December 20, 2021

"'She was seen as too sexy and too lightweight to be serious,' her longtime agent... said... Ms. Babitz was a precocious child of Hollywood, born on May 13, 1943, stopping traffic at 13."

"(A soon-to-be famous actor, spying her on her front lawn in a leopard print bathing suit, cruised her in his convertible before realizing her age and speeding away, she recalled in 'Eve’s Hollywood.').... She clocked the popular girls.... 'When they reach 15.... and their beauty arrives, it’s very exciting — like coming into an inheritance and as with inheritances, it’s fun to be around when they first come into the money and how they spend it and on what.'  Eve’s inheritance was her appetite, her curiosity and her zaftig beauty, like Brigitte Bardot with a shag haircut and hip huggers. She was a hedonist with a notebook. Eve hung out at the Troubadour, the West Hollywood club that nurtured Jackson Browne, the band Buffalo Springfield, for whom she made album covers, and Steve Martin, whom she made over by showing him a book of Jacques Henri Lartigue’s photographs featuring crisply dressed men in white suits on the beach in France at the turn of the century. In 1963, she wrote to Joseph Heller, the author of 'Catch-22,' angling to find a publisher for a nascent novel that never materialized: 'I am a stacked 18-year-old blonde on Sunset Boulevard. I am also a writer.'... Then in 1997, trying to light a cherry-flavored Tiparillo while driving her Volkswagen Beetle, her clothing caught fire, searing most of her body.... Holed up with her cat in her West Hollywood apartment, Ms. Babitz became a recluse — and a pugnacious conservative, converted by the talk radio that became the backbeat to her new life...."


A strange obituary. And I've elided Frank Zappa, Salvador Dalí, and Marcel Duchamp. 

Creepy, really. You'd think "Me Too" had never happened. She died of Huntington's disease, so maybe this obituary was composed years ago. 

The scene on the front lawn in a leopard print bathing suit seems like the scene in the Kubrick movie where Humbert Humbert first lays eyes on Lolita. The Times sounds Humbertish referring to Babitz as "a precocious child." The editors left in "stopping traffic at 13." Maybe that's the tone of Babitz's writing. She wrote "When they reach 15.... and their beauty arrives, it’s very exciting" and "I am a stacked 18-year-old blonde on Sunset Boulevard." And all this is added up to the role of "hedonist." It's as though the New York Times has devolved into Harvey Weinstein. Ah, but she turned into a conservative — "a pugnacious conservative" — so no holds barred. 

25 comments:

Joe Smith said...

'...stopping traffic at 13."'

Better than stopping clocks, I guess.

I looked her up and saw lots of images.

She had a kind of plain face but did have big tits.

If she had those when she was 13 it would have been 'remarkable,' but seriously not that unusual.

Hollywood is very sick these days, I can't imagine what it was like for well-developed young teens in the '60s...

Lurker21 said...

In 1997, Babitz was severely injured when she accidentally dropped a lit match onto a gauze skirt, which ignited the garment and melted her pantyhose beneath it; the accident caused life-threatening third-degree burns over half her body. Because she had no health insurance, friends and family organized a fund-raising auction to pay her medical bills. Friends and former lovers donated cash and artworks to help pay for her long recovery.

Ouch.

Ed Ruscha included her in Five 1965 Girlfriends (Walker Arts Center's Design Journal, 1970).

A cheap imitation of Rembrandt's classic Six 1666 Girlfriends.

gilbar said...

You'd think "Me Too" had never happened

"Me Too"? What was that? WHEN was that?

rhhardin said...

You'd think "Me Too" had never happened

Me Too is a girl-constructed pedestal for girls.

William said...

"Elided" sent me to Webster's. Thanks

Will Cate said...

Read a book about her years ago. I know I'm just a rube from the deep south, but honestly I could never figure out what the big deal about her was, other than being genetically blessed. She really seems to have just skated along in life until the hideous accident.

Wince said...

Holed up with her cat in her West Hollywood apartment, Ms. Babitz became a recluse — and a pugnacious conservative, converted by the talk radio that became the backbeat to her new life...."

CRT = Critical Rush Therapy.

"I am equal time." - Rush Limbaugh

Michael said...

One of my favorite writers. Conveyed the feel of Los Angeles better than Didion. In the last couple of years her work has been revived, happily, and was getting the attention it deserved. Rest in peace. And "Eve's Hollywood' is excellent on Audible

What's emanating from your penumbra said...

MeToo doesn't require women to stop using their appearance to manipulate people. It wasn't a prosecution of both people in the sex-for-influence transaction. Ugly women are still at the bottom along with men without money or power.

tim in vermont said...

André the Giant was discovered by a wrestling promoter who saw him on the street from his car while André, as a teenager, was single-handedly loading a refrigerator into a truck for a moving company.

Scarlet Rivera was supposedly spotted by Bod Dylan from his limousine, on the streets of Manhattan.

Tom T. said...

An image search of her name turns up generic pictures of a cute '60s girl, a slightly older and heavier woman playing chess naked (perhaps chasing the attention she used to receive), and a lot of shots of an ordinary older woman smoking. I'm glad she found a niche with her writing, because being pretty can only last so long.

Krumhorn said...

I think the writer was adopting Eve's tone as you suggested. Frankly, it made me want to read some of her essays. The photo of her playing chess with Marcel Duchamp is amazing. This was the best line in the piece:

“In every young man’s life there is an Eve Babitz,” Earl McGrath, the record executive, famously said. “It’s usually Eve Babitz.”

- Krumhorn
(my preferred adjectives: brilliant/awesome)

Amadeus 48 said...

It's Christmas week-- the silly season in the news biz. Editorial standards, usually honored in the breach on most normal days, disappear faster than than a party girl's underpants. The NYT is going on a bender with that cute little number from the steno pool who keeps dropping double entendres into the dictation transcriptions.

Howard said...

Sunset Boulevard in the 21st Century with Leo the cat as William Holden.

Temujin said...

I'd never heard of her, which is one of those reasons I love these kind of posts. Learn something new everyday coming here.

farmgirl said...

I image googled b/c- who is this? I saw a pic of her w/Jim Morrison. So cool!!
As to the hedonism- every book cover is horny… just saying. She may have been a bit of a bubble slightly off plumb?

Realizing I am judging a book by its cover

Scot said...

I get the zaftig part, but beauty? She must have had a dazzling personality.

William said...

She front loaded her good luck which is better than having no luck at all. I'm not going to read her books, but they sound interesting. By Hollywood standards, she was no Bardot. By Hollywood standards, even Bardot was no Bardot after she hit the two-five. Still, as witty writers go, I'd put her in the top percentile. I don't mean to throw around negative stereotypes, but, by and large, witty writers aren't stacked....From the obit, it sounds like she rode the zeitgeist for awhile, but her zeitgeist had too many bright colors and macrame trimmings for our current zeitgeist. The obit makes it sound like she had a good time. No she didn't. She was groomed and abused by all those rock stars and Hollywood stars. The happiest day of her life was when she suffered severe burns and all those awful Hollywood people stopped hitting on her and she had the time and leisure to listen to the Rush Limbaugh show in its entirety.

Christopher said...

The scene on the front lawn in a leopard print bathing suit seems like the scene in the Kubrick movie where Humbert Humbert first lays eyes on Lolita. The Times sounds Humbertish referring to Babitz as "a precocious child." The editors left in "stopping traffic at 13." Maybe that's the tone of Babitz's writing. She wrote "When they reach 15.... and their beauty arrives, it’s very exciting" and "I am a stacked 18-year-old blonde on Sunset Boulevard." And all this is added up to the role of "hedonist." It's as though the New York Times has devolved into Harvey Weinstein.

Ah yes, the days when we could describe the world as it actually is.

I recall a Law and Order episode where James McCoy (Sam Waterston) is lounging at a beach, gazing ummmm longingly at a beautiful young women some distance away.

Until she turns to show her face (to someone else) and he realizes it's his daughter, and McCoy turns away in self-rebuke and a little disgust.

I present to you The World.

mikee said...

Laurence Sterne wrote in his delightful "A Sentimental Journey" of French woman: "There are three epochas in the empire of a French woman.—She is coquette,—then deist,—then dévote: the empire during these is never lost,—she only changes her subjects when thirty-five years and more have unpeopled her dominion of the slaves of love, she re-peoples it with slaves of infidelity,—and then with the slaves of the church."

Change religion to politics and he describes this modern woman completely.

Big Mike said...

She was seen as too sexy to be serious.

I must have missed the memo where it says sexy women can’t be serious. The pictures of Marie Curie with which we are most familiar with show a dour woman in late middle age. But if you find a picture of her as a young woman she is quite pretty, albeit with the most piercing, intimidating eyes I have ever seen. It should be noted that Pierre found her agreeably attractive and was not intimidated. Rosalind Franklin was quite attractive. Her X-ray crystallography pictures of the DNA molecule were appropriated by Maurice Wilkins and shown to Watson and Crick without Franklin’s knowledge or permission. The pictures clinched the case for a double helix. Watson, Crick, and Wilkins shared the Nobel Prize, however at the time the prize was awarded Franklin was dead much too young from ovarian cancer and the Nobel committee almost never awards a posthumous prize. The list of very intelligent, yet sexy, women does not end with these two, of course. The world is full of of women who are brainy, serious, and sexy.

Tom Grey said...

Reminds me of Roman Polanski.
You know, that fine Hollywood director who drugged a beautiful 13 y.o.
after her mother left her alone.

Drugged the girl, then raped her, and raped her anally, and orally.
(Actually not sure of the order)

Most of Hollywood OK with this, including Whoopi Goldberg ("not rape-rape." No? )since he was so talented and famous.
Bleah.
#MeToo remains a semi-failure until such prior acceptance becomes unacceptable.

Republicans who are abusive have long been far more pilloried than Democrats - since Dems support abortion (especially for women they've raped).

Michael said...

Yes, every young man needs an Eve Babitz. I had one. Transformed me from a shy, insecure 19-year-old boy into a confident and assured 20-year-old man.

I bet tonite there are dozens of men thinking back saying to themselves, "Thank you, Eve"

Anonymous said...

Yes, every young man needs an Eve Babitz. I had one. Transformed me from a shy, insecure 19-year-old boy into a confident and assured 20-year-old man.

I bet tonite there are dozens of men thinking back saying to themselves, "Thank you, Eve".



Indeed, indeed. Thank you, Tami. My wife would thank you, too, if she only knew.

Marcus Bressler said...

Hope they wiped off and sanitized that chair after the chess match.