DALLAS
INTERVIEWS
MARY
CROSBY
MARY CROSBY'S HOT AS A PISTOL, SAYS
LARRY HAGMAN, BUT NOT IN A WAY TO WORRY DEAR OLD DAD
by Sue Reilly, 1980
To
some of the show's estimated 350 million fans around the world,
the Dallas denouement scene they had waited exactly eight
months for was perhaps an anticlimax. For actress Mary Crosby,
who herself did not know the outcome until that night, it
was the turning point of all her 21 struggling years. It was
a vindication that no one could appreciate more than Larry
Hagman, the actor she was revealed to have plugged. After
all, no headline in any of the 57 countries concerned had
declared: MARY MARTIN'S SON IS SHOT BY BING CROSBY'S DAUGHTER.
"All of my life people have thought
of me as Bing Crosby's daughter. Now they'll remember me as
the person who shot J.R.," whoops the lovely woman who
is cast as sloe-eyed siren Kristin Shepard. "I didn't
have anything to do with being born to my mother and father.
But I had a lot to do with Kristin Shepard's notoriety. I'm
proud of the work I did on Dallas," beams the actress
who before this fall was confused by many Americans with Cathy
Lee ("That's Incredible!") Crosby. (They aren't
even related.) "Kristin was really a high-class whore,
but my parents taught us that we should play whatever was
offered and learn from every opportunity. This is a tremendous
boost for my career." Grins Hagman of his young co-star:
"Look out! She's hot."
Indeed, gawkers and paparazzi have
tried to corral Mary in the modest Malibu hilltop home she
rents with her husband of two years, songwriter Edmund "Eb"
Lottimer, 29. Last week she left "Dallas" for the
indefinite future, explaining that "the character can't
go any further. She's slept with her brother-in-law, driven
her sister to drink, become a blackmailer. What else is left?"
But Crosby is scheduled to appear on the CBS spin-off "Knots
Landing" and is pondering the numerous offers that poured
in within days of the dramatic disclosure. She's just begun
filming the Doris Day role in NBC's scheduled remake of "Midnight
Lace" and has completed an ABC pilot, "Golden Gate,"
in which she co-stars with Jean Simmons, Richard Kiley and
John Saxon. "I play a nice crazy lady whose morals are
right but who is really foundering," says Mary.
Ironically, that's the way she felt
about her own career just 18 months back. "I got off
to an okay start -- a "Starsky and Hutch," a "CHiPs"
-- and then I screwed up," Mary remembers. "I did
a horrendously awful series for NBC called Brothers and Sisters,
which bombed. People wouldn't even let me read for parts for
six months afterward. I can enjoy a vacation as well as the
next person," she cracks, "as long as I know it's
a vacation and not a premature retirement." Thus she
calls Dallas producer Leonard Katzman "like a second
father to me" and credits him with saving her "stalled"
career and helping her to establish finally an identity free
from what she calls "the double-edged sword" of
her legacy.
"I had a head start in acting,"
Mary freely admits. "Because of my parents, I had a SAG
card, an agent and a recognizable name. But I knew if I screwed
up, people would never forget. I'd be dead." Equally
troubling was the scrutiny paid to her personal life because
of her famous father. In a memorable 1977 interview with Barbara
Walters, Bing, a martinet on morals, said he would disown
his only daughter if she lived with a man out of wedlock.
At the time, the then 17-year-old Mary was already, in her
words, "damn near living with" Lottimer.
They had met at the coaxing of Eb's
brother, a New York disco manager and acquaintance of Mary's.
Having previously moved out of her family's lavish Hillsborough
estate, she was living in a San Francisco apartment. Eb, the
son of a Virginia investment man and his landscape architect
wife, was, he says, "a starving student" at the
University of California 70 miles south in Santa Cruz. They
rendezvoused for a first-date picnic on a deserted beach midway
between their homes. "She was so much prettier than I
thought she would be," says Lottimer. "She looked
so much like her father, and I loved her feistiness and openness."
Says Crosby: "He looked much thinner than I expected,
but he was so open and honest, so loving." They moved
in together three months after Bing's death in October 1977,
amid reports that her mother, Kathryn Grant Crosby, was aghast.
"There were so many stories about
Bing's daughter living in sin," Mary recalls. "We
weren't hurting anyone. We were living in love. I couldn't
understand why people were trying to hurt us and hurt our
families." She does think that her father would have
come to accept the situation. "I believe his love and
trust would eventually have won out over his anger,"
she says. An astrologer friend helped set the 1978 wedding
date. Mary insists that the absence of her family was strictly
circumstantial: "My mother was doing a play, my brother
Harry was in England and my brother Nathaniel was playing
a golf tournament. We have very strong family bonds,"
Mary continues. "Harry camps out here often. So does
Nat when he's in town. We're close."
Certainly she has the right sort of
roots to deal with the "Dallas" hullaballoo. As
Bing's second child by Kathy -- he also had four sons by his
late first wife -- Mary was national news the day she was
born. At 2 she became the youngest person in the U.S. to pass
the Red Cross beginner's swim test. "I could read and
write by 3," recalls Mary. "That was my mother's
trip. She taught me. So I skipped grades in high school and
graduated when I was 15." At 6 she made her stage debut
with her mother in a Bay Area production of "Peter Pan"
and promptly proclaimed that she would become an actress.
Her childhood included bit stage parts with her mother, the
family's annual Christmas TV specials and Hemingway-esque
field trips with Der Bingle.
"He just didn't know what to make
of a girl in the family, so he treated me like one of his
sons," Mary remembers fondly. "He used to take me
to ball games and fishing and hunting. One year on safari
I outshot him [killing an ancient but nonetheless threatening
crocodile]. He was very proud of that." At home she went
for smaller game. "l beat the crap out of my brothers
until I was 11," she smiles, "and then they got
bigger than I was. But I learned the value of feminine wiles,
which are really more dangerous."
She spent her high school sophomore
year as an exchange student with a Mexican family with seven
children ("I came home with a new respect for the responsibilities
parents have") and after graduation enrolled at the University
of Texas. Briefly. "I didn't need to learn how to be
a good Tri Delt, or catch a husband or hold my liquor,"
notes Crosby. "So I went to San Francisco and auditioned
for the American Conservatory Theatre," the eminent rep
company where her mother was active. "I was the youngest
person ever accepted." It was there, while rehearsing
for "Julius Caesar," that she learned of Bing's
death?ut finished her scene before leaving. "My father
would have expected it of me," says Mary. "He was
a total professional."
Still, Crosby admits to having been
"awfully green" when she joined the Dallas cast
last year. "I was terrified," she recalls. "My
first week, walking around in a teeny bikini, I kept crossing
my arms over my chest because I was afraid I was going to
fall out of the top of the suit. And I didn't know anything
about technique or lighting." Hagman, as considerate
as J.R. is contemptible, coached her and became a close friend
along the way. "I was nervous about having him pat my
ass on TV, so he suggested to the director that stroking my
back would be more seductive," reports Crosby. "He
saved me from any confrontations. For all his crazy hats and
his wild sense of humor, Larry is totally grounded, the sanest
person I know. He and his wife, Maj, have a wonderful marriage."
Having just celebrated their second
anniversary, Crosby and Lottimer profess similar solidity,
even if her career at present has leapfrogged his. Eb has
started his own small recording and production company while
waiting for his "adult-contemporary" stylings to
reach the charts. "If my career were taking off at the
same time as Mary's, I couldn't enjoy her success nearly as
well," says Lottimer. "This way, I am a part of
her success, and when I hit, she will enjoy that with me."
Adds Mary: "It's a five-day-a-week job with him, and
he does serious work. But when I get a day off I try to get
his attention by doing little things, like walking around
the house nude." At their one-bedroom wooden chalet,
with a sweeping view of hills and ocean, there are no neigbours
in sight. "We love the rural life away from the show
business craziness," says Mary, who lists their pastimes
as reading, riding the Arabian mare Eb gave her last Christmas
and writing love songs to each other. "The things that
are really important to me are my man, my animals [they also
have two sheep dogs and two cats] and my books. I don't need
anything else." Except, of course, fulfilling work. "I'll
miss everyone on Dallas so much, but I have a wonderful career
ahead of me," says Mary. "I can feel it."