The Research Process: Harron and Turner did extensive research into Pages life, interviewing friends and even Pages ex-husband to help them get the story right.
Asked if anything she learned during the research process surprised her, Harron responded, Yes. Just before we started filming Gretchen and I and a couple of us went to see a man named Edward Morehouse, a drama teacher in New York who was in Bettie Pages acting class. We had already written the scenes about Bettie Page acting where we had her being shy and being intimidated by the serious New York acting students. But he told us something really amazing. When they would do the improvisational classes, she would very often just start to take her clothes off. We said thats clearly very significant and so we put that in.
I think she would just go to that place where she was so used to doing it and it was like a comfortable thing for her to do. She probably thought, I dont know what to do know. Ill just do what I always do.
Securing the Financing for The Notorious Bettie Page: The decision to shoot the film in black and white was one of the major hurdles Harron had to overcome with potential financial backers. That made it terribly difficult to get funding for, because we actually shot before Good Night, and Good Luck which did very well. But people said, You will never get any foreign sales. Youll never get this movie financed. People wont do a movie in black and white anymore because people wont go see it.
It took many years to get it financed and I think people did see that there was a cult of Bettie Page and that theres a nostalgia for the style, and the sexiness of the era. One thing about an era of repression is that they are very sexy because so much is forbidden.
The Strange Mix of Fetish Poses and Religion: While researching Pages life, Harron would ask those who knew her how she balanced her deep religious beliefs with what she did for a living. I met with Paula Klaw several times. We interviewed Paula several times. We interviewed her first husband, Billy Neal. We show a little bit of that marriage. Billy had his own take on it. He said, Well, she wanted to be an actress and she just saw that as a way to get on. As a way to get ahead, as something shed do to make a career. He had more insight to her religiousness, but people who knew her in New York thought of her more in some ways as this innocent country girl. I dont think that they really ever talked to her about God. A number of people said to me that she was like a country girl in New York, that she never lost that kind of slightly naïve quality to her.
Harron continued. Its very interesting. In a way weve always been able to, in America, combine sex and religion. I mean, look at Jessica Simpson and her fathers a preacher a Baptist preacher. He doesnt seem to see anything contradictory in her doing whats basically pin-ups, posing with very, very clothes and making a career out of that. So, in a way, thats always coincided.
Pin-ups were kind of racy, but it was socially acceptable to be like a Betty Grable or a Marilyn Monroe. The fetish stuff was what was not acceptable and I think that was hidden. I think that she thought that nobody would see those photographs. I assume that was what she felt because I know from having met Paula Klaw and also talking to Paula Klaws son, Ira, that there was that idea of who was it hurting? If its making them happy, then whats the harm of it? I think that the philosophy of the Klaw studios was whats the harm and I think that Bettie would have probably picked up on that.
Capturing the Playful Mood of Bettie Pages Photo and Film Shoots: Somebody said how they always had a lot of food for the models. Irving loved food; thered be like plates of sandwiches. And then if you look at the photographs themselves, you see that the models are kind of cracking up sometimes. Theyre actually starting to laugh on camera. I knew that it was all girls who did the photographs, and it was all kind of the same people week after week. Bettie herself said once, We used to laugh our heads off at these crazy outfits we had to put on. That was something she said in an interview, so you kind of got the impression of this kind of slightly pajama party atmosphere.
Does Harron believe Page knew what happened when men got their hands on the photos? Harron said, I think if she wanted to spend 10 seconds thinking about it, she would have known in a way. But I think it was one of those things like, Thats no concern of mine. This is a job and whatever they want to do with the photographs, thats up to them. I think that was the attitude, generally, of everybody that was doing them. Lets not think about that.

