Nikita Khrushchev Goes to Hollywood
Lunch with the Soviet leader was Tinseltown's hottest ticket, with famous celebrities including Marilyn Monroe and Dean Martin
- By Peter Carlson
- Smithsonian magazine, July 2009, Subscribe
(Page 5 of 7)
Score one for Skouras! Of course, Khrushchev was not willing to concede anything.
"Mr. Tikhonov, please rise," the premier ordered.
At a table in the audience, Nikolai Tikhonov stood up.
"Who is he?" Khrushchev asked. "He is a worker. He became a metallurgical engineer....He is in charge of huge chemical factories. A third of the ore mined in the Soviet Union comes from his region. Well, Comrade Greek, is that not enough for you?"
"No," Skouras shot back. "That's a monopoly."
"It is a people's monopoly," Khrushchev replied. "He does not possess anything but the pants he wears. It all belongs to the people!"
Earlier, Skouras had reminded the audience that American aid helped fight a famine in the Soviet Union in 1922. Now, Khrushchev reminded Skouras that before the Americans sent aid, they sent an army to crush the Bolshevik revolution. "And not only the Americans," he added. "All the capitalist countries of Europe and of America marched upon our country to strangle the new revolution. Never have any of our soldiers been on American soil, but your soldiers were on Russian soil. These are the facts."
Still, Khrushchev said, he bore no ill will. "Even under those circumstances," he said, "we are still grateful for the help you rendered."
Khrushchev then recounted his experiences fighting in the Red Army during the Russian civil war. "I was in the Kuban region when we routed the White Guard and threw them into the Black Sea," he said. "I lived in the house of a very interesting bourgeois intellectual family."
Here he was, Khrushchev went on, an uneducated miner with coal dust still on his hands, and he and other Bolshevik soldiers, many of them illiterate, were sharing the house with professors and musicians. "I remember the landlady asking me: ‘Tell me, what do you know about ballet? You're a simple miner, aren't you?' To tell the truth, I didn't know anything about ballet. Not only had I never seen a ballet, I had never seen a ballerina."
The audience laughed.
"I did not know what sort of dish it was or what you ate it with."
That brought more laughter.
"And I said, ‘Wait, it will all come. We will have everything—and ballet, too.'"
Even the tireless Red-bashers of the Hearst press conceded that "it was almost a tender moment." But of course Khrushchev could not stop there. "Now I have a question for you," he said. "Which country has the best ballet? Yours? You do not even have a permanent opera and ballet theater. Your theaters thrive on what is given to them by rich people. In our country, it is the state that gives the money. And the best ballet is in the Soviet Union. It is our pride."
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Comments (7)
I heard on the TV early that Sunday morning that the Premier's train would be on its way North through Chatsworth in the San Fernando Valley. I ran for the railroad tracks and saw a helicopter fly over, then a single diesel engine, and then the train, with USSR flags hanging from the observation deck at the end of the train. Even as a nine year old, I was impressed.
Posted by Rev. Charles Bunnell on September 19,2012 | 11:20 PM
In 1959 I was a Shoe Salesman at Hollywood, CA. At the time of the motorcade from Hollywood north to the ACLA Campus, they passed right in front of our Leeds Shoe Store located at the foot of the campus on Westwood Blvd. Hardly anyone even went outside the local stores to witness the motorcade. Please note! In an interview later in the day Khrushchev said he was disturbed by the amount of automobiles occupied by only a single person. This wasteful, must conserve he stated through an interpretor
Fifty years ago. An experience for sure! Thanks for the article!
Bob Bedford
Posted by Bob Bedfford on September 26,2009 | 11:38 PM
His comment "we will bury you" was a mis translation of an old Russian saying, "we will still be around after you are gone." meaning "we will outlast you." It was not a threat, but was purposely misquoted to be one.
Posted by Dave on July 12,2009 | 07:41 PM
When I was six years old, growing up in Pittsburgh, we went to see Khruschev's drive along the Pittsburgh Parkway from the airport. Climbed a hill for what seemed for hours. Having leaned back-against 1st-floor hallways during bomb drills with heads down and necks covered - was scared to death, I had NO idea what this occasion was.
There's an anecdote about Nikita stripping a Rolex watch from his wrist and giving it to a steelworker at the Homestead Mill. Believe it to be true, although he was also good at banging shoes on the table as he declared, "We will bury you."
David Helmick
Posted by David Helmick on July 12,2009 | 05:51 PM
Important lesson in the limitations of "personal diplomacy" and the realities of diplomacy.
Khruschev got a personal look at American life, saw the productivity and happiness of our country.
Just a few years later, he met the Kennedy in Vienna, judged him naive, and decided to "test" the US with the Cuban missile provocation.
No lasting insights into America, no "goodwill" built by his earlier visit. Just the hard truths of power and international rivalry.
Our State department should learn that lesson well.
Posted by Robert Arvanitis on July 8,2009 | 02:46 PM
I read this article while exercising at a therapy center.
Subject: Nikita In Hollywood
This is a superb article. it clarified some things about this visit that I had been puzzled about, such as no visit to Disenyworld.
You should have mentioned the Russian speaking immigrants, while they came from Russsia they were not ethnic Russsians. They spent their time tactlesly needling Krushev about the Soviet Union . Whereupon he stated that the plane that brought him here could easily bring him back to the Soviet Union. He also said that these people were not Real Russians
Thanks again for a most interesting article.
Warm regards,
Lionel Issen
Posted by Lionel Issen on July 1,2009 | 02:22 PM
Several years ago I was stationed at Vandenberg Air Force Base in Southern California. The oldheads there told a slightly different story of Kruschev's aborted trip to Disneyland. According to them, when Walt Disney was approached about the visit he refused it. When asked why, the answer was words to the effect, "It's my place goddammit, and I don't want to let that red S.O.B in it!"
Since Kruschev couldn't go down the coast to the Magic Kingdom, he went up it instead. A passenger rail line still runs through the air base, which at the time was a nuclear missile test facility. As the party rolled along the dunes, there standing at attention for the man who commanded the world's other superpower and had intoned "We will bury you" was a trio of Atlas ICBMs, erect in their gantries, fuming liquid oxygen, at the ready.
Posted by D.W. on June 27,2009 | 10:59 AM