Apr 8, 2018

Gangster's Boy: Jackie Cooper Falls in Love

Born September 15th, 1922, the blond, pug-faced Jackie Cooper (left, with Freddie Bartholomew and Mickey Rooney) was the Ricky Schroder of his generation.  He got his start in Skippy, an adaptation of the comic strip about kids and dogs and the lunacy of adult society.  Jackie’s ability to shed realistic tears on cue (augmented by authoritarian directing: Taurog threatened to shoot his dog if he failed to deliver) won him a Best Actor Oscar nomination and catapulted him into the ranks of Hollywood royalty.  Sooky, The Champ, When a Fellow Needs a Friend, and Treasure Island followed, all box-office toppers.  By 1934 Jackie had his own fan magazine, half a dozen Big-Little book titles, and enough advertising tie-ins to shame Little Orphan Annie.

When Jackie hit pubescence, his box office draws declined, he re-invented himself la hard, masculine boys’ book hero.  He spent hundreds of hours at the gym, becoming an expert boxer, wrestler, and swimmer.  Movie magazines published photos of him in boxing trunks or skimpy swimsuits, displaying a hard-packed muscularity that made adult beefcake star John Garfield look downright scrawny.  Boys and men rarely appeared shirtless on camera in the 1930s, so instead Jackie wore tight dark-colored t-shirts that accentuated his v-shaped torso and mountainous biceps.


But even with a stunning boys’ book physique, he had become so thoroughly promoted as vulnerable, sensitive, and clingy that audiences simply wouldn’t accept him as tough, not even tough as a façade to hide a sensitive soul, so he was still asked to make with the waterworks in every picture.  And his pictures always featured homoromance, sometimes with heterosexual competition.

In Gangster’s Boy (1938),  Jackie plays Larry Kelly, a whiz-kid valedictorian, a letterman in every sport, yet also a fun-loving regular fella: he drives a jalopy covered with graffiti, plays the drums in a swing band, and litters his speech with goofy  expressions like “Who do you think you are?  Anyhow?”


He is stunningly attractive, so thoroughly desired by the guys, gals, teachers, and townsfolk that they always look like they want to rip his clothes off and ravish him on the spot, but he is devoted to his long-term “particular friend,” Bill Davis (future Broadway star Tommy Wonder).  “We’ll always be together,” Larry exclaims in a tender moment, and indeed after their high school graduation they plan to enroll at West Point together.

When Larry stars dating a girl, Bill seems to resent the competition: every time Larry swoops in for a kiss, he finds some excuse to interrupt them. He claims that pictures of girls are not allowed in cadets’ lockers at West Point: “You’re not supposed to waste time thinking about girls. . .you’ve got important things to think about!”  This may or not be true, but Larry does not challenge him.

The somewhat strained homoromance is further interrupted when Larry’s father, Knuckles, returns from an extended “business trip” up the river and confesses that he is actually a reformed gangster, just released from prison (perhaps the name “Knuckles” should have provided a clue).

When the townsfolk discover the terrible secret, they turn into slathering bigots.  No gangster’s son has the right to sully their town: they kick Larry out of the nightclub where he’s performing, refuse to applaud after his valedictory speech, and forbid their children from seeing him.  On the night of the Big Dance, Bill and his sister both sneak out of the house to see Larry, positioning themselves both as “dates,” as competitors for his affection.  But then the sister is forgotten, and the rest of the movie is traditional homoromance.

Driving home from the Big Dance, they accidentally hit and injure a small child.  Bill was at the wheel, but Larry claims responsibility, recognizing that an arrest for reckless driving will ruin either of their chances of being admitted to West Point.  But Bill is unwilling to let Larry sacrifice his career.


They posture and argue about who will take the blame until the judge uncovers the truth and exonerates them both, intoning that they have “learned a lot about friendship.”  But really it is the adults who have learned a lot. Larry and Bill already knew that they were ready to fight and die for each other, that their bond far transcended any momentary flirtation with girls.  Instead of a heteronormative clinch, the movie ends with the boys gazing at each other with eye-shimmering affection.

Within the Hollywood community, there was considerable speculation that the teenage Jackie’s sensitivity and his many friendships with girls signified that he was gay.  Whispered “anecdotes” had Jackie and former costar Wallace Beery caught with their pants down, and once at a nightclub, brash blue comedian Milton Berle spotlighted him as a “fag”, to gales of humiliating laughter.  These jokes and rumors apparently had a profound effect on Jackie.  In his later years, in spite of his otherwise liberal politics, he has made some mildly homophobic statements,  and he has never formed a close friendship with a man, perhaps out of a fear of what masculine intimacy might signify.


8 comments:

  1. That pool shot is amazing.

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  2. That bulge must have been pre-code. Did Jackie Cooper have a swimsuit scene in all of his movies?

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    1. Leaving aside that the first Code movie, Tarzan and His Mate (with a host of last-minute edits), was released when Jackie Cooper was 11, bulges really weren't against the Code.

      Nudity was, to an extent. Male nudity that "made sense" (swimming, bathing, showering) was somewhat acceptable, as were blink and you'll miss it dick slips. Female nudity was actually treated with more censorship than male nudity, really Psycho was controversial for having a woman in the shower despite shots of men showering throughout the Code era going back to Weissmuller's friendly rival, Buster Crabbe. (And recall, Psycho was still before radical feminism highlighted the issue of sexualized violence.)

      Because women weren't sexual brings and gay guys didn't exist; male nudity was simply not in as many movies because...women weren't sexual brings and gay guys didn't exist.

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    2. The shirtless pics, including the one with the bulge, are actually not from a movie, but from a magazine article. After a childhood spent mainly as a crying waif, Jackie was being marketed as a teen hunk who enjoyed swimming and boxing.

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    3. Thanks for the info. I do always take the time to explain the Hays Code (including the heterosexism) though. People are surprised at what was allowed and what wasn't.

      Same thing happens with anime.

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  3. Jackie Cooper preceded Skippy with a stint in the Our Gang films just as sound was added to the series. They were shown on TCM just a few years back when they hosted a salute to Hal Roach and his studio.

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  4. Studios knew how to market their hunkier male stars - so they were always doing boxing pictures, taking showers when ever possible specially in prison movies, there were also plenty of publicity beefcake shots in which the star was shown in some sport activity or working out to get ready for a role. Check out John Garfield and the Bowery Boys in "They Made Me A Criminal"(1939) plenty of beefcake on display

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    1. I think I have some posts on the Bowery Boys from back in 2012 or 2013. In "Dead End" the whole gang goes swimming, and there are several movies with Leo Gorcey or Bobby Jordan in boxing trunks.

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