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Politics : Bill Clinton Scandal - SANITY CHECK -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: jbe who wrote (9190)10/13/1998 12:48:00 PM
From: Les H  Respond to of 67261
 
FBI reported on Marxism --
the Groucho kind

October 12, 1998
Web posted at: 10:54 a.m. EDT (1454 GMT)

NEW YORK (AP) -- He did more
than smoke cigars and leer at women.
He defended free speech and
U.S.-Soviet friendship. He had
opinions on everything from the New
Deal to the United Nations.

So when Groucho Marx wiggled
those eyebrows and made wisecracks about the Establishment, a few
Establishment eyebrows went up as well.

Documents recently made public show the FBI kept detailed files on the
comedian, ranging from his supportive quote about the Scottsboro Boys in
the 1930s to jokes made on television in the '50s and '60s.

With the unintentional humor of a Marx brothers villain, the bureau is still
withholding several pages "in the interest of national defense or foreign
policy."

A fine way to treat the beloved leader of Fredonia.

"In 1953, the FBI was told by one of their confidential informants that
Groucho was a member of the Communist Party and they decided to do a
full review," said Jon Wiener, a professor of history at the University of
California, Irvine, who acquired the files through the Freedom of Information
Act.

'After Lennon, why not Marx?'

"Getting the files on Marx was a kind of shot in the dark. I had been a
plaintiff in a lawsuit to the John Lennon FBI files," Wiener said. "We recently
settled most of the issues in that case so I thought, 'After Lennon, why not
Marx?'"

The son of Jewish immigrants, Marx grew up in turn-of-the-century
Manhattan, in a world where socialism was about as subversive as the
Sabbath. He would become a dependable member of Hollywood's liberal
community, supporting the New Deal and other causes.

But what was standard left-wing thinking in the 1930s and '40s became
suspicious thinking in the Cold War era. In 1953, the House Un-American
Activities Committee pressured Groucho through Jerry Fielding, bandleader
for the comedian's TV game show "You Bet Your Life."

Fielding, who had been tagged as a Communist sympathizer in Walter
Winchell's syndicated column, would later say the committee wanted him to
name Groucho as a fellow traveler.

Fielding refused and the show's sponsor, DeSoto-Plymouth Dealers of
America, persuaded Groucho to fire him. "That I bowed to sponsors'
demands is one of the greatest regrets of my life," Marx wrote years later.

Alleged offenses date back to 1934

According to the FBI files, Groucho's alleged offenses date back to a 1934
article in the Communist Party newspaper the Daily Worker. The article
claims he called Communist support for the Scottsboro Boys an inspiration
for "Soviet America."

He was also quoted as defending Tom Mooney, a labor leader then
imprisoned, and later pardoned, for the bombing deaths of 10 people.

In the '40s, Groucho attended a benefit concert for Soviet war relief, helped
sponsor a fund-raiser for the liberal magazine The Nation and opposed
United Nations recognition for the fascist government of Spain.

He was also a member of the Committee for the First Amendment, an
anti-HUAC organization that included Frank Sinatra, Humphrey Bogart and
Lauren Bacall.

"You Bet Your Life" was a popular program, but the Groucho files are filled
with letters from unhappy viewers in the '50s and '60s.

One letter complained that when a guest told Groucho he was a former
pugilist and bootlegger, the comedian responded, "You mean you were a
bootlegger for the FBI?"

Another writer observed that "Groucho Marks" had referred to the United
States as "the United Snakes" and was friendly with another alleged
Communist sympathizer, Charlie Chaplin.

There's no indication that Groucho's career was affected, but the FBI did
take him seriously. One internal memo -- noting Groucho's real name was
Julius H. Marx -- was initialed by six officials, and J. Edgar Hoover
personally responded to at least one letter writer, enclosing the pamphlet
"What You Can Do to Fight Communism and Preserve America."

Entries to Groucho's file ended in the early 1960s. He died in 1977.

"They concluded from their study he was not a member of the Communist
Party," Wiener said. "The party was a very rigid organization; it's hard to
imagine a wisecracking spirit like Groucho's in it."