Paul Newman is remembered as an iconic sex symbol, but apparently never truly felt like one until he met Joanne Woodward.
The actor’s posthumous memoir “The Extraordinary Life of an Ordinary Man”, is based on interviews with friends, family, and Newman himself over the span of five years in the mid-’80s.
The interviews were conducted by Newman and his friend, screenwriter Stewart Stern, and they set a rule that everyone be completely honest.
Newman, who is known for films such as “The Hustler,” “Cool Hand Luke” and “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid”, delved into being a sex symbol in Hollywood, revealing it wasn’t until he met Woodward, that he began to embrace it.
“Joanne gave birth to a sexual creature,” Newman says in an excerpt of the book. “We left a trail of lust all over the place. Hotels and public parks and Hertz Rent-A-Cars.”
Neman’s book also addressed his humble beginnings, his insecurities growing up and rise to sex-symbol status.
He was raised in Shaker Heights, Ohio, where he was too small to play on the school football team without special permission and awkward around girls.
“Girls thought I was a joke. A happy buffoon,” he says in the book. “All that changed in 1953 after I met Woodward when we were both understudies in the Broadway play “Picnic.” We began a steamy affair. I went from being not much of a sexual threat to something else entirely.”
Newman was married to first wife Jackie Witte at the time, and they had three young children. The couple’s divorce was finalized in 1958, and he married Woodward in the same year.
“There was evening in our Beverly Hills home after we got married, Joanne had fixed up one room with a thrift shop double bed, which we declared the F–k Hut by her,” Newman recalled.
“It had been done with such affection and delight. Even if my kids came over, we’d go into the F – – k Hut several nights a week and just be intimate and noisy and ribald,” Newman reveals.
The couple eventually settled down in Westport, Connecticut, and had three daughters, Nell, Melissa and Clea.
They remained married until Newman passed away from cancer at age 83 in 2008. Woodward is now 92 and is living with Alzheimer’s but still resides on the property the couple shared.
“Joanne and I still drive each other crazy in different ways,” the famous actor admits in the book. “But all the misdemeanors, the betrayals, the difficulties have kind of evened themselves out over the years.”
The couple’s daughter Clea says, “Despite the fact that my parents fought and it could be dramatic, they also fought really hard to stay together. They didn’t walk. There were times it was pretty close, but they worked hard at it. Ultimately they came together.”
Clinton had the same thing. It was called the WH.