Volume 13, No. 3/2005

Was Katharine Hepburn 'a force of nature'... or a fabricated icon?

Katharine Hepburn, the feminist icon, brought all of her Hollywood boyfriends home to meet her family in Connecticut.

Ms. Hepburn sent her paychecks home to her father, who controlled her money until his death. Then, his secretary handled the paychecks.

Bonnie Moxey Maxwell, who is enrolled in UD’s Master of Arts in Liberal Studies program, discovered these details and many others while researching Ms. Hepburn for her thesis, “Hepburn Redux: Rethinking the Myth.”

Maxwell interviewed the actress’s surviving siblings, read stacks of books about Ms. Hepburn and visited the places where the actress had lived. Maxwell’s research also was the centerpiece for a Katharine Hepburn Film Retrospective, held in February in Rehoboth Beach, Del.

She listened to Dr. Robert Hepburn and Peggy Hepburn Perry recount their sister’s place in a family history that includes Harvard graduates and a maternal uncle who founded Corning Glass.

She talked with Ms. Hepburn’s brother-in-law, Ellsworth S. Grant, and with Katharine Houghton Grant, the niece who co-starred with Ms. Hepburn in Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner.

Maxwell, a retired private school executive who lives at the Methodist Country House near Greenville, Del.,  says she views Ms. Hepburn as a “force of nature,” a term Ms. Hepburn borrowed from George Bernard Shaw to describe herself.

“She was really larger than life in the things she took on,’’ Maxwell says. “The public perception was that she just went from one success to another. The reality of it is she was battling all the time. She spent so much time trying to create her own icon status.”

Maxwell’s personal interviews and readings turned up dozens of interesting facts for Hepburn fans:

Maxwell said Ms. Hepburn made 15 movies during the 1930s, and only four were box office and critical successes. She said when Ms. Hepburn went home to her parents in 1938, she had been labeled box-office poison in a full-page ad in a trade paper. Ms. Hepburn had turned down a last-ditch offer from RKO to play one of four daughters in a B movie, and she was without a studio. She revived her career by engineering the success of The Philadelphia Story, first on stage and then on film. “The kind of courage it took to battle back from being destroyed professionally, I think, is underestimated,’’ Maxwell says.

Before Ms. Hepburn’s successful appearance on The Dick Cavett Show in 1973, unedited tapes show that Ms. Hepburn arrived ostensibly to look over the television studio and began reorganizing the furniture and criticizing the carpet to gauge Cavett’s reaction. When she estimated Cavett was a host she could handle, she told him she would do the show but wanted to tape it on the spot. “She just sits there and talks,’’ Maxwell says. “It was the beginning of the thawing of her relationship with the press. This is a gal who just worked very, very hard at implanting her persona in American consciousness to a greater degree than any other actress of her era.”

In 1986, Ms. Hepburn organized a television tribute to Spencer Tracy. Maxwell says the show ended with Ms. Hepburn reading an open letter to the late actor beginning with, “Dear Spence,…” The letter cast Mr. Tracy as a troubled man who tossed and turned in his sleep. It cast her as his comforter. It also cast him as the greatest American actor of his time.

“She’s putting him forward as a very troubled, disturbed person, and this enhances her role as caretaker, it empowers her as the caretaker for the best American film actor. This was a part of a serious campaign to shape America’s consciousness,’’ Maxwell says.

If asked to sum up Ms. Hepburn in one word, Maxwell says she would use the word that Ms. Hepburn used—horsepower. “Horsepower is a measure of force, and I think the thing that comes across to me of Hepburn is the sheer force of her personality, the force with which she propelled herself through life. That’s the revelation to me—how hard Hepburn worked at being Hepburn.” 

—Kathy Canavan