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How Jackie Collins became the queen of Hollywood romance

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DailyBiteSep 22, 2015 | 13:52

How Jackie Collins became the queen of Hollywood romance

Jackie Collins was just 15 when she had a passionate fling with Marlon Brando. There were no anguished accusations of older, more famous men sexually abusing under-age girls from the queen of the bonkbusters. She enjoyed every minute of it.

"Marlon was in his early 30s and I was about to be 16," she later recalled of their short affair in Los Angeles, where she was living with her actress sister, Joan.

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The attention from one of Hollywood’s leading men wasn’t completely surprising. By the age of 15, Collins had the body of an 18-year-old, with a tiny waist and pneumatic breasts. He sent someone over to me at a party to say, “Marlon thinks you’re great looking and have a great body and would like to meet you”.

Whe she met him, she said, "he stared straight at my 39in chest — men often talk to my chest — and said, 'That’s a great-looking body you have, little girl'." It was a mutual attraction.

"We had a very brief but fabulous affair — he was at the height of his fame and glamour, the most beautiful man I’d ever seen. We went together on and off for a short while, but he was a real womaniser and had a girlfriend and I had another boyfriend, so it was just a bit of fun."

Collins, who once admitted to only falling in love with five men, said Brando wasn’t one of them. He had merely been a "schoolgirl crush" she said insouciantly. A crush and, of course, a chapter’s worth of invaluable source material for a writer whose literary claim to fame was to know the seamy side of Hollywood — names changed, of course — better than anyone else.

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Brando, as we shall see, wasn’t the only star who chased her when she was just 15, and there was even a blind date she had enjoyed while still a teenager in London with an unnamed "prince" who turned up to pick her up in a gull-wing Mercedes.

"It was a fantastic car but I didn’t like him much," she said. "I went to his apartment and he had a jug of champagne filled with white peaches." He cooked what she said was the "most seductive meal" she has ever had. "I didn’t end up with him but I ended up with the car for a few days."

Her undeniably wild youth notwithstanding, Collins always insisted she was really quite moralistic and that her amoral fictional characters always got their come-uppance in the end. But that still left unanswered the question of how she picked up her encyclopaedic knowledge of sexual proclivities and practices. During an ITV interview just a few days before she died, she joked about the scenes in her novels. She tried out "every" sexual position she covered, she insisted, laughing. "Absolutely, every one — that’s why I’m exhausted today."

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It raised a laugh but was she serious or joking? For while the best-selling novelist shared the same sort of glamourous lifestyle as the debauched characters in her steamy tales, it was sometimes difficult to be sure how much Collins drew from experience. In interviews, she argued passionately for the virtues of monogamy in marriage. The author of her own recipe book, she preferred to talk about what she was cooking up in the kitchen rather than in the bedroom.

"I never talk about my money or my sex life — I just write about other people’s," boasted the multi-millionaire.

But Collins clearly had sex on the brain from an early age. The middle child of a variety agent and his beautiful wife, a former nightclub hostess, Jackie Collins, her equally famous older sister Joan and younger brother Bill were brought up in a basement flat in Maida Vale, West London. She gathered her material by hiding when small in the trolley of food her mother wheeled in to the Friday night card parties of her father and his friends, listening to their comments when they thought no women were present.

Living on the ground floor was helpful in later years, as she would sneak out of her bedroom window at night and head off to West End jazz clubs wearing tight T-shirts that were risqué enough for her mother to burn them. To cure her truancy, she was sent to the smart Francis Holland School. But she was expelled after teachers discovered she had a cottage industry writing dirty limericks for pupils for a penny a time and was even then working on her first bonkbuster. She celebrated leaving school by throwing her uniform into the Thames.

Her parents gave the young rebel a choice — reform school or going to live with Joan in Hollywood and trying to follow in her footsteps as a budding actress. So she went to Los Angeles to share a flat with her sister, although Joan was often away filming. Jackie had little success as an actress — but men were a different matter.

Still a teenager, she became a habitué of the debauched Chateau Marmont hotel, where the stars hung out. Errol Flynn chased her around a table and she also had to counter the advances of an Sammy Davis Jr. "He said, 'Why don’t you want anything to do with me? Is it because I’m Jewish?'" she recalled. "And I wanted to say, 'Well, it has nothing to do with the fact that you’ve got one eye and you’re married'."

Her first marriage, aged 23, was to fashion impresario Wallace Austin. Although they had a daughter, Tracy, he was a manic depressive and addicted to the heroin substitute methadone. She used to come home to find him with a note on his chest saying: "I’ve taken an overdose." In 1965, after five years of marriage, she began divorce proceedings, and he committed suicide by overdosing on barbiturates.

Collins said she always wanted to be a writer. As she had learnt at school with her smutty limericks, she had a knack for lewd literature and used it to spectacular effect. Her first novel, The World Is Full Of Married Men, was published in 1968 after her editors tried to make her remove all the four-letter words.

Barbara Cartland exploded with horror at its X-rated sex scenes. The queen of romantic fiction called it "nasty, filthy and degrading" and said it gave her sleepless nights. An MP took out a half page advert in a newspaper to denounce it and the book was banned in South Africa and Australia. Of course, the notoriety only boosted sales and convinced her publishers she was on to something.

After her first novel became a bestseller, she married her second husband. They’d met on a blind date. Oscar Lerman, the owner of various nightclubs including the celebrity haunt Tramp in London, encouraged her to keep writing and they remained together — having two daughters — until he died from cancer in 1992.

(Courtesy of Daily Mail.)

Last updated: September 22, 2015 | 13:52
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