The Crowd
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B.W. Cook
She won an Oscar for her supporting role in the 1948 film “Key Largo.”
Claire Trevor Bren made more than 60 films in a career that spanned the
golden age of Hollywood. She passed away Saturday in Newport Beach
without fanfare, without search lights chasing the sky.
In the end, as in most all of the dealings in this one remarkable life,
there was dignity.
Claire Trevor Bren was a woman of considerable substance. She was a woman
who accomplished goals that many others might have considered the apex of
the human experience. Oscars may be wonderful, but for Bren, the Oscar
was a wonderful part of the past.
She was a woman who lived very much in the present, never regaling old
glory. And, surely until her final breath, Bren had her primary focus on
the important things in life.
Hopefully, her stepsons and grandchildren had the chance to say goodbye.
For more than anything else, family is what mattered to the movie star
the world adored in the earlier part of this century. But in fact, family
and friends are as much her legacy as anything she did on screen.
“I am so blessed to have such wonderful grandchildren,” Bren often
repeated in many conversations and in many settings. At an awards dinner
in Orange County honoring the actress with life achievement status two
years ago, Bren sat at a table surrounded by her grandchildren and their
spouses.
She told the black-tie-clad audience, “My genuine life achievement sits
before you. My grandchildren have come here tonight to be with me, and
this is my greatest joy.”
And it was not only her grandchildren that brought light into her life.
Bren adored her stepsons, Donald and Peter. They were very much her own
children even though she did not come into their lives until they were
young men.
Marrying Milton Bren in 1948, a legendary Newport figure as well as
successful Hollywood producer and agent, Claire Trevor became stepmother
to the two young men.
She also had a son of her own, Charles, tragically killed in an airplane
crash in San Diego in 1978. It was a loss she would never recover from,
and one aspect of the past she would not part with.
In death, her spirit is reunited with the son she loved and lost too
soon, and the husband of 31 years she cherished.
Bren chose not to talk openly about the loss of Charles, although with
close friends she would share her memories. Rather, she would beam with
pride over the accomplishments of son Peter, a respected businessman
living in New York, and son Donald, chairman of the Irvine Co.
“Donald was always a very driven and goal-oriented man,” she once shared
in a conversation over drinks in the bar of the Four Seasons Hotel,
Newport Beach -- a property developed by the Irvine Co. under her son’s
master plan.
“Donald has always been decisive, and precise. He has a clear vision of
himself and for the projects he undertakes. I believe he was greatly
influenced by his stint in military school and then later in the service.
He also has some of the best of his father’s quality -- vision and the
brains and guts to turn a dream into reality.”
In the early 1990s Donald Bren assisted his stepmother in a move from New
York City back to Newport Beach.
“It was time,” said Bren, when questioned about her reasons for leaving
the East Coast. “I love New York. I still do, but Newport is more
peaceful, more relaxed, an easier place to live. And besides, I can be
near many of my close friends from the past.”
Born in New York City in 1909, Bren broke her ties with the city that
offered her the first taste of fame making Vitaphone short-subject films
in an early Brooklyn studio.
She studied at The American Academy of Dramatic Arts and went on stage as
a teenager. A few years later, at the height of the Great Depression, the
young actress was offered a Hollywood film contract. By 1932, Claire and her mother and father moved to North Hollywood.
“I never really took my career all that seriously until the Depression,”
she said. “My father, who was a very strict and stern man, was a tailor
who catered to the wealthy trade in New York. When the Depression hit, he
lost his business. One day he told me that I needed to earn a living.”
“I must tell you that I was shocked. I suppose that I had never taken my
work seriously enough until that point.” said Trevor Bren, who once had
top billing over a young cowboy actor named John Wayne in the film
“Stagecoach.”
“From then on, I worked. I worked for the joy of following a career path
I wanted. I also worked to make money, to provide a roof over my head.”
Bren went on to ask me what my children were doing. I confided that my
older daughter was exploring the world of acting.
“Tell her she needs to work and make money to support herself,” she said.
“Tell her that the business is not about playing around. Make it
abundantly clear that she must swim or sink -- and there is no safety
net. Otherwise, she may not have a chance.”
Bren took her career very seriously. She said that she learned two
important lessons early on: Save your money and never fall in love with
the leading man. They were axioms that Bren did not always adhere to, but
axioms of sound advice just the same.
“I just did my best,” she said. “Sure, I made some real loo-loo mistakes.
I fell for the wrong men early in life, before Milton. But I think
overall I was always a fairly grounded person. I got that from my
parents.
“And I also got a great deal of love and support. That made a big
difference in Hollywood,” she said. It also made a very big difference in
all aspects of Bren’s life beyond the lights and cameras.
In retirement, a word Bren did not particularly relate to, she found
great joy in just socializing with her beloved friends and family. She
painted, and she was excellent. Her canvas was vibrant and unique, coming
from a rich and intelligent life.
Filling her Big Canyon residence with art, Bren created a haven of
culture in her final years. There was an old-world feeling of taste in
her home. It was a level of taste she had developed over a lifetime of
exposure to the good and bad times, and the experience that comes from
survival. Bren was gracious, not solicitous. She was a lady, and she was
also a broad.
She loved her cigarettes and her cocktails, yet she abhorred people who
became too self-indulgent and too boring after too many drinks and too
many smokes. She never bragged because she never had to. She wore her
accomplishments on her face, in her eyes, within the corners of her grin.
She dressed with style, she moved with grace, she stopped tracks in a
room when she wanted to. She could also be invisible when she wanted to
be. She was just plain smart, talented, and most importantly, caring.
She leaves a legacy of family and film. I think she would like to be
remembered as a woman who had a greater sense of the world, of life
around her, than just her own sphere.
Ironically, she preferred her own protected and quiet sphere, yet she
always spoke of giving back, contributing to society. Perhaps it was a
reflection of her time. The spirit of noblesse oblige, of participating
in making the world a better place.
“Do something for the young people. Give them a break,” she would often
say. “Think of what you can do to help someone less fortunate -- and then
do it.”
It was a joy to know Claire Trevor Bren, even for just a few years. While
we were not close friends, there was a certain simpatico. She understood
the place from which I find my words as a writer. She understood it
instinctively and passionately.
And for me, she was a bit like my own late mother. Tough yet refined,
living for the moment, enjoying every day, optimistic, worldly, and
loving. Goodbye great lady. You will be missed, never replaced.
* B.W. COOK’S column appears Thursdays and Saturdays.
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