CABARET VILLE MAGAZINE.
P211.
Lifestyle of the stars:
Visiting Kim Novak
"What
would I be doing if I still lived here?" Kim Novak mused. She supplied
her own answer: "I'd be spending my afternoons shopping on Rodeo Drive."
Instead, she has chosen to live in a wooded paradise near Ashland, Ore.
Called Windsong, it's a place she and her husband, Bob Malloy, share
with golden eagles, geese, deer, elk and a host of other wild fauna, not
to mention a barnyard full of farm animals. "We have two or three
hundred acres (80 to 120 hectares), including two large islands," she
reported. "The main channel of the (Rogue) river runs past
the islands. A smaller tributary passes
in front of our house. It has very little traffic, so we can enjoy it
without the noise of the
motor boats." It's a far cry from the
Kim Novak of the 1950s and '60s, who kept the gossip columns agog with
her romances. Groomed by Columbia boss Harry Cohn, Novak progressed from
a striking beauty in films such as Pushover and PHFFT to accomplished
actress in Picnic and Vertigo. So does she ever get bored with the
rustic life? "Never," she insists. "We go on long rides with our horses.
We kayak on the river. I cross-country ski in the winter. I have my
photography. I paint and sculpt and write poetry. And there are always
the animals to watch." Things haven't always been so idyllic at the
ranch. In 2000, a fire destroyed the manuscript of Novak's nearly
completed autobiography. She also lost all of her memorabilia, including
letters from Frank Sinatra and James Stewart, jewelry, and posters of
her films and photos. At first she despaired of resuming her memoir, but
now she is back at work and has completed several chapters. Novak made
one of her infrequent visits to Hollywood recently to present an award
to Norman Brokaw, her William Morris agent for 47 years. She came to an
interview in the formal
dining room of the Regent Beverly
Wilshire Hotel and, like a proud mother showing off baby photos, she
produced snapshots of her Oregon spread. The main house is indeed
impressive, rising white and stately amid the foliage, surrounded by
wide lawns. At 71 - "I can't hide it; it's in the record books" - she
wears her movie-star looks well. Her straight white-blond hair provides
a parenthesis to her unlined face. Her slender figure looks as if she
just came from a dance rehearsal. The voice, so seductive in love
scenes, remains husky and compelling. Born in Chicago, Novak worked as
an elevator operator and dime-store clerk before touring the country
selling refrigerators as Miss Deepfreeze. She eventually landed in
Hollywood, where Cohn decided to make her Columbia's new glamour girl.
His Svengali treatment worked, and soon Novak was a
box-office star. But she earned little
respect from her much-feared boss. One Christmas, she decided to turn
the tables on Cohn.
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