Ruby Romaine

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Ruby Romaine
Tracey Takes On... character
First appearance"Tracey Takes On...Charity"
Last appearanceTracey Ullman in the Trailer Tales
Created byTracey Ullman
Portrayed byTracey Ullman
In-universe information
Nickname
  • Rube
  • Little Girl Friday
GenderFemale
OccupationMakeup artist
Family
  • Rosco (Uncle)
  • Shep (Uncle; also Buddy's father)
SpouseTubby Lapels (Divorced)
Significant otherSenator Joe McCarthy (briefly)
Children
  • Buddy Romaine
  • Desirée Romaine
Relatives
  • Karen (Granddaughter)
  • Wayne (Grandson)
  • Whitney (Great-granddaughter)
ReligionRuby doesn't believe in that stuff
NationalityAmerican

Ruby Romaine is a fictional character portrayed by

greenlit a pilot for a potential Ruby Romaine spin-off series resulting in the one-off television special, Tracey Ullman in the Trailer Tales in 2003. Ruby is a self-proclaimed "star maker".[1]

Biography

Ruby's family originally hails from

Hermosa Beach Friars Club which produced her daughter Desirée.[4] However, according to the episode "Tracey Takes On... America", Desirée was actually the product of a secret love affair with then-Senator Joseph McCarthy. "He was the first guy I did it with in a blimp," reveals Ruby.[5]

Aside from Desirée, Ruby also has a son, Buddy.

Vietnam war.[8] He returned shell-shocked.[8] He lives with Ruby to this very day. Despite his harrowing experience, Buddy still misses Vietnam. To fill the void, he adopted a Vietnamese Pot-bellied, Oinky.[9][10] Ruby makes sure that Buddy takes his antipsychotic medication[11] daily, although he seemingly has lapses.[12] Ruby gave birth to both her children six months apart. She explains, "That way I could spend a lot of time with them and make sure that they were growing up right." Desirée steals things from the morgue where she works and Buddy frequently runs around the streets in Ruby's bathroom screaming, "Stop the noise!".[6]

Ruby currently resides in

East Hollywood, Los Angeles, California.[13] Her makeup career began with the film Pirate of the Plains starring actor Errol Flynn. Flynn took a liking to an underage Ruby and slept with her. Ruby, threatening to go public with the affair, was offered a job doing makeup on the film, thus kickstarting her makeup career.[14] She is the oldest working member of the Make-Up Artists and Hair Stylists Guild. "I've been working here fifty years, hell, I'm almost out of rouge!"[15]
Ruby chooses to make her makeup the old-fashioned way, in a blender. She has over 720 film and television shows to her credit.

Some of the famous faces Ruby's made up include Barbara Eden,[16] Bette Davis,[17] Clark Gable,[18] Debbie Reynolds,[10] Debra Paget and Dennis Weaver (in Seven Angry Men, they didn't have the budget for twelve),[18] Humphrey Bogart,[5] Jane Kaczmarek,[10] Jane Seymour,[15] Jane Wyman (who never said more than a few words to her), Katharine Hepburn,[18] Kirk Douglas,[18] Maureen O'Hara,[7] Mickey Rooney,[19] Ronald Reagan (for his Chesterfield cigarette ads),[20] Rose Marie,[10] Spencer Tracy,[18] the cast of Bonanza,[21] and Candice Bergen.[15] She also worked personally for actress Joan Crawford.[15] Ruby explains, "My job was to draw her eyebrows in five minutes before the alarm went off."[15] Ruby was fired from the film The Greatest Story Ever Told (which was the closet thing she ever had to a religious experience) after actress Angela Lansbury accused her of drinking some of the wine meant for the Last Supper scene.[22]

Ruby has also done makeup for the porn industry. Her work can be seen in Plymouth Cock.[18] "I never needed a 'beaver brush' when I worked with Minnelli!"[18]

Ruby has had numerous affairs with Hollywood actors. The list includes Anthony Quinn, Cornel Wilde,[23] Lawrence Welk,[24] and Robert Mitchum.[23] Ruby swears that when she worked on the film Magnificent Obsession with actor Rock Hudson he was "all hands."[25]

She's only been arrested once in her life. "It was on one of those low-budget shows. It was all about people turning into rats." A half-pound of cocaine was found in the hair and makeup trailer and Ruby and another woman were taken in for questioning. She was innocent, but years prior she did let a gaffer rub some on one of her nipples and lick it off. "He got a bigger kick out of it than I did. That's for sure."[26]

Ruby's brand of

Happy Hour at Smog Cutters,[18] which she frequently drives to in her blue Buick. She enjoys champagne music[24] and wine tasting.[4] Ruby is known to call into The Family Spending Channel, a home shopping channel, when she's had "a few too many".[17]

Ruby only gets

mammograms to ensure that she doesn't get dropped from her union's health insurance program.[30] Ruby has had a hysterectomy.[28]

When work slows down, Ruby relies on her Social Security check, Buddy's disability check, her union pension, and food stamps.[17]

Celebrities Ruby claims to have worked with

Celebrities Ruby has claimed to have had affairs with

Filmography

The following is a partial list of real or non-fictionalized films and television show titles

The following is a partial list of fictional films and television show titles (year unknown)

Character inspiration

Tracey Ullman describes Romaine as "pure Hollywood white trash."[40] She was based on many of the Hollywood union makeup artists sent to make her up over the years.[41] Romaine's look was inspired by Romaine Greene, a hairstylist who worked on many of Woody Allen's films.[42] The voice was inspired by Florence Aadland, mother to actress Beverly Aadland, who at 15 had an affair with a 48-year-old Errol Flynn. Ullman played Florence in the 1991 one-woman Broadway show The Big Love based on the 1961 book of the same name. She spent hours listening to audio recordings of the late Florence dictating her memoir to writer Tedd Thomey.[43] There are parallels between Ruby Romaine's early days in Hollywood and that of Beverly Aadland's, specifically Aadland's affair with Erroll Flynn.

See also

References

  1. ^ Ullman, p. 151.
  2. ^ Ullman, p. 109.
  3. ^ Ullman, pp. 12–13.
  4. ^ a b Ullman, p. xxv.
  5. ^ a b c d e "Tracey Takes On... America". Tracey Takes On... February 24, 1999. HBO.
  6. ^ a b Ullman, p. 59.
  7. ^ a b c d e "Tracey Takes On... Hype". Tracey Takes On... March 3, 1999. HBO.
  8. ^ a b c Ullman, p. 203.
  9. ^ "Tracey Takes On... Age". Tracey Takes On. February 15, 1998. HBO.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "Tracey Ullman in the Trailer Tales". Tracey Ullman in the Trailer Tales. August 3, 2003. HBO.
  11. ^ "Tracey Takes On... Mothers". Tracey Takes On... February 8, 1997. HBO.
  12. ^ a b "Tracey Takes On... Marriage". Tracey Takes On... January 4, 1998. HBO.
  13. ^ a b c "Tracey Takes On... The End of the World". Tracey Takes On... March 17, 1999. HBO.
  14. ^ a b c "Tracey Takes On... Childhood". Tracey Takes On. March 5, 1997. HBO.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Tracey Takes On... Hollywood". Tracey Takes On... January 11, 1998. HBO.
  16. ^ a b Ullman, p. 187.
  17. ^ a b c d "Tracey Takes On... Money". Tracey Takes On... April 9, 1997. HBO.
  18. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t "Tracey Takes On... Sex". Tracey Takes On. January 25, 1997. HBO.
  19. ^ a b c d e f g "Tracey Takes On... Road Rage". Tracey Takes On... February 17, 1999. HBO.
  20. ^ a b c d "Tracey Takes On... Smoking". Tracey Takes On. January 18, 1998. HBO.
  21. ^ "Tracey Takes On... Dating". Tracey Takes On... January 13, 1999. HBO.
  22. ^ a b c "Tracey Takes On... Religion". Tracey Takes On... February 15, 1998. HBO.
  23. ^ a b c d e "Tracey Takes On... Man's Best Friend". Tracey Takes On... February 22, 1998. HBO.
  24. ^ a b c d "Tracey Takes On... Fantasy". Tracey Takes On... February 2, 1997. HBO.
  25. ^ a b c "Tracey Takes On... Obsession". Tracey Takes On... March 10, 1999. HBO.
  26. ^ "Tracey Takes On... Crime". Tracey Takes On... March 27, 1997. HBO.
  27. ^ Ullman, pp. 220–221.
  28. ^ a b "Tracey Takes On... Movies". Tracey Takes On. April 2, 1997. HBO.
  29. ^ "Tracey Takes On... Drugs". Tracey Takes On... January 13, 1999. HBO.
  30. ^ "Tracey Takes On... Health". Tracey Takes On. March 13, 1996. HBO.
  31. ^ a b "Tracey Takes On... Vegas". Tracey Takes On. February 17, 1997. HBO.
  32. ^ a b c "Tracey Takes On... Death". Tracey Takes On. March 13, 1996. HBO.
  33. ^ a b "Tracey Takes On... Nostalgia". Tracey Takes On. February 7, 1996. HBO.
  34. ^ a b c "Tracey Takes On... Agents". Tracey Takes On. February 1, 1998. HBO.
  35. ^ "Tracey Takes On... Royalty". Tracey Takes On. February 14, 1996. HBO.
  36. ^ a b Ullman, p. 176.
  37. ^ a b "Tracey Takes On... Sports". Tracey Takes On... March 8, 1998. HBO.
  38. ^ "Tracey Takes On... Health". Tracey Takes On... March 20, 1996. HBO.
  39. ^ "Tracey Takes On... 1976". Tracey Takes On... March 5, 1997. HBO.
  40. ^ Avasthi, Sarubhui (17 January 1997). "Tracey Ullman Defies Characterization". The News Journal. Retrieved 16 March 2018.
  41. ^ "Tracey Takes On... The Characters". Tracey Ullman. 28 October 2016. Archived from the original on 2021-12-19. Retrieved 1 January 2018 – via YouTube.
  42. ^ "Tracey Ullman is back! Tracy Ullman with Patricia Marx". 92nd Street Y. 21 November 2016. Archived from the original on 2021-12-19. Retrieved 1 January 2018 – via YouTube.
  43. ^ De Vries, Hilary (3 March 1991). "Interview : Voice No. 1,001 : Her TV show is history, but Tracey Ullman has found another offbeat American misfit to play, this time on Broadway". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 1 January 2018.

Sources