Where's yours. (what happens to Oscars) (Books and Arts)

Economist (US), The, March, 1990

JOAN CRAWFORD had a spotlight shining on hers. George C. Scott didn't even bother to pick his up. Walter Matthau insisted that the Oscar he received as best supporting actor in "The Fortune Cookie" made the best doorstop he ever had. Fred Astaire, for a while, professed to be uncertain where his was; eventually, he found it in his bar. Irving Berlin also insisted he couldn't remember where he kept the Oscar he got for "White Christmas"-unlike the sales figures, which he could quote at the drop of a hat.

Gregory Peck's award for "To Kill a Mockingbird" rests in his den, and Jane Fonda keeps hers on view in her living room: a contrast from the anti-vietnam days, when she made sure it stayed hidden among all the bric-a-brac in her tumbledown house in Santa...

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