Shirley Temple



I stopped believing in Santa Claus when I was six. Mother took me to see him in a department store and he asked for my autograph. Shirley Temple Black, born Shirley Jane Temple was an American former child actress, businesswoman and diplomat who was perhaps one of the most popular if not the most popular child performer of all time, earning the distinction as a consistent box-office draw for four straight years (1935–38). She retired from show business at the young age of 22, though she made sporadic film and television appearances later in her life. Temple also took on a political career in her adulthood, having mounted an unsuccessful bid for Congress as a conservative under the Republican Party ticket; she was later appointed as chief of protocol and the U.S. Ambassador to both Ghana and Czechoslovakia.

Besides earning praise for entertaining people of all ages during the Great Depression, her life and career have been subject to scrutiny, particularly with the abuses she experienced during her career as a child actress, as well as her conservative political views.

America's sweetheart
Perhaps the best-known aspect about Temple is her career as a child actress during the golden age of Hollywood, having been on-screen since the age of three in a series of short satirical films featuring toddlers in decidedly adult situations. Temple herself later remarked that the films were "a cynical exploitation of our childish innocence," also revealing the horrors that she and her child co-stars faced on set at the time, like trapping the poor children in an ice box should they misbehave or slip up on-set, all on top of the arguably inappropriate situations the child performers were subjected to. It should also be noted that Burlesks was made prior to the introduction of the leading to a more or less anarchic film industry devoid of regulation and protection for their performers.

Even more disturbing were Temple's allegations against MGM producer whom she accused of having sexually abused her at the age of twelve in what amounts to a proto-#MeToo revelation. Freed set her up in an interview during Temple's move to MGM, where the producer allegedly unzipped his trousers and exposed himself in front of her. Temple, being an innocent child at that point, responded with a nervous giggle, and was thrown out of the room. She cited this as the reason why she did not stay long with the MGM studios and went back to Fox. The "Good Ship Lollipop" sequence in the 1934 vehicle has not aged well with modern audiences either. Comments left on one YouTube upload question the appropriateness of Temple's character serenading a band of grown men on board an airplane.

On the bright side however, Temple somehow did not wind up in the pantheon of errant former child performers whose lives were all but ruined due to the stresses and abuses they faced, such as and Peter Pan actor  whose tragic life was later callously satirised by Disney in  She also was good friends with African-American vaudeville actor and tap dancer  with whom she collaborated in a number of productions, though the scenes featuring Robinson were unsurprisingly excised from screenings in the South due to the Jim Crow laws. Temple recalled, "Bill Robinson treated me as an equal, which was very important to me. He didn't talk down to me, like to a little girl. And I liked people like that. And Bill Robinson was the best of all."

While the rigors of her childhood life and career are well-known and documented, cranks have unfortunately taken the story way out of context and shoehorned conspiracist screeds on top of what is factual, such as allegations of satanic ritual abuse and even MKULTRA of all things. Even during her heyday, such spurious rumours and urban legends were prevalent, such as when persistent rumours in Italy speculated that the young Temple was not a child but a dwarf actress in her thirties due to her stockier body type. Such was the gossip that, according to Temple herself in her memoirs, even the Vatican themselves got involved when they summoned a certain Silvio Massante to investigate on whether she was indeed a child and not a real-life version of the Batman villain Baby Doll. Other rumours concerned the condition of her teeth or that she wore a wig; Temple's mother actually gave her a routine regimen for setting her trademark curls involving vinegar rinse.

On the GOP ship Lollipop
Temple made no secret about her conservative inclinations, although she rubbed elbows with Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1934. Roosevelt remarked positively about the actress, saying "As long as our country has Shirley Temple, we will be all right." In her adulthood, Temple sided with the likes of fellow-Hollywood veteran Ronald Reagan (whose political views were clearly no different than Temple's) and Richard Nixon. In 1967, she ran unsuccessfully in a special election in California's 11th Congressional District to fill the seat left vacant by the death from leukemia of eight-term Republican J. Arthur Younger, caucusing under the GOP as an independent candidate. Comedian ridiculed this and performed a sketch where he dressed as Temple and sang a parody song called "On the Good Ship U.S.A." (of Annie fame as Miss Hannigan no less) also joined in on the fun with her own sketch on her eponymous comedy show where she assumed the role of a namby-pamby -esque Temple send-up named "Shirley Dimple", later re-christened as "Rhonda Dimple" likely due to legal issues.

She also publicly expressed her stance as a staunch anti-communist, having claimed to have witnessed a poor unarmed woman being gunned down in Czechoslovakia and harbored a strong pro-Vietnam War position. Ironically enough, she herself became the subject of McCarthyist witch hunting when the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) suspected Temple of leftist sympathies. Earlier still was when elements within Congress debated whether Temple – during her child star days – was unwittingly supporting the communist cause, something that was dismissed more as a bizarre joke than a credible threat considering that Temple was then only 10.