Lucius Beebe(1902-1966)
- Additional Crew
- Actor
Lucius Morris Beebe was born into a wealthy old Bostonian-area family
on December 9, 1902, Wakefield, Massachusetts. By a young age he'd
already developed a pronounced distaste for casual clothes, bad
manners, foreign places, most foreigners and anything that was expected
to occur before noon. Educated at Yale and Harvard, he gained a
reputation early on as an unabashed homosexual, defying almost every
prevailing societal convention as to his mannerisms (flamboyant),
opinions (very flamboyant) and dress (yet even more flamboyant). At
Yale, a professor was heard to complain about the 'infestation' of
women on campus and spying Beebe off in the distance wearing
exaggerated white pantaloon-like knickers, quipped, "and here comes two
of them right now." What he possessed however was a keen wit and an
unvarying loyalty toward his friends. His social circle included
Noël Coward, writer/snob Louis Bromfield, dancer Clifton Webb, five and dime heir
Woolworth Donahue, and perhaps most significantly (at least as far as
women were concerned), scandalized Broadway star Libby Holman (he would
remain her most loyal supporter in the press through her murder charge
debacle- which was dropped - and lurid gossip of her lesbian lifestyle,
which dogged her for decades). Beebe landed a reporting job on the
Herald Tribune and earned the ire of his editor by covering hard news
events in audacious formal wear. Either by design or shove, he quickly
moved from hard news reporting into the society pages where he happily
covered New York society, which flourished after the repeal of
Prohibition. His column competed in good stead with the likes of
Ed Sullivan and, to a certain extent, Walter Winchell--- but, unlike them, had the
advantage of being a ranking member of the clique he reported on,
without having to pay for gossip. Within this group however, his
reporting was considered wildly unreliable; Tallulah Bankhead remarked, "he must
have a great respect for the truth since he very rarely uses it." While
the vast majority of America was mired in the miserable depths of the
Great Depression, Beebe publicly stated he'd do his part by limiting
his food and drink allowance to $100 per day. He also claimed to brush
his teeth in Chablis. Still, by some strange vicarious quirk of the
American psyche, Depression-era readers were fascinated by the rich,
even while they nearly starved. His newspaper column, "This New York"
wherein he chronicled New York's Cafe Society- a term he created,
remained popular for years (in 1939 he was an advisor to the film Cafe
Society in which he appeared). Beebe was also an avid railway
enthusiast, and in later life traveled around the country in an opulent
private railway car - decorated in Venetian Renaissance style. He and
his partner Charles Clegg traveled extensively, wrote books, and became
noted photographers (they met at a Washington D.C. party - Beebe was
wearing the Hope Diamond as a gag). Eventually tiring of New York,
Beebe and Clegg relocated to, of all places, Nevada, to successfully
resurrect the newspaper that once employed Mark Twain. After selling
that the couple retired to San Francisco. Beebe died of heart attack in
February, 1966. Charles Clegg committed suicide at precisely the same
age Beebe died in 1979.