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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Forget Paris – Bing paved the way for imprisoned stars

Cecelia Rasmussen Los Angeles Times

Decades before Paris Hilton’s imprisonment became a cause célèbre, aspiring crooner Bing Crosby was jailed quietly with nary a mention in the newspapers. And after he became a star, his arrest and court records just as quietly vanished.

Crosby, then 27, crashed his car in front of the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel in November 1929 after a night of drinking. This was during Prohibition, when liquor was illegal.

It caused the Spokane-bred Crosby to miss what was supposed to be his big break – a solo in Paul Whiteman’s 1930 movie musical “The King of Jazz.” But he wondered later whether his voice had been suited to the tune; a flop could have torpedoed his career before it began.

Although the arrest wasn’t reported in newspapers and the records disappeared, the facts are not in dispute.

Crosby himself discussed the incident more than 20 years later. In the early hours of New Year’s Day 1950, he was broadcasting on KGIL radio from Ciro’s nightclub in Hollywood. Johnny Grant, Hollywood’s honorary mayor, was emceeing the program.

“(Crosby) told me the story over the air about how he was flung into ‘durance vile’ (jail), something I had never heard of before,” Grant said in a recent interview.

The incident also is documented in a 2001 biography by Gary Giddins and in a 1955 Hollywood Reporter article by Crosby’s brother, Harry.

Crosby was in town to film the Whiteman musical, a vaudeville-type production produced by Carl Laemmle Jr. at Universal Studios. His trio, the Rhythm Boys, came west from New York in June 1929 with Whiteman’s orchestra.

To make the band feel at home, Universal built a recreational lodge for the 24 musicians on the back lot. Whiteman arranged for each of them to buy a Ford to drive around Los Angeles. Each car included a spare tire cover emblazoned with the bandleader’s image.

“We all bought autos – or at least we made the down payments with money which Pops (Whiteman) advanced to us, then deducted from our salaries,” wrote Harry Crosby in the Nov. 15, 1955, Hollywood Reporter. Bing chose a convertible.

While they waited for the script to be finished, Crosby’s trio kept busy singing on a radio show sponsored by Old Gold cigarettes, as well as at parties. But the script took longer than expected, so the orchestra and the Rhythm Boys retreated to New York in August.

In late October, they returned for filming.

“Pops had promised me a song, ‘Song of the Dawn,’ ” Harry Crosby quoted his brother as saying. “A verse and two choruses.

“I rehearsed and rehearsed, then took time out to see the SC-UCLA game. There was quite a shindig after the game in our studio bungalow, involving some tippling, but not to excess.”

Bing evidently drove an unknown party guest to her hotel, the Hollywood Roosevelt. There, he told his brother, “A car bumped mine after the party,” and he was taken to the slammer.

The other driver, also allegedly drunk, was arrested too, but his name and what became of him are not known.

“Bing made a left turn into an oncoming car with such force that he and his passenger were knocked over the windshield and onto the pavement. He was fine, but the woman was bloody and unconscious,” Giddins wrote in the first volume of his 2001 biography, “Bing Crosby, A Pocketful of Dreams: The Early Years 1903-1940.”

“He practically drove through the lobby of the Roosevelt Hotel,” Bobbe Brox Van Heusen, a singer in Whiteman’s film, told Giddins.

“Bing carried her into the Roosevelt lobby, where the house doctor assured him that she was all right,” Giddins wrote.

The cops nabbed him and the driver of the other car, “who in Bing’s account was ‘more drunk than he was,’ ” Giddins said in a recent interview. “(Crosby) felt it was an injustice.”

From jail, Crosby called a musician friend and told him to bring more blankets because he was cold. He was bailed out a day later.

At his hearing the next week, he came to court “directly from the golf course, wearing green plus-fours, an orange sweater and check socks,” Giddins wrote.

The judge didn’t take kindly to his attire, nor to his drinking. He asked the singer if he was familiar with the 18th Amendment, Prohibition.

“Yes, but no one pays much attention to it,” Crosby reportedly replied.

Crosby maintained his innocence, claiming he was a victim of a bad driver and a zealous cop. “But it was his brazen court performance,” Giddins wrote, that put him in the slammer.

He was sentenced to 60 days.

Crosby fumed in his cell over the severity of his sentence. Laemmle and Whiteman’s pleas got him transferred to a jail with a liberal visitation policy that was near the studio. His new jailers apparently agreed to allow two police officers to escort Crosby to the studio during the day and back to jail at night.

But during the two weeks or so that it took to arrange the deal, Whiteman gave Crosby’s solo to John Boles, arguing that it was too costly to hold up filming any longer, although Bing and the Rhythm Boys did appear in a few numbers.

Crosby “had to come to the rehearsals with those detectives and he looked so terrible,” Van Heusen told Giddins.

It’s not clear how Crosby’s records were erased, nor how his sentence was calculated, nor whether the judge specified that he serve it all – but he got out early.

“Bing’s jail sentence was ultimately reduced by a third and he was released before the New Year,” Giddins wrote.

For eight or nine years, Giddins said, he tried to get copies of Crosby’s documents.

“But it’s easier to get into the CIA,” he said, laughing. “The studios went in there and destroyed them. They just bought them off.”

The media did cover an incident that took place Oct. 11, 1953, at Wilshire and Sepulveda boulevards in which Crosby’s Mercedes hit a firefighter’s car, injuring the firefighter and two others.

Police drove the by-then major star home without performing a sobriety test. No charges were filed – but Bing admitted having had four Scotch and waters and a champagne toast.

The firefighter’s neck was broken, as was one arm, and he was partially paralyzed. He sued Crosby for $1 million but settled for $100,000.

Once Bing became secure in his career, he became philosophical about the 1929 arrest and his loss of the “Song of the Dawn” solo.

“I must say,” Crosby told his brother in The Hollywood Reporter article, “(Boles) had a bigger voice and a better delivery for that kind of song than I had, and I often wondered what might have happened to me if I had sung it.

“I might have flopped with the song. I might have been cut out of the picture. I might never have been given another crack at a song in any picture.”