Paul Bern(1889-1932)
- Writer
- Director
- Producer
Paul Bern is undoubtedly more famous today for being found shot to
death in his bathroom barely 2 months after his marriage to proto-sex
symbol Jean Harlow in 1932. Born in Hamburg, Germany as Paul Levy, he came
to the United States with his family as a child. His mother died by drowning in the fall of 1920, as documented in her death certificate, not by suicide as previously speculated. Bern
spent the vast majority of his adult life employed as a screenwriter,
director and producer at MGM before rising into the upper executive
ranks. He most notably kept his feet wet in production by co-producing
the all-star hit _Grand Hotel (1932/I which won the third Oscar)_ with the uncredited boy-genius, Irving Thalberg. He
gained a reputation as one of the few MGM executives stars could turn
to with their personal problems and be assured of a degree of
confidentiality. He was the first person many of them sought out prior
to dealing with hard-nosed studio boss Louis B. Mayer. His quiet intellectual
demeanor attracted Harlow--- who despite her sexpot screen persona, was
inclined to more cerebral pursuits. But in marrying her, Bern also
inherited her leeching family and they strained the marriage from the
start. Sadly it was in death--- which still stands officially as a
suicide-- that he gained the most press, one of the most studied and
wildly speculated-upon mysteries in Hollywood history. His alleged
suicide note is open to lurid interpretation and doubts persist whether
it's written in his own handwriting or is merely an apology written
weeks before over what could politely be called a sexual dysfunction.
Harlow herself never publicly commented on the matter, although she was
interviewed by LAPD detectives and appeared before a grand jury.
Screenwriter Ben Hecht claimed he was murdered by a mentally imbalanced
former lover, Dorothy Millette (with whom had a common law marriage and
whom Bern continued to marginally support) who was found floating in
the Sacramento River the day following his death. Speculation also
surrounds E.J. Mannix's activities in the case. Mannix was known in those
days as the studio's "fixer" and rumors abound on the degree of his
involvement, most recently alluded to in Hollywoodland (2006). The Los Angeles