Aileen Pringle(1895-1989)
- Actress
Aileen Pringle's favorite film was a mid-1920s silent based on a book
by Elinor Glyn:
Three Weeks (1924), sort of a "Lady
Chatterly's Lover". She recalled in a 1980 telephone conversation: "The
film was in good taste; some people thought the book was trashy".
Anita Loos wrote in "A Girl Like I", the
first volume of her autobiography, vaudeville comic
Joe Frisco telling Glynn: "Leave me get this
straight. You want to find some tramp that don't look like a tramp, to
play that English tramp in your picture. But take it from me, that kind
of tramp don't hang out in Hollywood". Aileen had spent her 20s married
to Charles McKenzie Pringle, the son of Sir John Pringle, a Jamaica
landowner and a member of the Privy and Legislative Councils of
Jamaica. Aileen lived in Jamaica until she went on stage with
George Arliss. When she began divorce
proceedings against Pringle in 1926, Hollywood gossip columnists
speculated she would marry H.L. Mencken.
She did not remarry until 1944 when she became the bride of
James M. Cain, author of "The Postman
Always Rings Twice". I opened my 1980 telephone conversation with
Aileen by mentioning that the day before I had been reading her
correspondence with Mencken at the New York Public Library. "But all
the letters were destroyed", she said. I knew that Mencken had asked
for all of his letters to her back at the time he became engaged to
Sara Haardt. Aileen was the only woman who received such a request from
Mencken at that time. "It was your letters from the late '30s and '40s
I was reading", I told Aileen. "In one of them Mencken was urging you
to write a book. Did you ever finish it?" "No. I got married instead."
In a 1946 letter she wrote to Mencken. "If I had remained married to
that psychotic Cain, I would be wearing a straitjacket instead of the
New Look."