Dark victory: Ronald Reagan, MCA and the Mob.

AuthorDonaldson, Sam

Dark Victory: Ronald Reagan, MCA and Mob.

Dan Moldea* has set himself the formidable task of demonstrating that that nice man in the White House, so straight and honest of image, is actually a creature of and collaborator with the Mob. Ronald Reagan has been called many things but "godfather' is something new.

* Dark Victory: Ronald Reagan, MCA and the Mob. Dan Moldea. Viking, $18.95.

Moldea traces the rise of MCA--originally named the Music Corporation of America--from its founding as a dance band booking agency in 1924 by the late Jules Stein, to its emergence as the most powerful force in Hollywood history, a company that came to be called the "octopus' because it had its tentacles into every facet of film and later television production. And how was MCA able to grow so great?

First, because it played "footsie' with the mafia, according to Moldea. Every Mob figure of the thirties and forties seems to be mentioned in this book. It is not always clear what these sinister characters had to do with MCA, and Moldea repeatedly swings the yellow brush of "guilt by association.' If it weren't the Mob we would all cry foul, there is so much innuendo and so little proof offered. But the Mob did invade Hollywood, and the reader will probably conclude that where there was so much smoke there must certainly have been fire. It's different when it comes to the second reason Moldea gives for the success of MCA: Ronald Reagan and his alleged Mob ties. When it comes to presidents we'd like a little more proof.

In 1940, MCA president Lew Wasserman engineered the first million dollar studio contract in the agency's history for his actor-client Ronald Reagan. Moldea's thesis is that Reagan subsequently used his position as president of the Screen Actor's Guild (SAG) to benefit MCA in return for that and for future payoffs. In particular, Reagan pushed through a permanent waiver for MCA from SAG rules in 1952 so that it could produce shows, as well as represent the talent who worked on them. That gave MCA a tremendously profitable advantage over its competitors. In return, Moldea suggests MCA saved Reagan's career by giving him his premier television host roles on the "G.E. Theater' and "Death Valley Days,' and even bailed him out financially by arranging purchase of his ranch at a price far above market value. Moldea records how MCA and Reagan continued scratching each other's back right into the White House (yes...

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