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At 66, ‘Zuzu’
thinks life is wonderful
From Michael Hill
SENECA
FALLS (N.Y.)—Zuzu has a cold again. She sniffles and sucks on a cold
pill as she signs autographs for fans lined up to the door in a coffee
shop.
Karolyn Grimes jokes that she left her coat open, like her character
Zuzu Bailey in “It’s a Wonderful Life.” A more likely culprit is the
holiday crunch of appearances by the former child actress — from a
Victorian festival in Puyallup, Wash., to the Colorado Country Christmas
Show and now to Seneca Falls, which claims to be the inspiration for
director Frank Capra’s mythical Bedford Falls.
Around Christmas, this Finger Lakes village is gussied up like the snowy
movie town with white lights and wreaths strung across the main street.
And the 66-year-old Grimes has come for a weekend celebration.
Everyone who saw the movie remembers Zuzu. She gets to say, “Every time
a bell rings an angel gets his wings.” And the petals from Zuzu’s rose —
stuffed into a pants pocket by Jimmy Stewart’s George Bailey as he
comforts his sickly daughter — become a symbol of life.
Grimes laughs about the petals getting more screentime than she did. But
she has parlayed her six minutes in the beloved 1946 film into a
late-life career. After enduring heartaches that make George Bailey’s
troubles look small, she has become a feel-good ambassador for the film
and one of its last living links.
“I’m that little girl and I stand for something those people love,” she
says. “... For some reason or other, that little girl embodies the
image, or maybe the power to make them happy.”
People tell her as much all afternoon at the Zuzu Cafe, where she sits
with a Sharpie at a table laid out with “It’s a Wonderful Life” stuff:
DVDs, ceramic ornaments, memory books, her own “Zuzu Bailey’s It’s a
Wonderful Life Cookbook” and scattered rose petals.
“Do you know what a thrill this is? “
“This is my favourite movie!”
“Thank you for giving us so much joy!”
For each person, Grimes neatly signs her name with “Zuzu” in quotes and
a little doodle of a bell. She usually adds a message like, “Enjoy life,
it’s wonderful.”
Grimes lives near Seattle, but retains a Midwestern cheeriness. She
holds her smile for hours and laughs as she pops up for snapshots. She
has a gold “Z” pinned to her blue velveteen jacket.
She lost her nest egg in the 2001 economic downturn and relies on these
appearances. As she signs, her husband sits beside her and asks, “Cash
or credit card?” It’s a job, but she clearly loves being Zuzu. After
signing autographs all afternoon, she bumps into a fan at a diner who
talks on her cell phone to her father.
Grimes happily accepts the phone.
“Do you know who you’re talking to?” she says to woman’s father. “You’re
talking to Zuzu!”
Grimes had already worked with Bing Crosby and Fred Mac Murray when she
appeared in “It’s a Wonderful Life.” She grew up in Hollywood and was
nudged into the business by her mother. Capra picked her to play Zuzu.
Grimes retains kid-centric memories of the movie: Capra kindly squatted
to give her directions. “Mr. Stewart” held her in his arms, take after
take, for the end scene and always put her down gently. She loved the
Baileys’ big Christmas tree.
At the time though, even to a 5-year-old, “it was just another job.”
Grimes’ movie career waned as her mother became ill. She lost her at age
14. Her father died in a car accident a year later. A court shipped the
teenage orphan to Osceola, Mo., to live in a “bad home” with an aunt and
uncle.
She liked meeting people outside hyper-competitive Hollywood. She went
to college, married, raised kids, became a medical technologist. Zuzu
was the past. Her box of clips and pics stayed in the basement until
1980, when a reporter came to her door in Stilwell, Kan., and asked her
a question:
“Did you play that little girl in the movie, ‘It’s a Wonderful Life?’?”
Now Grimes stands watching herself on a big-screen TV as a curly-haired
pixie from 60 years ago. The little girl asks her dad to fix her flower,
and he sneaks the wilted petals into his pocket.
“What do you think? Did I see it?” she asks the audience. Grimes is
giving a crowd at the community centre a tour of the movie with bits of
trivia.
Zuzu’s name was inspired by an old brand of ginger snaps, she says. The
snow coating Bedford Falls was made of soap flakes and chemicals; that’s
why it looks sudsy sometimes. Reviewing the flower scene, she suggests
Zuzu saw through her father’s heartfelt ruse and loves him all the more
for it.
“I think what Frank Capra is trying to say is she knows her father isn’t
perfect,” she said.
The film about a suicidal, small-town money lender was a bit of a dud
after its December 1946 release. “Wonderful Life” got a second life in
the mid-’70s when a lapsed copyright allowed television stations to show
the movie for free. The movie gathered iconic status through constant
showings.
After the reporter’s story, Grimes did local Zuzu events in the ‘80s and
branched out by the ‘90s.
This was a difficult stretch personally; she knows angels don’t always
save people. Her 18-year-old son killed himself in 1989 and her second
husband died of cancer in 1994 (her first husband was killed in a
hunting accident). She kept on.
“You have a choice,” she says. “You can drown in your sorrows, be the
grumpy old Mr. Potter and be hurt and be in pain ... but I think you
need to put that behind you because, my gosh, life is a wonderful gift.”
Grimes, one of about seven surviving actors from the movie, says she’s
had troubled souls approach her sobbing at her appearances. She inspires
smiles when she passes out a rose petal.
“I really feel like Zuzu is kind of a mission maybe, I don’t know,”
Grimes says. “I think that there is a higher power at work and that I
had to go through a lot of adverse situations in my life to understand
other people’s pain.” |