1932 Fifty Years Ago (April/May 1982 | Volume: 33, Issue: 3)

1932 Fifty Years Ago

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April/May 1982 | Volume 33, Issue 3

The gates of the Atlanta penitentiary swung shut on Al Capone on May 4, putting an end to a career that had netted the king of gangsters some $60,000,000 a year. Convict No. 40,866 seemed philosophical during his train trip from Chicago: “I’ll make out wherever I am,” he said, though he thought the government hadn’t been “playing fair” when it hung an income tax evasion rap on him. As the train rolled south, Capone began mopping his brow and talking about the heat. “I can stand that, though,” he said. “But I’ll miss my beer.”

At Hopkinsville, Kentucky, a carver named Will E. Campbell made the prisoner a present of one of his celebrated hickory pipes. Though himself a cigar smoker, Capone was pleased: “That’s the first time anybody ever gave me anything.”

Two months later, Capone received a tribute of sorts when, despite the carping of the Hays office, Howard Hughes opened his movie Scarface . According to Ben Hecht, who wrote the script, Capone’s boys were just as dubious about it as was Will Hays. In his autobiography, A Child of the Century , Hecht recalled a midnight visit from two men, “their faces set in scowls and guns bulging their coats,” who were holding a copy of the script:

“You the guy who wrote this?” I said I was. …

“Is this stuff about Al Capone?”

“God, no,” I said. “I don’t even know Al.”

“Never met him, huh?”

I pointed out I had left Chicago just as Al was coming into prominence.

“I knew Jim Colosimo pretty well,” I said.

“That so?”

“I also knew Mossy Enright and Pete Gentleman.”

“That so? Did you know Deanie?”

“Deanie O’Bannion? Sure. I used to ride around with him in his flivver. …”

A pause.

“O.K., then. We’ll tell Al this stuff you wrote is about them other guys.”

They started out and halted in the doorway, worried again.

“If this stuff ain’t about Al Capone, why are you callin’ it Scarface ? Everybody’ll think it’s him.”

“That’s the reason,” I said. “Al is one of the most famous and fascinating men of our time. If we call the movie Scarface , everybody will want to see it, figuring it’s about Al. That’s part of the racket we call showmanship.”

My visitors pondered this, and one of them finally said, “I’ll tell Al.” A pause. “Who’s this fella Howard Hughes?”

“He’s got nothing to do with anything,” I said, speaking truthfully at last. “He’s the sucker with the money.”


On May 21 , headlines exultantly proclaimed that “the aviatrix” Amelia Earhart Putnam had successfully, and in record time, completed the first solo flight across the Atlantic