfstraße 17 with English writer Christopher Isherwood, whom she had met in October 1930 or early 1931.[c][37][38] Isherwood, who was an apprentice novelist, was politically ambivalent about the rise of fascism and had moved to Berlin in order to avail himself of boy prostitutes and to enjoy the city's orgiastic Jazz Age cabarets.[39][40] At their first meeting, Ross monopolised the conversation and recounted her latest sexual conquests.[1] At one point, she reached into her handbag and produced a diaphragm, which she waved in the face of a startled Isherwood.[1] The two soon became intimate friends.[27][41]
Although Ross' relations with Isherwood were not always amicable,[d] she soon joined Isherwood's social circle alongside more politically-aware poets W.H. Auden and Stephen Spender.[43][44] Subsequently, Ross was the only woman in this circle of gay male writers, who mythologised her in their respective memoirs.[43] Among Isherwood's acquaintances, Ross was regarded as a sexual libertine who was devoid of inhibitions and had no qualms about entertaining visitors to their flat while nude or about discussing her sexual relations.[30][45][46] A contemporary portrait of the 19-year-old Ross appears in Isherwood's Goodbye to Berlin when the narrator first encounters the "divinely decadent" Sally Bowles:[47][48]
I noticed that her fingernails were painted emerald green, a colour unfortunately chosen, for it called attention to her hands, which were much stained by cigarette smoking and as dirty as a little girl's. She was dark ... Her face was long and thin, powdered dead white. She had very large brown eyes which should have been darker, to match her hair and the pencil she used for her eyebrows.[49]
Isherwood further described the youthful Ross as having a physical resemblance to Merle Oberon but said her face naturally had a sardonic humour akin to that of comedian Beatrice Lillie.[50] Their ramshackle flat at Nollendorfstraße 17 was in a working-class district near the centre of Weimar Berlin's radical enclaves, subversive activity, and gay nightlife.[51]
By day, Ross was a fashion model for popular magazines,[26] and by night, she was a bohemian chanteuse singing in the nearby cabarets located along the Kurfürstendamm avenue, an entertainment-vice district that was selected for future destruction by Nazi politician Joseph Goebbels in his 1928 journal.[52][53] When the Nazi Party later seized power in early 1933, Brownshirts forcibly closed these venues.[52] Isherwood visited these nightclubs to hear Ross sing, and he described her voice as poor but nonetheless effective:[54]
She had a surprisingly deep, husky voice. She sang badly,[e] without any expression, her hands hanging down at her sides—yet her performance was, in its own way, effective because of her startling appearance and her air of not caring a curse of what people thought of her.[55]
Due to her acquaintance with Isherwood, Ross later became immortalised as "a bittersweet English hoyden" named Sally Bowles in Isherwood's 1937 eponymous novella and his 1939 book Goodbye to Berlin.[56][57] Isherwood introduced Ross to the visiting Paul Bowles, a bisexual American writer who would later gain acclaim for his post-colonial novel The Sheltering Sky.[58] This meeting between Ross and Paul Bowles made an impression upon Isherwood, who later used Bowles' surname for the character Sally Bowles, whom he based upon Ross.[59][60] Isherwood said Ross was "more essentially British than Sally; she grumbled like a true Englishwoman, with her 'grin-and-bear-it' grin. And she was tougher".[10]
Botched abortion
Although Isherwood sometimes had sex with women,[61] Ross—unlike the fictional character Sally—never tried to seduce Isherwood,[62] although they did share a bed whenever their flat became overcrowded with visiting revelers.[10][63] Instead, a 27-year-old Isherwood settled into a sexual relationship with a 16-year-old German boy named Heinz Neddermeyer.[64][65]
Meanwhile, Ross entered into a variety of heterosexual liaisons, including one with musician Götz von Eick,[66] who later became an actor under the stage name Peter van Eyck and starred in Henri-Georges Clouzot's The Wages of Fear.[67] Although some biographers identified van Eyck as Jewish,[f][66] others posit van Eyck was the wealthy scion of Prussian landowners in Pomerania.[70] As an aristocrat, his family expected him to embark upon a military career but he became interested in jazz and pursued musical studies in Berlin.[69]
When the 19-year-old van Eyck met Ross, he often moonlighted as a jazz pianist in Berlin cabarets. Either during their brief relationship or soon after their separation, Ross realised she was pregnant.[71] As a personal favour to Ross, Isherwood pretended to be her heterosexual impregnator in order to facilitate an abortion, [72] of which Ross nearly died due to the doctor's incompetence.[3] Visiting the ailing Ross in a Berlin hospital, Isherwood felt the resentment by the hospital staff for, as they assumed, forcing Ross to undergo an abortion. These events later inspired Isherwood to write his 1937 novella Sally Bowles and serves as its narrative climax.[73][74]
Leaving Germany
While Ross recovered from the botched abortion, the political situation rapidly deteriorated in Weimar Germany as the incipient Nazi Party continued to grow stronger day by day.[75] By 1932, Weimar Germany was in the trough of an economic depression, with millions of persons unemployed.[76] Nearly every German they encountered "was poor, living from hand to mouth on little money".[77] Berliners experienced "poverty, unemployment, political demonstrations and street fighting between the forces of the extreme left and the extreme right".[76]
As the political climate deteriorated, Ross, Isherwood, Spender, and others realised they must leave Germany.[78] "There was a sensation of doom to be felt in the Berlin streets", Spender recalled.[75] In the July 1932 elections, the Nazis became the largest party in the Reichstag, though not a majority. By August that year, Ross departed Germany and returned to southern England.[g][80] Despite Ross leaving Germany, Isherwood chose to remain due to his attachment to Heinz Neddermeyer.
After Adolf Hitler's ascension as Chancellor of Germany on 30 January 1933, however, Isherwood realised that staying any longer in Germany would be perilous.[3] He commented to a friend: "Adolf, with his rectangular black moustache, has come to stay and brought all his friends.... Nazis are to be enrolled as 'auxiliary police,' which means that one must now not only be murdered but that it is illegal to offer any resistance."[3] Two weeks after the Enabling Act cemented Hitler's power, Isherwood fled Germany and returned to England on 5 April 1933.[81]
Ultimately, the increasing prevalence of xenophobic Nazism in the country precluded Ross and Isherwood from returning to their beloved Berlin.[25] Many of the Berlin cabaret denizens whom Ross and Isherwood befriended later fled abroad or died in labour camps.[82][83][84][85]
Activism in London
Joining the Communist Party
There is nothing in his [Isherwood's] portrait of Sally [Bowles] to suggest that she might have any genuine ability as an actress, still less as a writer. My mother [Jean Ross], on the other hand, was at least talented enough as an actress to be cast as Anitra in Max Reinhardt's production of Peer Gynt and competent enough as a writer to earn her living, not long afterwards, as a scenario-writer and journalist.
After her return to southern England, Ross resided at Cheyne Walk in Chelsea, London, and continued to fraternise with Isherwood and his circle of friends.[80] She also began to associate with left-wing political activists "who were humorous but dedicated, sexually permissive but politically dogmatic".[86] During this period, she met Claud Cockburn, an Anglo-Scots journalist and the second cousin, once removed, of novelists Alec Waugh and Evelyn Waugh.[5]
Ross and Cockburn met at the Café Royal.[h][90] One evening, Cockburn handed Ross a cheque but, having second thoughts, he telephoned the next morning to warn her the cheque would bounce.[91] Despite this "portent of unreliability" and "the fact that Cockburn had already been married to an American woman whom he left when she became pregnant", Ross began an affair with Cockburn.[91] On a subsequent evening, Cockburn expounded Marxist economic theory to Ross all night until the early morning hours. Cockburn later said he persuaded Ross to become a left-wing journalist and secured her employment at the Daily Worker.[92]
Due to Cockburn's influence, Ross joined the Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB) during the tenure of General Secretary Harry Pollitt.[25] She became an active and devoted Party member for the remainder of her life.[93] Meanwhile, she continued her career as an aspiring thespian, appearing in theatrical productions at the Gate Theatre Studio that were directed by Peter Godfrey and, in need of money, she modelled the latest Paris fashions by French designer Jean Patou in Tatler magazine.[25] It is possible, although unlikely,[i] she obtained a bit role as a chorus girl in Paramount Studios' musical drama film Rumba.[95]
Isherwood and Viertel
While in England, Ross' connections to the British film industry proved crucial to Isherwood's future career.[96] Ross had spent only around eighteen months in Berlin between 1932 and 1933 but became fluent enough in German to allow her to obtain work as a bilingual scenarist with Austro-German directors who had fled the Nazi regime.[97] One of these Austrian directors was Berthold Viertel, who became Ross' friend.[98][99]
At the time, translators were sorely needed in the film industry to facilitate productions headed by Austro-German directors who were now working in the United Kingdom.[91] Ross, who was aware Isherwood was living in poverty, persuaded Viertel to hire him as a translator.[100] As repayment for this favour, Ross asked Isherwood to promise to give half of his first week's salary from the job to her.[96] After obtaining the job, Isherwood either reneged upon or forgot this agreement with Ross,[101] and this incident may have contributed to the souring of their friendship.[102] Viertel and Isherwood soon collaborated upon a film that would become Little Friend (1934); this collaboration launched Isherwood's long career as a screenwriter in Hollywood.[88]
During 1933, Isherwood composed the nucleus of a story about Ross' abortion in Berlin that would later become his 1937 novella Sally Bowles.[103] Dissatisfied with its structure and quality, Isherwood rewrote the manuscript during subsequent years,[104] and he eventually sent the manuscript to editor John Lehmann to be published in New Writing, a new literary periodical.[105] When Isherwood informed Lehmann his story was based on factual events, the editor became worried about the story's climax because it draws upon Ross' abortion.[106] Lehmann feared Ross would file a libel suit against Isherwood and himself if the story was published.[107][15]
Anxious to avoid a libel suit, Isherwood implored Ross to give him permission to publish the story.[108] Ross' reluctance delayed the publication of the manuscript.[108] Because abortion was a controversial topic in 1930s England and carried the penalty of life imprisonment,[109] Ross feared Isherwood's thinly-disguised story recounting her lifestyle and abortion in Berlin would further strain her difficult relationship with her status-conscious family.[110]
To prevail upon Ross to give consent for the novella's publication, Isherwood said he was in the direst financial circumstances. Ross, who herself was often impoverished, sympathised with any friend in a similar situation.[18] As a personal favour to Isherwood, she yielded her objections to the publication of Sally Bowles,[16] which was then published by Hogarth Press.[111] Following the tremendous success of the novella, Ross regretted this decision and believed it permanently harmed her reputation.[18] Now deeply committed to the socialist cause, Ross noticed Isherwood's story undermined her standing "among those comrades who realised she was the model for Sally Bowles".[112]
Workers' League
Around 1934 and 1935, Ross wrote a manifesto for the short-lived British Workers' Film and Photo League (BWFPL) and served as its General Secretary.[8] Much like its communist-backed US counterpart, the BWFPL's main objective was to launch a cultural counter-offensive to the "bourgeois" and "nauseating" films produced in capitalist societies such as the United States and the United Kingdom.[113] The organisation sought to take anti-capitalist "revolutionary films to workers organisations throughout the country".[113]
Despite its limited personnel and modest funds, the League produced newsreels, taught seminars on working-class film criticism, organised protests against "reactionary pictures", and screened the latest blockbusters of Soviet Russia to cadres of like-minded cineastes.[114] The BWFPL frequently screened such motion pictures as Storm over Asia (1928),[115] Ten Days That Shook the World (1928), Road to Life (1931), and China Express (1929).[114]
During Ross' tenure as General Secretary, the BWFLP was closely tied to the Friends of the Soviet Union, to which it often sublet its office space. After her resignation as the League's Secretary, Ross continued to serve as a League member and helped produce the short film Defence of Britain in March 1936.[116] Drawing upon her family's resources, Ross personally donated a considerable sum to the fledgling organisation in February 1936.[117] Another League member named Ivan Seruya, however, embezzled the majority of Ross' donation to finance his own private venture International Sound Films.[117] This incident and the subsequent dearth of organisational funds reportedly contributed to the League's lack of progress and to its demise in 1938.[117]
Film criticism for the Daily Worker
Between 1935 and 1936, Ross worked as a film critic for the Communist newspaper Daily Worker using the alias Peter Porcupine,[118][119] which she presumably adopted as a homage to radical English pamphleteer William Cobbett, who had used the same pseudonym.[118] Ross' interest in film criticism began in Berlin where she attended the cinema with Isherwood, Auden, and Spender.[76]
According to Spender, their quartet of friends viewed such films as Robert Wiene's The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, Fritz Lang's Metropolis, and Josef von Sternberg's The Blue Angel. They were particularly fond of "heroic proletarian films" such as G.W. Pabst's Comradeship as well as "Russian films in which photography created poetic images of labour and industry", which is exemplified in Ten Days That Shook the World and The Battleship Potemkin.[120] Fellow critic Dwight Macdonald described this period as spanning the Golden Age and Iron Age of Soviet cinema:[j]
Those were the years when one went to the 'little' movie houses which showed Russian films as one might visit a cathedral or museum—reverently, expectantly. One joined a congregation of avant-garde illuminati, sharing an exhilarating consciousness of experiencing a new art form—many, including myself, felt it was the great modern art. In the darkened auditorium, one came into contact with the twentieth century.[121]
In her film criticism, Ross stated that "the workers in the Soviet Union [had] introduced to the world" new variations of this art form with "the electrifying strength and vitality and freedom of a victorious working class".[122] One of her reviews of early Soviet cinema was described by a scholar as an "ingenious piece[s] of dialectical sophistry".[122]
Eve of the Spanish Civil War
In mid-September 1936, while the Spanish Civil War was in its first year, Ross met English poet and anti-fascist John Cornford at the Horseshoes pub in England while in the company of his friend John Sommerfield.[k][123][124] As the first English volunteer to enlist against Francisco Franco's forces, Cornford had just returned from the Aragon front, where he had served with the POUM militia near Saragossa, and fought in the early battles near Perdiguera and Huesca.[125] Cornford then returned to England from Barcelona to recruit volunteers to combat the fascists in Spain.[126]
Following the initial meeting between Ross and Cornford,[l] a near brawl occurred at the pub when an ex-fascist volunteer who had been in the Irish Brigade was present and almost came to blows with Cornford over the subject of the war.[129] After leaving the pub, Cornford and Ross went for dinner to Bertorelli's on Charlotte Street in Fitzrovia, central London,[130] where Ross impressed Cornford with her knowledge of ongoing political matters in Spain, as well as between England and Germany.[131] By the end of the evening, Cornford and Ross began a romance.[93][132][133]
Cornford possibly moved into Ross' apartment in the ensuing weeks while he recruited volunteers to return en masse with him to Spain.[134] While living with Ross, Cornford published his first book of poems and worked on a translation of Lysistrata.[130][135] If such a relationship occurred,[k] this brief union was not to last due to their mutual commitment to fighting Franco in Spain.
War correspondent
Arrival in Republican Spain
[Ross] may well, at 19, have been less informed about politics than Isherwood, five or six years older; but, when the Spanish war came and the fascists were bombing Madrid, it was she, not Isherwood, who was there to report it.
In September 1936, Ross travelled to war-torn Spain either in the company of Claud Cockburn or separately.[m] Meanwhile, Cornford returned to Spain with 21 British volunteers to fight the fascists and had become the de facto representative of the British contingent in the International Brigades.[125] He served with a mitrailleuse unit, and fought in the Battle of Madrid in November and December 1936. During the subsequent battle for University City of Madrid, he was wounded by a stray anti-aircraft shell.[139] Despite his injuries, he then served with the English-speaking volunteers of the Marseillaise Brigade and was killed in action at Lopera near Córdoba on 27 or 28 December.[140]
Upon hearing of Cornford's death, Ross was devastated and may have attempted to kill herself with an overdose of sleeping pills.[141] Decades later, she would confide to her acquaintance John Sommerfield during a personal conversation that Cornford "was the only man I ever loved".[142] The death of Cornford and other friends in the service of the doomed Republican cause likely solidified Ross' anti-fascist sentiments,[n][50] and she remained in Republican Spain throughout the prolonged conflict as a war correspondent for the Daily Express.[97]
Journalist and propagandist
Throughout the Spanish Civil War, Ross worked for the London branch office of the Espagne News-Agency ("Spanish News Agency").[143] During Ross' tenure in the organisation, the Espagne News-Agency was accused by journalist George Orwell of being a Stalinist apparatus that disseminated false propaganda to undermine anti-Stalinist factions on the Republican side of the Spanish Civil War.[o][144]
According to Orwell, during the Barcelona May Days, when anarchist factions on the Republican side were annihilated by Stalinist-backed troops, the Espagne News-Agency and the Daily Worker published false claims saying the anarchists had been planning a coup and were secretly allied with the fascists and thus justified their extermination.[146]
All of the agency's staff—including Ross—were loyal operatives of the Comintern apparatus,[143] the international Communist organization that sought to create a worldwide Soviet republic.[147] Ross' fellow Comintern propagandists included Hungarian journalist Arthur Koestler,[148] Willy Forrest, Mildred Bennett of the Moscow Daily News, and Claud Cockburn.[p][150]
Ross and Cockburn became closer as the civil war progressed. By this time, Cockburn was a prominent member of the British Communist Party.[149] Within five years, he would become a leader of the Comintern in Western Europe.[149] While covering the Spanish Civil War for the Daily Worker in 1936, Cockburn had joined the elite Fifth Regiment of the left-wing Republicanos battling the right-wing Nacionales and, when not fighting, he gave sympathetic coverage to the Communist Party.[q][154]
While Cockburn fought with the Fifth Regiment, Ross served as a war correspondent for the Daily Express.[155] When Cockburn was at the front lines, Ross ghost-wrote his columns for him, "imitating his style and filing it at the Daily Worker under his name while continuing to send her own reports to the Express".[25] Ross was embedded with Republican defenders in Madrid.
Among the other foreign correspondents in besieged Madrid were Herbert Matthews of The New York Times,[156] Ernest Hemingway of the North American Newspaper Alliance,[157] Henry Tilton Gorrell of United Press International,[156] and Martha Gellhorn of Collier's,[156] as well as Josephine Herbst.
Ross and other foreign correspondents often dined together in the ruined basement of Gran Via, the sole restaurant open in besieged Madrid during its relentless bombardment by fascist troops. Armed loyal sentries heavily guarded the basement restaurant and no-one was permitted entry without a press pass.[158]
Reporting on the Southern Front
In early 1937, as the civil war progressed, Ross, her friend Richard Mowrer of The Chicago Daily News—the step-son of Ernest Hemingway's first wife Hadley Richardson[r]—and their guide Constancia de la Mora travelled to Andalusia to report on the southern front.[160] Ross and Mowrer investigated and reported upon war-time conditions in Alicante, Málaga, and Jaén.[161]
Shortly before her arrival, a squadron of German Junkers Ju 52 aircraft bombed Jaén.[161] Amid the rubble, Ross reported on the death toll and interviewed survivors including mothers whose children had died in the bombardment.[162] She proceeded to Andújar where, amid the ongoing battle and machine-gun fire, she interviewed Colonel José Morales, a commander of the southern armies.[163]
Following her interview with Colonel José Morales, the convoy in which Ross was travelling faced recurrent enemy fire and later, during the evening, was bombed by a fascist air patrol.[163] De la Mora recalled this bombing as one of the daily perils Ross and other pro-Republican journalists endured to report news from the front lines:
In the dusk, I saw Mowrer and Jean Ross running down the road. I began to run. The sound of the planes, the low roar of the motors, filled my ears and head and heart and throat. I ran faster and faster ... Suddenly the whole mountain exploded with a noise so hideous, so vast, that the ear was not shaped to comprehend it. The ground where I lay trembled I felt it move against my body. The sound began to diminish ... Jean Ross and Mowrer came down the road. We made jokes.[164]
During her time in Andújar, Ross endured nine aerial bombardments by German Junkers and survived each despite the lack of air raid shelters.[165] Recalling these events, Mora described Ross as a fearless reporter who had seemingly resigned herself to death and looked "as natural as possible" when the bombs fell.[166] Her friends noted Ross "had a comforting air of calmness about her".[167] Following her reporting in Andújar, Ross continued to report from the fronts at Córdoba and Extremadura.[166] She continued reporting on the progress of the war, often from the front lines of the Republican forces, for the next year.
Fall of Madrid and return to England
In late 1938, while pregnant with Claud Cockburn's child,[10] Ross witnessed the final months of the Siege of Madrid and endured aerial bombardment by Francoist forces.[50] By the time the besieged city fell to the Nationalist armies on 28 March 1939, Ross had escaped to England. Her wartime experiences, especially the atrocities she witnessed and the friends she lost in combat, solidified her lifelong commitment to anti-fascist resistance.[n]
Sixty days after the fall of Madrid, Ross gave birth to a daughter by Cockburn. The child, Sarah Caudwell, who was born on 27 May 1939, was the only offspring of their union.[168] Some sources say Ross did not marry Cockburn due to her political beliefs about women's emancipation,[10] but under British law, Cockburn still was married to his first wife Hope Hale Davis; he could not marry Ross at that time without committing bigamy.[a] Whether Ross knew Cockburn was still legally married to Davis is unknown. Several months before her daughter's birth, Ross filed a deed poll in which she changed her surname to Cockburn.[170]
In 1938 or 1939, Cockburn entered into a clandestine sexual relationship with Patricia Arbuthnot.[25] In August 1939, Cockburn "walked out" on Ross and their newly-born child to live with Arbuthnot.[25] Cockburn later omitted all mention of Ross from his memoirs.[171] Following her abandonment by Cockburn, Ross did not have another recorded male partner. She later told an acquaintance "having a man around was like having a crocodile in the bath".[167]
Later life and death
Second World War and post-war years
Shortly before the outbreak of the Second World War, Ross, her daughter Sarah, and her widowed mother Clara Caudwell moved to Hertfordshire.[25] Ross became friends with Isherwood's old acquaintance Edward Upward and his wife Hilda Percival, both of whom were socialist in outlook. Upward later met Olive Mangeot through their attendance of Communist Party meetings and the two began an extramarital affair.[172] Olive, whom Isherwood depicted as Marvey Scriven in The Memorial and as Madame Cheuret in Lions and Shadows, eventually separated from her husband Andre Mangeot and lived in the London suburbs at Gunter Grove, Barnet, where she invited Ross and her daughter Sarah to live with her.[173]
For many years, Ross and Sarah lived as Olive's boarders in modest circumstances in Gunter Grove.[174] Much like Ross, Mangeot had been an apolitical bohemian in her youth and transformed with age into a devout Stalinist who sold the Daily Worker and was an active member of various left-wing circles.[175] According to Isherwood, Mangeot, Ross, and their social circle refused to consort with Trotskyists or other communist schismatics who had strayed from the Stalinist party line.[175]
Parenthood, and socialist activities
For the remainder of her life, Ross devoted herself to advancing the ideology of socialism and raising her daughter Sarah.[18] To obtain the most advantageous education available for Sarah, Ross moved to Scotland. In 1960, they moved to Barnes, London, for Sarah to attend Oxford University.[25] They lived with Jean's invalid sister Margaret "Peggy" Ross, a sculptor and painter who trained at the Liverpool School of Art.[176]
At this point, Ross acted as a caretaker for both Peggy—who had severe arthritis affecting her mobility—and her ailing mother Clara, who had suffered a debilitating stroke.[177] Under Ross' tutelage, Sarah became one of the first women to join the Oxford Union as a student and to speak in the Oxford Union's Debating Chamber.[4] She went on to teach law at Oxford and became a senior executive at Lloyds Bank, and later a celebrated author of detective novels.[178]
While Sarah was at Oxford, Ross continued to engage in political activities including protesting nuclear weapons, boycotting apartheid South Africa, and opposing the Vietnam War.[179] Even in later life, she continued to sell copies of the Daily Worker to neighbouring houses and to raise awareness of ongoing political campaigns.[26] Acquaintances who met Ross during the later decades of her life noted various hardships and impoverished economic circumstances had taken their toll on her. By this time, she had few clothes and very little money.[25] Sommerfield recalled:
She seemed burned out ... with bruise marks under her eyes and lines of discontent round her mouth; her once beautiful black hair looked dead, and she wore too much make-up, carelessly applied. Only her voice was the same, a rapid, confiding drawl full of italics. She was still using the slang and political cliches of her youth, and trying to shock with a freedom of speech that now was taken for granted".[141]
Ross and writer Isherwood met a final time shortly before her death. In a diary entry for 24 April 1970,[177] Isherwood recounted their final reunion in London:
I had lunch with Jean Ross and her daughter Sarah [Caudwell], and three of their friends at a little restaurant in Chancery Lane. Jean looks old but still rather beautiful and she is very lively and active and mentally on the spot—and as political as ever ... Seeing Jean [again] made me happy; I think if I lived here I'd see a lot of her that is—if I could do so without being involved in her communism.[177]
On 27 April 1973,[180] Ross died at her home in Richmond, Surrey, aged 61, from cervical cancer.[181] She was cremated at East Sheen.[25]
Dislike of Sally Bowles and Cabaret
According to Jean Ross' daughter Sarah Caudwell, her mother detested her popular identification with the vacuous character Sally Bowles.[18] Ross believed the character's political indifference more closely resembled Isherwood or his gay friends,[182] many of whom "fluttered around town exclaiming how sexy the storm troopers looked in their uniforms".[183] This claim is confirmed by biographer Peter Parker who described Isherwood as "the least political" of W. H. Auden's social circle in Weimar Berlin,[184] and W. H. Auden lamented the young Isherwood "held no [political] opinions whatever about anything".[184]
Caudwell claimed that Isherwood's fictionalised depiction of her mother uses a literary convention that necessitated "a woman must be either virtuous (in the sexual sense) or a tart. So Sally, who is plainly not virtuous, must be a tart to depend for a living on providing sexual pleasure".[18] Such a submissive gender role would have "seemed to [Ross] the ultimate denial of freedom and emancipation."[185] Although Caudwell posited that Isherwood depicted Sally Bowles as a tart, Isherwood emphatically denied this interpretation.[186] In a letter to John Van Druten, Isherwood wrote that Sally "is a little girl who has listened to what the grown-ups had said about tarts, and who was trying to copy those things".[186]
Above all, Ross resented Isherwood's depiction of Ross expressing antisemitic bigotry in his 1937 novella Sally Bowles.[18][187] In the novella, Bowles laments having sex with an "awful old Jew" to obtain money.[188] Caudwell said such racial bigotry "would have been as alien to my mother's vocabulary as a sentence in Swahili; she had no more deeply rooted passion than a loathing of racialism and so, from the outset, of fascism." Due to her unyielding dislike of fascism, Ross was incensed Isherwood had depicted her as thoughtlessly allied in her beliefs "with the [racist] attitudes which led to Dachau and Auschwitz".[18] In the early 21st century, some writers have argued the antisemitic remarks in Sally Bowles are a reflection of Isherwood's own much-documented prejudices.[s][189] In Peter Parker's biography, he states: "Isherwood is revealed as being fairly anti-Semitic to a degree that required some emendations of the Berlin novels when they were republished after the war".[189]
[Ross] never liked Goodbye to Berlin, nor felt any sense of identity with the character of Sally Bowles ... She never cared enough, however, to be moved to any public rebuttal. She did from time to time settle down conscientiously to write a letter, intending to explain to Isherwood the ways in which she thought he had misunderstood her; but it seldom progressed beyond 'Dear Christopher ...' It was interrupted, no doubt, by more urgent things: meetings about Vietnam, petitions against nuclear weapons, making my supper, hearing my French verbs. It was in Isherwood's life, not hers, that Sally Bowles remained a significant figure.
Isherwood never publicly identified Ross as his model for Sally Bowles until after her death. Others proved less discreet. Ross said her vindictive former partner Claud Cockburn leaked to the press that she had inspired the character.[190] In 1951, poet Stephen Spender in his autobiography World Within World publicly confirmed Ross as the basis of the character,[42] and he also confirmed the novella's abortion incident to be factual.[191] Later, Gerald Hamilton, the inspiration for Isherwood's character Mr Norris, identified Ross as Sally Bowles due to a public feud with Cockburn.[t][34] Consequently, when Cabaret garnered acclaim in the late 1960s, journalists—particularly those from the Daily Mail—tracked down Ross and hounded her with intrusive questions.[193]
Ross refused to discuss her sexual misadventures in Weimar Berlin with tabloid journalists. Caudwell said their relentless questions "were invariably a disappointment on both sides: the journalists always wanted to talk about sex" while Ross "wanted to talk about politics".[18] Ross noted reporters often claimed to seek knowledge "about Berlin in the Thirties" but they did not wish "to know about the unemployment or the poverty or the Nazis marching through the streets—all they want to know is how many men I went to bed with".[194] Ross became angered when the reporters ascribed her many sexual affairs to her feminist beliefs: "They asked if I was a feminist. Well, of course I am, darling. But they don't think that feminism is about sex, do they? It's about economics".[18]
Ross steadfastly declined invitations to watch Cabaret or any related adaptations.[195] Her ambivalence towards the popular success of Cabaret was not unique among Isherwood's acquaintances: Stephen Spender said Cabaret glossed over Weimar Berlin's crushing poverty, and he later noted there was "not a single meal or club in the movie Cabaret that Christopher and I could have afforded".[76] Both Spender and Ross often said Isherwood's stories glamourised and distorted the harsh realities of life in 1930s Berlin.[76] According to Ross, Isherwood's "story was quite, quite different from what really happened".[196] She nonetheless conceded the accuracy of the depiction of their social group of British expatriates as pleasure-seeking libertines: "We were all utterly against the bourgeois standards of our parents' generation. That's what took us to [Weimar-era] Berlin. The climate was freer there".[196]
Portrayals and legacy
Isherwood canon
Sally Bowles, the fictional character inspired by Jean Ross, has been portrayed by a number of actors; Julie Harris in I Am a Camera, the 1951 adaptation of Goodbye to Berlin and the 1955 film adaptation of the same name; Jill Haworth in the original 1966 Broadway production of Cabaret; Judi Dench in the original 1968 West-End stage version of Cabaret; Liza Minnelli in Bob Fosse's 1972 film adaptation of the musical, and Natasha Richardson in the 1998 Broadway revival of Cabaret.[197]
In 1979, critic Howard Moss noted the resilience of the Sally Bowles character: "It is almost fifty years since Sally Bowles shared the recipe for a Prairie oyster with Herr Issyvoo in a vain attempt to cure a hangover" and yet the character in subsequent permutations lives on "from story to play to movie to musical to movie-musical".[198] Moss ascribed the character's continuing appeal to the aura of sophisticated innocence that pervades the character and of Weimar Berlin in which "the unseemly and the ugly" are either de-emphasised or made to appear genial to the spectator.[198]
According to critic Ingrid Norton, Sally Bowles later inspired Holly Golightly in Truman Capote's novella Breakfast at Tiffany's.[199][200] Norton has said Isherwood's Bowles was the key model for Capote's Golightly character,[200] and that both scenes and dialogue in Capote's 1958 novella have direct equivalencies in Isherwood's 1937 work.[200] Capote, who admired Isherwood's novels, had befriended Isherwood in New York in the late 1940s.[201]
Christopher and His Kind (2011)
In 2011, British actor Imogen Poots portrayed Jean Ross in Christopher and His Kind, in which she starred opposite Matt Smith as Christopher Isherwood.[202] For her performance, Poots attempted to show Ross' personality as "convincingly fragile beneath layers of attitude" but did not wish to depict Ross as a talented singer.[203] Poots said if "Jean had been that good,[e] she wouldn't have been wasting her time hanging around with Isherwood in the cabarets of the Weimar Republic, she would have been on her way, perhaps, to the life she dreamed of in Hollywood".[203]
These Foolish Things
As well as inspiring Sally Bowles,[19] Ross has been credited as the inspiration for one of the 20th century's most-enduring popular songs, "These Foolish Things (Remind Me of You)".[26] Although its composer Eric Maschwitz's wife Hermione Gingold said her autobiography the song was written for either herself or actor Anna May Wong,[21] Maschwitz's own autobiography contradicts that of Gingold.[22] Maschwitz cites "fleeting memories of [a] young love" as the inspiration for the song,[22] and most sources—including the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography—say cabaret singer Ross, with whom Maschwitz had a youthful romantic liaison, was the muse for the song.[20]
References
Notes
- ^ a b c Contrary to sources such as Linda Mizejewski,[97] Ross and Cockburn never married because Cockburn was uncertain whether his divorce from Davis was valid in England.[169] Whether Ross knew Cockburn was still married to Davis is unknown. Several months before her daughter's birth, Ross filed a deed poll that changed her surname to Cockburn, see "No. 34604". The London Gazette. 3 March 1939. p. 1518.
- ^ In 1986, many years after Ross' death, her daughter Sarah Caudwell disputed Isherwood's claims of Ross' sexual exhibitionism in Reinhardt's Tales of Hoffmann.[18] Acquaintance Gerald Hamilton and others, however, said Ross was known for her sexual exhibitionism, including entertaining guests in the nude.[34]
- ^ Isherwood said Fräulein Meta Thurau "was tremendously intrigued by her [Ross'] looks and mannerisms, her makeup, her style of dressing, and above all, her stories about her love affairs. But she didn't altogether like Jean. For Jean was untidy and inconsiderate; she made a lot of extra work for her landladies. She expected room service and sometimes would order people around in an imperious tone, with her English upper-class rudeness".[36]
- ^ Isherwood wrote in his 1976 memoir that both he and Ross were selfish and often quarrelled.[36] Stephen Spender likewise implied relations between Isherwood and Ross were often acrimonious, and Isherwood referred to Ross as "a bitch" for snidely claiming he might one day "write something really great, like Noël Coward".[42]
- ^ a b Peter Parker notes that Ross "claimed that Isherwood 'grossly underrated' her singing abilities, but her family agreed that this was one aspect of Sally Bowles that Isherwood got absolutely right".[3]
- ^ Critic David Thomson and writer Peter Parker assert that Peter van Eyck was Jewish.[68] Others contend van Eyck was a Pomeranian aristocrat.[69] The character of Klaus Linke in Isherwood's Goodbye to Berlin is based upon van Eyck.[3]
- ^ Attempting to streamline events in a 1977 interview, Isherwood inaccurately said Ross went from Germany to Spain to join the Spanish Civil War.[79] This is incorrect.[80] After leaving Berlin, Ross returned to England and then went to Spain.[80]
- ^ Gerald Hamilton hypothesised Ross and Cockburn were acquaintances as far back as Berlin in 1930.[87] Other sources contradict this statement and say Ross and Cockburn did not meet until after Ross moved back to London.[88][89]
- ^ Isherwood states in Christopher and His Kind that Ross never travelled to the United States during her lifetime.[94] As such, she could not have filmed Rumba (1935) in Hollywood. She is perhaps wrongly credited as having a role in the film.
- ^ The 1930–1932 period of Soviet cinema and subsequent years were dubbed by film critics as its "Iron Age". This was an era in which state policy "laid waste to the once-flourishing cinema industry as effectively as it laid waste to the fertile Ukrainian farmlands".[121]
- ^ a b The relations between Ross and John Cornford appear in John Sommerfield's autobiographical 1977 work The Imprinted.[136] This work is a memoir with facts and fiction interwoven.[137] Sommerfield was an intimate friend of Cornford and fought in the Spanish Civil War alongside him.[138]
- ^ John Sommerfield recalled Ross meeting Cornford in his autobiographical memoir The Imprinted based upon his personal experiences in the 1930s. He described her as "a dark, slim girl, stylishly dressed, not like most of the girls we used to meet".[127] She spoke in a well-mannered style and "gave out a sort of high class sexiness that made you feel there was something special about her, that she was a prize".[128]
- ^ Isherwood biographer Peter Parker said Ross was "on holiday with [Claud] Cockburn in Spain when the civil war broke out" and that they "stayed there as reporters".[25]
- ^ a b In a 1974 interview with James Day, Isherwood said Ross' commitment to Marxism occurred after her sojourn in Berlin and was "the one subject on which she was a bit boring because she echoed the [Stalinist] party line".[50]
- ^ According to George Orwell, the Espagne News-Agency published false stories about anti-Stalinist anarchists who had been secretly executed by the NKVD in Spain.[144] For example, the agency falsely reported that Andrés Nin—who had been tortured and executed by the NKVD—had escaped to a fascist sanctuary.[145]
- ^ Using the alias Frank Pitcairn, Claud Cockburn reported on the Spanish Civil War for the Daily Worker and became its Foreign Editor. He became a key figure in the British Communist Party and the Comintern of Western Europe.[149]
- ^ George Orwell criticized Claud Cockburn in Homage to Catalonia (1938).[151] Orwell accused him of being under the control of Stalin and was critical of the way Cockburn reported the Barcelona May Days.[152] Cockburn was a close friend of Mikhail Koltsov, the foreign editor of Pravda and a Kremlin operative.[153]
- ^ Richard Mowrer was the son of Paul Mowrer, the first journalist to be awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Correspondence in 1929. After her divorce from Ernest Hemingway, Hadley Richardson married Paul Mowrer and became the step-mother to his son Richard. Ernest's son Jack Hemingway was Richard's step-brother.[159]
- ^ In an article for The New York Review of Books, writer Gore Vidal notes Isherwood's inordinate preoccupation with racial matters.[59] In contrast to Isherwood, Ross was noted in her later years for her commitment to racial equality.[18]
- ^ In a 1954 newspaper column, journalist Claud Cockburn publicly outed Gerald Hamilton as the basis for Mr Norris in Isherwood's stories.[192] Hamilton may have retaliated by identifying Ross—Cockburn's former partner and the mother of his child—as the basis for Sally Bowles.[192] Ross believed Cockburn had initially revealed her identity to the press.[190]
Citations
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Parker 2005, p. 206.
- ^ Brown 2016.
- ^ a b c d e f g Parker 2005, p. 220.
- ^ a b Stasio 2000.
- ^ a b Mosley 2003, p. 120.
- ^ Williams 1996, p. 265; Whaley 1969, p. 44; Jardine 2014.
- ^ Williams 1996, p. 265; Whaley 1969, p. 44; Fyrth 1999.
- ^ a b Forbes 2011, pp. 206–19.
- ^ Isherwood 1976, pp. 100–101; Croft 1989, p. 156; Firchow 2008, p. 120.
- ^ a b c d e Garebian 2011, pp. 6–7.
- ^ Izzo 2005, p. 144: "Isherwood's Sally Bowles was based on Jean Ross, a spunky British woman whom he met during his Berlin days with W. H. Auden and Stephen Spender".
- ^ Grossman 2010: The Berlin Stories "form one coherent snapshot of a lost world, the antic, cosmopolitan Berlin of the 1930s, where jolly expatriates dance faster and faster, as if that would save them from the creeping rise of Nazism".
- ^ Izzo 2005, p. 144: "The abortion is a turning point in the narrator's relationship with Sally and also in his relationship to Berlin and to his writing".
- ^ Lehmann 1987, pp. 28–9; Gallagher 2014.
- ^ a b Izzo 2005, p. 144: "Isherwood's publisher was nervous about the abortion episode and encouraged him to drop it".
- ^ a b Parker 2004; Lehmann 1987, p. 29.
- ^ Croft 1989, p. 156; Firchow 2008, p. 120.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Caudwell 1986, pp. 28–29.
- ^ a b Garebian 2011, p. 4.
- ^ a b c Parker 2004; Brown 2016.
- ^ a b Gingold 1989, p. 54.
- ^ a b c d Maschwitz 1957, pp. 77–79.
- ^ Garebian 2011, pp. 6–7; Parker 2005, p. 206; Isherwood 2012b, p. 796, Glossary.
- ^ Parker 2005, p. 206; Isherwood 2012b, p. 796, Glossary.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Parker 2004.
- ^ a b c d e Frost 2013.
- ^ a b c d Parker 2005, p. 207.
- ^ Parker 2005, pp. 205, 207.
- ^ Parker 2005, p. 205.
- ^ a b c d Isherwood 1976, pp. 88–89.
- ^ Sutherland 2005, p. 122; Spender 1977.
- ^ Caudwell 1986, pp. 28–29; Gilbert 2011; Cockburn 2001.
- ^ Isherwood 1976, pp. 88–89; Isherwood 2012b, p. 386.
- ^ a b Hamilton 1969, p. 44.
- ^ Isherwood 2012b, p. 386: Ross "claimed that she and her fellow extra used to fuck [sic] every single night on stage during the party at Giulietta's Venetian palace in the second act of Hoffmans Erzählungen".
- ^ a b Isherwood 1976, p. 63.
- ^ Isherwood 1976, p. 63: "Jean moved into a room in the Nollendorfstrasse flat after she met Christopher, early in 1931".
- ^ Isherwood 2012b, p. 796, Glossary; Hamilton 1969, p. 44; Izzo 2005, p. 163; Lehmann 1987, p. 18.
- ^ Moss 1979: Isherwood frequented "the boy-bars in Berlin in the late years of the Weimar Republic.... [He] discovered a world utterly different from the repressive English one he disliked, and with it, the excitements of sex and new subject matter."
- ^ Isherwood 1976, Chapter 1: "To Christopher, Berlin meant Boys... Christopher was suffering from an inhibition, then not unusual among upper-class homosexuals; he couldn't relax sexually with a member of his own class or nation. He needed a working-class foreigner. He had become clearly aware of this when he went to Germany in May 1928."
- ^ Isherwood 1976, p. 63: "In real life, Jean and Christopher had a relationship which was asexual but more truly intimate than the relationships between Sally and her various partners in the novel, the plays and the films".
- ^ a b Spender 1966, p. 122.
- ^ a b Izzo 2005, p. 144.
- ^ Spender 1966, p. 122. In his autobiography World Within World, Spender described Ross as she appeared in 1931: "Her clothes dishevelled, her eyes large onyxes fringed by eyelashes like enamelled wire, in a face of carved ivory".
- ^ Hamilton 1969, pp. 44–45: "I always remember my first meeting with Jean Ross... When I called with my usual punctuality exactly at twelve o'clock, I was told that Miss Ross was in her bath. However a gay voice rang out down the passes — 'Is that you, Gerald? Come and talk to me, darling, while I'm having my bath' ... I felt rather startled at this warm invitation to sit down in the bathroom while a lady I had only met the night before was performing her ablutions. However, I went into the bathroom".
- ^ Garebian 2011, pp. 6–7; Isherwood 1976, p. 63.
- ^ Garebian 2011, p. 30: "Sally seems satisfied to be divinely decadent..."
- ^ Mizejewski 1992, p. 4: "The Sally character herself is this century's darling of divine decadence, an odd measure of how dear to us is this fiction of the 'shocking' British/American vamp in Weimar Berlin."
- ^ Isherwood 2012a, p. 24.
- ^ a b c d Day & Isherwood 1974.
- ^ Day & Isherwood 1974; Doyle 2013.
- ^ a b Farina 2013, p. 79.
- ^ Lehmann 1987, p. 18: "Jean Ross, whom [Isherwood] had met in Berlin as one of his fellow-lodgers in the Nollendorfstrasse for a time, when she was earning her living as a (not very remarkable) singer in a second-rate cabaret".
- ^ Lehmann 1987, p. 18.
- ^ Isherwood 2012a, p. 27.
- ^ Lehmann 1987, p. 18: "Jean Ross ... She had not yet been immortalized as Sally Bowles ..."
- ^ Garebian 2011, pp. 6–7; Bell 1973.
- ^ Garebian 2011, pp. 6–7; Vidal 1976.
- ^ a b Vidal 1976.
- ^ Izzo 2005, p. 144: "Isherwood himself admitted that he named the character of [Sally Bowles] for Paul Bowles, whose 'looks' he liked".
- ^ Isherwood 1976, pp. 10–11.
- ^ Isherwood 1976, p. 63: "Jean never tried to seduce him [Isherwood]. But I remember a rainy, depressing afternoon when she remarked, 'What a pity we can't make love, there's nothing else to do,' and he agreed that it was and there wasn't".
- ^ Isherwood 1976, p. 63: "On at least one occasion, because of some financial or housing emergency, they [Isherwood and Ross] shared a bed without the least embarrassment. Jean knew Otto and Christopher's other sex mates but showed no desire to share them, although he wouldn't have really minded".
- ^ Parker 2005, pp. 205–206: "...a sixteen-year-old Berliner named Heinz Neddermeyer... Isherwood realized that he 'had found someone emotionally innocent, entirely vulnerable and uncritical, whom he could protect and cherish as his very own.' In other words, he had found the person for whom he had been looking in all his relationships with adolescents."
- ^ Izzo 2005, p. 6; Vidal 1976.
- ^ a b Thomson 2005; Parker 2005, p. 220.
- ^ Frost 2013; Gallagher 2014; Thomson 2005.
- ^ Parker 2005, p. 220; Thomson 2005.
- ^ a b Bergfelder 2007, p. 47; Bock & Bergfelder 2009, pp. 495–496.
- ^ Bergfelder 2007, p. 47.
- ^ Isherwood 1976, pp. 244–245; Gallagher 2014; Thomson 2005.
- ^ Isherwood 1976, pp. 244–245; Spender 1966, p. 127; Spender 1974, pp. 138–139; Thomson 2005.
- ^ Lehmann 1987, pp. 28–9; Gallagher 2014; Spender 1974, pp. 138–139; Thomson 2005.
- ^ Izzo 2005, p. 144: "The abortion is a turning point in the narrator's relationship with Sally and also in his relationship to Berlin and to his writing".
- ^ a b Spender 1966, p. 129.
- ^ a b c d e Spender 1977.
- ^ Crossman 1949, p. 233.
- ^ Parker 2005, p. 254.
- ^ The New York Times 1977.
- ^ a b c d Isherwood 1976, p. 95.
- ^ Parker 2005, p. 221: "Isherwood recognized that he could not remain in Berlin much longer and on April 5, the day measures were brought in to ban Jews from the teaching professions and the Civil Service, he arrived back in London, bringing with him many of his possessions."
- ^ Isherwood 1976, pp. 164–166; Farina 2013, p. 74–81.
- ^ Parker 2005, p. 614: "It was probably during the Berlin trip that Isherwood learned that the Nazis eventually caught up with his other companion on his 1933 journey to Greece, Erwin Hansen, who had died in a concentration camp".
- ^ Isherwood 1976, p. 297: "Heinz [Neddermeyer] might easily have been sentenced to an indefinite term in a concentration camp, as many homosexuals were ... Like the Jews, homosexuals were often put into 'liquidation' units, in which they were given less food and more work than other prisoners. Thus, thousands of them died".
- ^ Isherwood 1962, p. 61: There were "people in danger of their lives, travelling with false papers and in fear of being caught and sent to a concentration camp or simply killed outright. It is only in the past few weeks that I have fully grasped the fact that such a situation really exists—not in a newspaper or a novel—but here where I have been living".
- ^ Isherwood 1976, p. 149: "Jean was now beginning to shed her Sally Bowles persona. Her way of expressing herself already showed the influence of her new London friends—left-wingers who were humorous but dedicated, sexually permissive but politically dogmatic".
- ^ Hamilton 1969, pp. 44–45: Gerald Hamilton said Claud Cockburn visited the flat shared by Isherwood and Ross in Berlin: "Oddly enough it was not true, as Christopher wrote in Mr Norris Changes Trains, that I ever lived in the famous pension immortalised by him. But I was a frequent visitor there. I always remember my first meeting with Jean Ross, who in Christopher's Berlin Stories, became the famous Sally Bowles ... I think Claud Cockburn also honoured this pension with his somewhat untidy presence".
- ^ a b Parker 2005, pp. 270–271.
- ^ Isherwood 2012b, p. 447: The editor notes "Ross and Cockburn were in Berlin at the same time, but did not meet until after she moved back to London".
- ^ Parker 2005, p. 270.
- ^ a b c Parker 2005, p. 271.
- ^ Parker 2004; Frost 2013.
- ^ a b Croft 1989, p. 156.
- ^ Isherwood 1976, p. 84: "Jean never did go to America."
- ^ Internet Movie Database.
- ^ a b Isherwood 1976, pp. 148–149.
- ^ a b c Mizejewski 1992, p. 44.
- ^ Isherwood 1976, p. 150.
- ^ Isherwood 1976, pp. 148–149: "One morning in the middle of October ... Christopher got a telephone call from Jean Ross ... 'Chris darling, I've just met this absolutely marvelous man [Berthold Viertel]. He's simply brilliant. I adore him ... No, you swine—we most certainly do not! He's old—at least sixty, I should think. I mean, I adore his mind ... You see, he's an Austrian, only he's a director in Hollywood. He's come here to direct a film ... And, darling, this is what's so marvelous—he wants you to write it!"
- ^ Izzo 2005, p. 170: "Berthold Viertel ... This Viennese dramatist, stage and screen director met Isherwood in 1933 through Jean Ross, who knew that Viertel needed a screenwriter for his film Little Friend".
- ^ Isherwood 1976, p. 150: "I can't remember if Christopher kept his promise to give [Jean] her half of his first week's salary".
- ^ Isherwood 1976, pp. 148–150.
- ^ Fryer 1977, p. 160.
- ^ Fryer 1977, p. 162.
- ^ Izzo 2005, p. 144; Lehmann 1987, p. 27.
- ^ Izzo 2005, p. 144; Lehmann 1987, pp. 28–9.
- ^ Mizejewski 1992, p. 50.
- ^ a b Johnstone 1975, p. 33.
- ^ Mizejewski 1992, p. 51.
- ^ Isherwood 1976, p. 245.
- ^ Lehmann 1987, pp. 28–9.
- ^ Fryer 1977, p. 164.
- ^ a b Doherty 1999, pp. 48–49; Chisholm 1992, pp. 110–114.
- ^ a b Chisholm 1992, pp. 110–114.
- ^ Doherty 1999, pp. 48–49.
- ^ Ryan 1986, p. 325.
- ^ a b c Ryan 1986, p. 314.
- ^ a b Hogenkamp 1986, p. 119.
- ^ Williams 1996, p. 265; Gilbert 2011; Fyrth 1999.
- ^ Spender 1977; Crossman 1949, p. 242.
- ^ a b MacDonald 1969, pp. 192–198.
- ^ a b Hutchings 2008, p. 122.
- ^ Sommerfield 2015: "[Sommerfield] went off to fight for the Republicans in the Spanish Civil War, serving in a machine-gun unit and losing his friend and fellow writer John Cornford to the conflict. On his return to England, Sommerfield found that he had been reported dead, his obituary appearing in two newspapers. Volunteer In Spain appeared in 1937 and was dedicated to Cornford".
- ^ Sommerfield 1977, p. 86: "I had been with [John Cornford] when they [Ross and Cornford] first met, very soon after he'd come back from Spain".
- ^ a b Cornford 1986, p. 9–10, Chronology; Cornford 1986, p. 11, Introduction by Galassi.
- ^ Cornford 1986, p. 9–10, Chronology; Sommerfield 1977, p. 86.
- ^ Sommerfield 1977, p. 86.
- ^ Sommerfield 1977, pp. 86–87, 140.
- ^ Sommerfield 1977, p. 87.
- ^ a b Sommerfield 1977, p. 93.
- ^ Sommerfield 1977, p. 87–88.
- ^ Sommerfield 1977, p. 87: "Jean was, for all practical purposes, alone with John, talking to him in a low, amorous murmur about some new scandalous bit of Foreign Office subservience to Hitler, while, at the same time, gently stroking his thighs. When we left the restaurant she ... linked arms with John and walked off with him".
- ^ Sommerfield 1977, p. 86: "Most of John [Cornford]'s girls had been unsuitable; and Jean [Ross] had been extra unsuitable".
- ^ Sommerfield 1977, p. 93: "After John had walked down Charlotte Street with Jean, he disappeared for several weeks. Then I had a letter, saying he'd moved in with Jean, and would I come round for a meal. 'She's a good cook, too,' he wrote. I liked that 'too'.
- ^ Sommerfield 1977, p. 94. Visiting them, Sommerfield wrote he was struck by the love Ross had for Cornford: "She seemed positively besotted, watching him all the time, eating him up with her eyes".
- ^ Croft 1989, p. 156; Sommerfield 1977, pp. 86–87, 140.
- ^ Whitehead 2013.
- ^ Sommerfield 2015; Baxell 2001, p. 126.
- ^ Cornford 1986, p. 9–10, Chronology.
- ^ Haycock 2013, pp. 143–4; Cornford 1986, p. 9–10, Chronology.
- ^ a b Sommerfield 1977, p. 94.
- ^ Sommerfield 1977, p. 95.
- ^ a b Whaley 1969, p. 44.
- ^ a b Orwell 2013, p. 168.
- ^ Preston & Mackenzie 1996, p. 267; Orwell 2013, p. 168.
- ^ Orwell 2013, pp. 168, 236–238.
- ^ MacLean 2014, p. 178.
- ^ Koestler 1954, pp. 210, 335–336, 368.
- ^ a b c National Archives 1940.
- ^ Whaley 1969, p. 44; Mora 1939, p. 306.
- ^ Bounds 2009, p. 136; Orwell 2013, p. 236–238.
- ^ Orwell 2013, p. 236–238.
- ^ McSmith 2015, p. 217; Bounds 2009, p. 136.
- ^ Moynihan 2012.
- ^ Gilbert 2011.
- ^ a b c Cowles 1941, p. 19.
- ^ Cowles 1941, p. 30.
- ^ Cowles 1941, Chapter 3: The Press.
- ^ The New York Times 1971.
- ^ Mora 1939, pp. 294, 307: "Mowrer and I and Jean Ross, a clever and charming Englishwoman working at that time for the Government news agency in Paris and London, started off in an automobile for the southern front".
- ^ a b Mora 1939, p. 307.
- ^ Mora 1939, p. 308.
- ^ a b Mora 1939, p. 310.
- ^ Mora 1939, pp. 313–314.
- ^ Mora 1939, pp. 314–315.
- ^ a b Mora 1939, p. 315.
- ^ a b Henderson 2018, Chapter: Jean.
- ^ Firchow 2008, p. 120; Stasio 2000.
- ^ Parker 2004; Isherwood 2012b, p. 796, Glossary.
- ^ "No. 34604". The London Gazette. 3 March 1939. p. 1518.
- ^ Isherwood 2012b, p. 447. Isherwood wrote in his diary; "I admire the first part of Claud Cockburn's autobiography very much. But ... I can't find the faintest allusion to Jean Ross".
- ^ Izzo 2005, p. 97.
- ^ Parker 2005, p. 270; Izzo 2005, p. 97; Izzo 2001, p. 89.
- ^ Parker 2004; Izzo 2005, p. 97.
- ^ a b Isherwood 1976, pp. 100–101.
- ^ Isherwood 2012b, p. 796, Glossary.
- ^ a b c Isherwood 2012b, pp. 66–67.
- ^ Stasio 2000; Isherwood 2012b, p. 796, Glossary.
- ^ Mizejewski 1992, p. 44; Caudwell 1986, pp. 28–29; Henderson 2018, Chapter: Jean.
- ^ Jardine 2014.
- ^ Gilbert 2011; Jardine 2014; Frost 2013.
- ^ Firchow 2008, p. 120; Cockburn 2001.
- ^ Isherwood 1976, pp. 124–125; Doyle 2013.
- ^ a b Allen 2004.
- ^ Cockburn 2001.
- ^ a b Van Druten 1983, p. 6.
- ^ Izzo 2005, p. 144: "Sally's attractiveness is also diminished by two anti-Semitic remarks she makes, which are omitted in all the postwar adaptations".
- ^ Isherwood 2012a, p. 33: "This job at the Lady Windermere only lasts another week. I got it through a man I met at the Eden Bar. But he's gone off to Vienna now. I must ring up the Ufa people again, I suppose. And then there's an awful old Jew who takes me out sometimes. He's always promising to get me a contract; but he only wants to sleep with me, the old swine."
- ^ a b Hensher 2005.
- ^ a b Isherwood 2012b, p. 70.
- ^ Spender 1966, p. 127.
- ^ a b Hamilton 1969, pp. 37, 126–127.
- ^ Friedrich 1995, p. 307.
- ^ Caudwell 1986, pp. 28–29; Frost 2013.
- ^ Bletchly 2013, p. 26; Isherwood 2012b, p. 70.
- ^ a b Johnstone 1975, pp. 33–34.
- ^ Bletchly 2013, p. 26.
- ^ a b Moss 1979.
- ^ Izzo 2005, p. 144: "Truman Capote's Holly Golightly ... the latter of whom is a tribute to Isherwood and his Sally Bowles ... "
- ^ a b c Norton 2010.
- ^ Clarke 1988, Chapter 19.
- ^ Wollaston 2011.
- ^ a b Harvey 2011.
Works cited
Print sources
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She's been played by big names such as Judi Dench, Julie Harris, Teri Hatcher and Brooke Shields. But Liza Minnelli's Oscar-winning performance as the underground club singer is seen by Cabaret fans as the definitive Sally Bowles. In fact author Christopher Isherwood based his character on Jean Ross, an English woman he met while living in decadent Berlin in the early 1930s. Jean generously allowed him to publish the book in 1937 – despite it featuring the then-scandalous fact she'd had an abortion. Isherwood never confirmed she had inspired Sally until after her death in 1973, while Jean, a political radical, never wanted publicity. She was traced by reporters when [I Am a Camera] was first staged in [1951], but declined all invitations to see the show. A family friend said: 'Jean was a wonderful woman, warm and gentle in demeanour. She couldn't have been more unlike the rather tinny character portrayed in Sally Bowles. She was extremely intelligent, politically alert and vital. She probably found the portrait painted by Christopher Isherwood rather irritating.'
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This side of Jean Ross' life is mentioned in John Sommerfield's The Imprinted (1977), where she appears as 'Jean Reynolds.' In this novel, she has been immortalised as Lucy Rivers in a novel by L.P. Davies titled A Woman of the Thirties. 'I realized that A Woman of the Thirties had been a misfortune for her; she had been fixed by the book, turned into a fictional character whose story ended in 1939.' She has an affair in The Imprinted with 'John Rackstraw' (based on John Cornford, a young Cambridge Communist with whom Sommerfield fought in Spain).
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Online sources
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The real Isherwood, though not without many sympathetic qualities, was petty, selfish and supremely egotistical. The least political of the so-called Auden group, Isherwood was always guided by his personal motivations rather than by abstract ideas.
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[Christopher Isherwood] found no irony in the post‐Berlin life of Jean Ross, the woman who was the model for the hedonistic Sally Bowles: 'A beautiful woman. She left Berlin to go to Spain during the Civil War. She died recently still a Communist.'
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Isherwood returned to the United States and three years later, on April 27th 1973, Jean died of cervical cancer at her home in Barnes, south-west London. She was cremated at Mortlake Crematorium on May 4th 1973.
- "John Sommerfield". London Books. June 2015. Archived from the original on 17 June 2015. Retrieved 7 March 2020.
[John Sommerfield] went off to fight for the Republicans in the Spanish Civil War, serving in a machine-gun unit and losing his friend and fellow writer John Cornford to the conflict. On his return to England, Sommerfield found that he had been reported dead, his obituary appearing in two newspapers. Volunteer In Spain appeared in 1937 and was dedicated to Cornford, but he felt that he had been rushed in writing it, despite mainly positive coverage.
- Moynihan, Colin (22 July 2012). "Alexander Cockburn, Acerbic Writer and Critic, Dies at 71". The New York Times. p. B8. Retrieved 18 June 2018.
- Moss, Howard (3 June 1979). "Christopher Isherwood: Man and Work". The New York Times. Retrieved 18 June 2018.
- "National Archives: Francis Claud Cockburn – Security File". The National Archives. 1 January 1940. Retrieved 29 May 2019.
"Francis Claud Cockburn, alias Frank Pitcairn: British. In 1933 Cockburn a former Times journalist, started his own political publication The Week which gained a reputation for having inside sources of information. In 1936, under the name 'Frank Pitcairn', he reported on the Spanish Civil War for the Daily Worker, later becoming its Foreign Editor. In 1939 he was a leading British Communist Party member and was said to be a leader of the Comintern in Western Europe. Throughout the Second World War he remained an active Communist".
- Norton, Ingrid (1 July 2010). "Year with Short Novels: Breakfast at Sally Bowles". Open Letters Monthly. Archived from the original on 7 April 2018. Retrieved 2 July 2018.
- "Paul Scott Mowrer Dies of 83; Won Pulitzer as Correspondent". The New York Times. 7 April 1971. p. 46. Retrieved 7 October 2020.
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- "Rumba (1935)". Internet Movie Database. As Ross purportedly never travelled to the United States during her lifetime, it is possible that Ross was erroneously credited as having a small role in this film.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: postscript (link) - Ryan, Trevor (March 1986). "Labour and Media in Britain 1929–1939: A Study of the Attitudes of the Labour Movement Towards the New Media, Film and Radio, and Of Its Attempts to Use them For Political Purposes" (PDF). School of History. 2. University of Leeds: 314, 325.
- Spender, Stephen (30 October 1977). "Life Wasn't a Cabaret". The New York Times. p. 198. Retrieved 18 June 2018.
- Stasio, Marilyn (6 February 2000). "Sarah Caudwell, 60, Lawyer and Author of Mystery Novels". The New York Times. Retrieved 18 June 2018.
Sarah Caudwell was born May 27, 1939.
- Thomson, David (21 March 2005). "The Observer as Hero". The New Republic. New York City. Retrieved 2 October 2019.
- Vidal, Gore (9 December 1976). "Art, Sex and Isherwood". The New York Review of Books. New York City. Retrieved 18 June 2018.
- Whaley, Barton (September 1969). Guerrillas in the Spanish Civil War (PDF). Center for International Studies (Report). Sponsored by the Defense Advanced Research Project Agency (DARPA). Cambridge, Massachusetts: Massachusetts Institute of Technology. p. 44. Archived from the original (PDF) on 12 February 2017. Retrieved 18 November 2018.
- Whitehead, Andrew (August 2013). "John Sommerfield". AndrewWhitehead.Net. Archived from the original on 1 August 2013. Retrieved 7 March 2020.
John Sommerfield described The Imprinted as semi-fictional memoirs. It draws loosely on his own life—the dissolute, disputatious political and literary circles in which he mixed; political activism in London; fighting in Spain... Much of the action concerns a commission to make a radio documentary about... John Cornford, then being pressured to amend the script and take out some of the politics, and battling against these injunctions.
- Wollaston, Sam (20 March 2011). "Review: Christopher and His Kind | Civilization: Is the West History?". The Guardian. Retrieved 18 June 2018.
External links
- Jean Ross at IMDb
- Jean Ross – CounterPunch Profile counterpunch.org; accessed 8 July 2014.
- Jean Ross – Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Profile, oxforddnb.com; accessed 8 July 2014.