In a revealing turn within the luminous tapestry of Hollywood's elite, Shirley MacLaine spills a treasure trove of intimate details in her newly released memoir. The Oscar-winning actress delivers stark admissions and breezy recollections that illuminate her storied career and personal life with vivid clarity.
Shirley MacLaine's new title "The Wall of Life: Pictures and Stories from This Marvelous Lifetime" offers a candid look into her unspoken Hollywood liaisons, New York Post reported.
The book landed on shelves today, coinciding gracefully with her 90th birthday, adding layers of grandeur to an already eventful release. MacLaine, a venerated star with decades of screen presence, authored “Out on a Limb” in 1983, which also achieved best-selling status amid its controversial reveals.
Shirley MacLaine and Steve Parker's marriage, lasting 28 years until he died in 2001, was characterized by its open nature—an unconventional arrangement that possibly shaded her interactions with co-stars. In her memoir, she candidly discusses relationships seeded in the limelight and during shoots, with notable absences.
Despite sharing the screen with many leading men, MacLaine's disclosures include affairs with all but two noteworthy exceptions: Jack Nicholson and Jack Lemmon. Her connection with Nicholson, in particular, drawn from their time in the Oscar-winning "Terms of Endearment," was platonic yet deeply impactful.
“He just made me laugh all the time. He was one of my favorite people,” MacLaine reminisced. About Lemmon, she had warmth spilling over, describing him as akin to a sister, underlining a fondness bereft of any romantic tinge.
“Terms of Endearment,” where MacLaine starred as widow Aurora Greenway opposite Nicholson's retired astronaut, Garrett Breedlove, remains a seminal piece of cinema, recognized greatly during the Academy Awards season where both actors received Oscars for their performances.
Her professional portfolio dazzles with a slew of iconic films where she not only showcased her talents but also, as she reveals, engaged intimately with some co-stars like Robert Mitchum.
They shared the screen in “Two for the Seesaw” and “What a Way to Go,” where Mitchum's hidden depth and intelligence captivated her off-camera.
“He was just extremely intelligent—hidden, but he was very, very intelligent. He didn’t have much of a sense of humor,” she recalled about Mitchum, whose life ended in 1997 due to lung cancer and emphysema complications. This contrasts significantly with her memory of other co-stars, who often brought levity to their relationships.
In another cinematic pairing, Nicolas Cage and MacLaine did not come together outside of their roles in “Guarding Tess,” where Cage portrayed a Secret Service agent. MacLaine expressed a platonic fondness for him, praising his receptiveness to her advice on stardom, cozy in their mutual respect though stark in its non-romantic bounds.
MacLaine’s connections, spanning generations and genres, thread through numerous personal and professional interactions, showcasing her influence in Hollywood. Her book not only explores past affairs but also pays homage to the friendships that shaped her both on and off-screen.
Shirley MacLaine illustrates her life in *The Wall of Life: Pictures and Stories from This Marvelous Lifetime*, offering a window into her philosophies and her stoic response to Hollywood’s complex relational dynamics. It presents a candid, strikingly intimate portrait of a life oscillating between reality and cinema.
As MacLaine’s narrative unfolds, readers experience a montage of moments that reflect and celebrate a woman who has lived unapologetically at the center of an ever-changing cinematic landscape.
At 90, her collection of memories serves as both a mirror and a guide, leading us through the corridors of a richly lived life amidst the flickers of the silver screen.