
Many, many pages are devoted to E. No doubt he loved her
deeply. He worries about her tiniest fears and dotes on every aspect of her
life. Almost too much but obviously
they were river deep, mountain high in love. They divorced in ‘75 and got
together again for work on the disastrous Private Lives play. At first everything went well with their public reunion but fairly soon Burton wrote:
"ET as exciting as a flounder temporarily…. This is going to be a long seven months. ET beginning to bore which I would not have thought possible all those years ago. How terrible a thing time is."
By the way, if you like reading about the famous knocking
the famous, there are plenty of those moments sprinkled about. Franco
Zefferelli and Jean Moreau get hit predominantly hard. As does the director of The Maltese Falcon, “Huston is a
simpleton. But believes himself to be a genius. And a self aggrandizing liar.
Cunning at it.”
Still, I find the best entries to be the quiet ones devoted to the women he loved
and the children he adored ... the ordinary guy—the guy I get—who just so happened to become one of the most famous actors of the 20th century.
And somewhere across time—October 5, 1966 to be exact—RB was
scrawling, “In case there is any mistake. This diary is written for my own
benefit.” Maybe so, sir. But I came to enjoy your ramblings and thoughts on
life. I was sad when your life in these pages ended. Salud.