Part 16 (1/2)

35. Bergman, p. 49.

36. Ibid., p. 48.

37. Cagney, p. 60.

38. Ibid.

39. Warren with Cagney, p. 102.

40. Stine and Davis, Mother G.o.ddam, p. 54.

41. Leaming, p. 108.

42. Stine and Davis, Mother G.o.ddam, p. 42.

43. Cagney, pp. 5253.

44. Lonely Life, p. 141.

45. Stine and Davis, Mother G.o.ddam, p. 57.

46. Stardust: The Bette Davis Story, dir. Peter Jones, Turner Cla.s.sic Movies, 2006.

47. Lonely Life, p. 142.

48. Howard, p. 208.

49. Lonely Life, p. 141.

50. s.h.i.+ngler, ”Malevolence.”

CHAPTER 5. THE FIRST OSCAR.

1. Stine and Davis, Mother G.o.ddam, p. 55.

2. Leaming, p. 109.

3. Ibid., p. 110.

4. Ibid., p. 111.

5. Behlmer, Inside Warner Bros., p. 15: Wallis to Mayo, September 13, 1934.

6. Bette Davis, ”Uncertain Glory,” p. 119.

7. Jerome Lawrence, p. 357.

8. Lonely Life, p. 147.

9. Quirk and Schoell, p. 70.

10. Lonely Life, p. 149.

11. Brophy, pp. 22728; encycl.opentopia.com/term/Curate's_egg.

12. e and a Warner Bros. internal accounting sheet, which claims that between 1931, when she first signed on at Warners, and late 1936, the studio paid Davis $74,941.67 while working and $71,583.33 while not working (which is to say, while she wasn't clocking in on a particular film), for a total of $146,525.00, or about $30,000 per year. Still, Davis clearly earned less for herself than she earned for the brothers Warner.

45. New York Times, February 26, May 1, and May 26, 1936.

CHAPTER 6. UP IN ARMS.

1. Stine and Davis, Mother G.o.ddam, p. 76.