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Farrah's Brainy Side
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A recent email exchange with the late Farrah Fawcett reveals the unlikely friendship between the Charlie's Angels star and the novelist Ayn Rand, who helped the actress understand her place in culture—and longed to cast her in a TV version of Atlas Shrugged.
Her golden hair prompted a nationwide outbreak of “feathered” bangs. Her taut body—captured most famously in a red bathing suit on a poster that sold, by her own estimation, 12 million copies—set the standard for the sun-kissed athletic sexiness of the '70s and '80s. When Farrah Fawcett, the pretty girl from Corpus Christi, Texas, who became an icon of American beauty, died today at the age of 62, the world lost its favorite angel.
Her life often read like an open book. Her famous paramours (Lee Majors; Ryan O’Neal), her spacey affect (on display most memorably in a 1997 interview with David Letterman), and her troubled son (he recently was released from jail to visit her deathbed) were always a part of the daily celebrity news feed. In mid-May, she even teamed with NBC News for a two-hour prime-time special, complete with home videos, about her battle with the anal cancer that eventually killed her.
Farrah told me, “Charlie’s Angels was never popular with critics who dismissed it as Jiggle TV. But Ayn saw something that the critics didn’t.”
But here are a few things that almost no one knew about Fawcett:
1) Fawcett and the writer Ayn Rand shared a birthday, February 2.
2) Rand, the inventor of the philosophical system called Objectivism, never missed an episode of Charlie’s Angels. She was such a Fawcett fan, in fact, that she sought to cast the actress as the lead in a planned TV miniseries version of her best-known work, the gargantuan novel Atlas Shrugged. (NBC later scrapped the project).
3) Rand, perhaps better than anyone else, helped Fawcett understand her place in American culture.
How do I know this? Because just months before Fawcett’s death, I had an email exchange with her about Rand. At the time, I was researching a possible article about the long—and as yet unsuccessful—effort to bring Atlas Shrugged to the big screen. I contacted Fawcett just to check a few facts. Instead, I got a glimpse I hadn’t expected of an intelligent woman with a savvy comprehension of her own cheesecake image.
Like most people, my sense of Fawcett had been marred by the 1997 Letterman interview in which she talked about “using my body parts to paint with”—particularly her gluteus maximus. And that was when she could get a sentence out. She twitched and lost her train of thought and interrupted herself. Her legs splayed. Her head bobbed. “Suddenly Farrah and I are playing charades,” Letterman said at one point, half fond, half exasperated.
But that wasn't my experience of Fawcett. For all her wacked-out antics, she was no dummy. She knew people saw her as an actress who had never transcended "Jiggle TV" and she had made her peace with it. She had a sense of humor about herself.
Recently, when Letterman ended a bizarre exchange with the mumbling actor-turned-musician Joaquin Phoenix with the words, "We owe an apology to Farrah Fawcett," I agreed. He may have meant it as a punchline, but after my interaction with her, I felt like saying: Farrah, I'm sorry.
Below, excerpts from our email interview:
How did you first learn of Ayn Rand’s interest in you? I gather she got in touch in the late '70s, when Charlie’s Angels was one of the biggest hit shows ever to appear on TV?
Ayn contacted me with a personal letter (and a copy of Atlas Shrugged) through my agents. Even though we had never met (and never did), she seemed to think we must have a lot in common since we were both born on the same day: February 2nd.
Why did Rand say she was so determined to see you in the role of Dagny Taggart, the female heroine in Atlas Shrugged?
I don’t remember if Ayn’s letter specifically mentioned Charlie’s Angels, but I do remember it saying that she was a fan of my work. A few months later, when we finally spoke on the phone (actually she did most of the speaking and I did most of the listening), she said she never missed an episode of the show. I remember being surprised and flattered by that. I mean, here was this literary genius praising Angels. After all, the show was never popular with critics who dismissed it as “Jiggle TV.” But Ayn saw something that the critics didn’t, something that I didn’t see either (at least not until many years later): She described the show as a “triumph of concept and casting.” Ayn said that while Angels was uniquely American, it was also the exception to American television in that it was the only show to capture true “romanticism”—it intentionally depicted the world not as it was, but as it should be. Aaron Spelling was probably the only other person to see Angels that way, although he referred to it as “comfort television.”









Yes, and it's a well known fact Farrah and Alan Greenspan shared a whole lot more than their mutual interest in Objectivism! George Patton
The "triumph of concept and casting" - now if only this form of The Romanticism of what 'could be and should be' would play out in real life as it's supposed to be.
Thanks Miss Amy Wallace; for the enlightening tribute to both these real-life legendary figures. We'll have to set a place for you in Galt's Gulch.
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Ayn Rand could see things and their philosophical meaning that no one else could, no doubt. Just read Atlas Shrugged, written 52 years ago, and compare it to what is going on in America now. What forsight she had.
You just saw her view just now? I read her novels 20 yeas ago and never thought that that kind of world could be! It cold be said that our great "industrialists" are "Shrugging", but, many are folding to the "collectivist rule". What we need, as a soveraign nation is, an "INDEVIDUAL", not a scocialist as in Barack Hussain "O'Bamby"!
what a nice thing you've done here. clearly, fawcett was bright and intuitive, quite a tight and clean writer. one hopes that more will come out about fawcett other than the angels-related stuff.
Please! Another red-herring! Just because Ayn Rand had a crush on Farrah Fawcett like half the world at the time, Farrah is suddenly brainy? I don't get the connection?????????? please explain yourself...this is ridiculous and you have wasted our time and interest...
Thank you, Ms Wallace, for telling me of an aspect of FF that I barely knew of. I had read some of Ms Rand's books & I wondered why many people were impressed with Ms Rand. Her books were good ads for a libertarian point of view; but as novels a dud. Ms Rand's sex scenes left me as cold as a tryst with a prostitute. My dearly departed drunken mother, in her later years, had insisted that I was born as a dirty old man. Ms Rand introduced me to my inner Puritan. Other women made me recall & revel in my inner dirty old man.
Back to Ms Fawcett, the lady's roles in a TV series didn't pass my eyes. I had no impression of her during the start of her career; I didn't watch TV then. I saw a couple of her movies. She &/or her directors showed me her acting ability. The scandals related to her marriage to & her divorce from Mr Majors got my attention. Engineering students took to calling themselves Farrah Fawcet Majors. Since I can't spell, I'll write ferrous faucett majors. I saw that Ms Fawcett had brains & that she made good use of her brains. That woman can't ever be accused of failing to use her god given gifts to her advantage.
I got turned on by Ms Fawcett as a cancer survivor. Ca can bring out a person's more endearing traits, at times. If you live with or or a friend to a Ca survivor, you learn that; it made me into a more tolerable person. Ms Fawcett was a brave Ca survivor. I admire her for that. Michael Jackson's death took the spot light from Ms Fawcett but Ms Wallace & others will write of the admirable Ms Fawcett as time goes on. That will show Ms Fawcett as a plucky actress & 1 hell of a woman in the best sense of the term. Going into the traits of what makes a woman into 1 hell of a woman is difficult. If you are 1 hell of a woman or have loved a woman who is 1 hell of a woman, you can't fully write of it in a way to explain it to those who aren't 1 hell of a woman or who haven't learned to love & cherish being part of her life. I expect that I'll be proven wrong on that by witty writers.
Thanks, Ms Wallace. You're a keeper.
Saw this reference on a Fox News crawl and had to see for myself. Thanks for the info. What a shame that they have both passed. They would have made the most unusual combination and would have been a dream come true to see Ayn's Atlas Shrugged characters in the flesh. I have read Fountainhead four times and Atlas three. Now I must do it again!!
I watched a TV special in which Fawcett flew to the socialist hell hole of Germany to undergo cancer treatment that she couldn't get here. But according to Rand, the German doctors are so overtaxed that saving lives isn't worth it, while the capitalist American doctors should have bent over backwards to save her. Why did Fawcett go and prove Rand is full of sh*t if they were such friends?
Where do you see "capitalist American doctors"? They are all partial slaves of the state, soon to be total slaves--just like the rest of us, if present trends continue. Want to be treated by a doctor who resents being a slave? Want to be treated by one who doesn't? (Last two sentences stolen from Ayn Rand.)
Thank you.
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