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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Monday, August 11, 2008

Actor Borgnine finally pens his story

By Susan King
Los Angeles Times

HOLLYWOOD — Ernest Borgnine isn't happy that the young whippersnappers running Hollywood these days have turned their backs on veteran actors and filmmakers.

"They forgot them," he says. "It's a shame, isn't it? They just sit in a chair and just melt away. I would love to see these people (in films). I don't know how Karl Malden is right now, but I bet you money he could put out a heck of a good picture. He's 95 or something like that. Everything is youth oriented and shoot 'em-up and more sex. This is what sells today. I say: These older people know what it's all about."

At 91, Borgnine certainly isn't wasting away in a chair — or dwelling on the past. He's in great shape, robust, hearty — still beefy. In fact, he probably could still play Fatso Judson, the brutal sergeant in the 1953 Oscar-winning best film "From Here to Eternity."

And, yes, he's keeping busy. His autobiography, simply called "Ernie," was just published. He earned a Golden Globe nomination for the 2007 telemovie "A Grandpa for Christmas," making him the oldest performer to receive such a nomination. He recently finished an indie film, "Another Harvest Moon."

How does he keep so young?

"See the books around," says Borgnine, pointing to various stacks in the comfortable den of the Beverly Hills house he's owned for 43 years. The past 35 he's shared it with his fifth wife, Tova, who has a successful cosmetics line on the shopping channel QVC.

"I do an awful lot of reading," he continues. "It keeps me busy. I try to keep my mind going always. That is the thing that counts. You can have your body not feeling so good, but if your mind is working you got it made. That is the way I figured it out."

It took him a long time to write his autobiography, he admits, because "I was lazy. I always said to myself, 'Who the hell wants to know about me?' "

His longtime publicist, Harry Flynn, convinced Borgnine to talk about his life and colorful career. "I said, 'Harry. Get off my back.' Finally, I said OK."

Flynn bought Borgnine a tape recorder to chronicle his humble beginnings as the son of poor Italian immigrants through to his acting career: the tough-guy roles in such films as "From Here to Eternity," his turn as a lovelorn lonely butcher in "Marty," his role in the TV sitcom "McHale's Navy" and his latest efforts, including providing the voice of Mermaid Man on "SpongeBob SquarePants."

"I just told the truth and nothing phony about it," Borgnine says about his autobiography. "If people like it, great; if people don't, too bad. I am sorry to say the last of my ex-wives expired last week. Tova is very healthy. There were times we thought (the marriage) can't go, but we made it, by golly. We are more in love today than we have ever been."

His fifth marriage is a far cry from his third marriage in 1964 to singer Ethel Merman. That one lasted just 32 days. When the late Merman published her autobiography years ago, the chapter devoted to Borgnine was a blank page. Borgnine, though, goes into more details about their ill-fated union.

"Before we were married, everything was wonderful. I would go to New York to see her and she'd come out here to see me. It was kind of one of those wonderful kind of things. So, finally, one day I said, 'Why don't we get married so we don't have to go back and forth all the time?' She thought about it and said, 'That's a good idea.' But it was like day and night."

Merman, he says, was incensed and extremely jealous on their honeymoon in Hawai'i and Tokyo when he received much more attention from fans than she did.

"It was a shame, really," he says, "because she could sing. But I'm telling you she could drive a person crazy."

Then Borgnine lets out a hearty, loud laugh — one of those infectious laughs that seems to come from the tips of his toes and roars out of his widely smiling mouth. A laugh that says it's good to be 91.