"Any girl can be glamorous," Hedy Lamarr once said.
"All she has to do is stand still and look stupid."
The film star belied her own apothegm by hiding a
brilliant, inventive mind beneath her photogenic exterior.
In 1942, at the height of her Hollywood career, she
patented a frequency-switching system for torpedo
guidance that was two decades ahead of its time. |
Hedy Lamarr was born in Vienna in
1914 as Hedwig Eva Maria Kiesler. She went to Max Reinhardt's
famous acting school in Berlin during her late teens, and
in 1933 she showed the world her acting skills and most of
herself in the film Extase (Ecstacy), which
quickly became notorious for its extensive nude scenes. The
movie played in America after severe cutting, and in 1937
its leading lady went to Hollywood. Louis B. Mayer, of MGM,
hired her and gave her the name Lamarr. Some people thought
Hedy to be the most beautiful woman in Hollywood, but as an
actress she was overshadowed by heroines like Ingrid Bergman
and Katharine Hepburn. In 1966, she published her autobiography,
Ecstacy and Me. Hedy Lamarr
married Fritz Mandal, the first of six husbands, in 1933.
During their marriage, which broke up in 1937, Madame Mandl
was an institution in Viennese society, entertaining—and
dazzling—foreign leaders, including Hitler and Mussolini.
Her husband specialized in shells and grenades, but from
the mid-thirties on he also manufactured military aircraft.
He was interested in control systems and conducted research
in the field. His wife clearly learned things from him,
because she and her co-inventor, George Antheil, later went
on to invent the torpedo guidance system that was two decades
before its time.
Hedy Lamarr's co-inventor, George Antheil,
was born in Trenton, New Jersey, in 1900. His parents were
from East Prussia. After studying music at what is now the
Curtis Institute, in Philadelphia, he went to Europe to
pursue a career as a concert pianist, heading first to Berlin
and then settling in Paris in 1923. He became one of the
top avante-garde composers of the time, writing and playing
machinelike, "mechanistic," rhythmically propulsive pieces
with names like Airplane Sonata, Sonata Sauvage, Jazz
Sonata, and Death of Machines. His Ballet
Méanique was scored for sixteen player pianos, xylophones
and percussion and was first performed in Paris in June
1926, in a version that had only one player piano but also
had electric bells, airplane propellers and a siren. It
caused an uproar.
Antheil knew practically everybody in
Paris's literary, artistic and musical circles, but in 1933
he returned permanently to the United States. He became
a film composer in Hollywood and a writer for Esquire
magazine, producing a syndicated advice-to-the-lovelorn
column and articles about romance and endocrinology. He
even published a book titled Every Man His Own Detective:
A Study of Glandular Endocrinology. In 1939 he set an
article to Esquire about the future of Europe that
proved impressively accurate: It predicted that the war
would start with Germany invading Poland, that Germany would
later attack Russia, and then the United States would be
drawn into the conflict.
He met Hedy Lamar in the summer of 1940,
when they were neighbors in Hollywood and she approached
him witha question about glands: She wanted to know how
she could enlarge her breasts. In time the conversation
came around to weapons, and Lamarr told Antheil that she
was contemplating quitting MGM and moving to Washington,
D.C., to offer her services to the newly established National
Inventors Council.
They began talking about radio control
for torpedoes. The idea itself was not new, but her concept
of "frequency hopping" was. Lamarr brought up the idea of
radio control. Antheil's contribution was to suggest the
device by which synchronization could be achieved. He proposed
that rapid changes in radio frequencies could be coordinated
the way he had coordinated the sixteen synchronized player
pianos in his Ballet Méanique. The analogy was complete
in his mind: By the time the two applied for a patent on
a "Secret Communication System," on June 10, 1941, the invention
used slotted paper rolls similar to player-piano rolls to
synchronize the frequency changes in transmitter and receiver,
and it even called for exactly eighty-eight frequencies,
the number of keys on a piano.
Lamarr and Antheil worked on the idea
for several months and then, in December 1940, sent a description
of it to the National Inventors Council, which had been
launched with much fanfare earlier in the year as a gatherer
of novel ideas and inventions from the general public. Its
chairman was Charles F. Kettering, the research director
of General Motors. Over its lifetime, which lasted until
1974, the council collected more than 625,000 suggestions,
few of which ever reached the patent stage. But according
to Antheil, Kettering himself suggested that he and Lamarr
develop their idea to the point of being patentable. With
the help of an electrical engineering professor from the
California Institute of Technology they ironed out its bugs,
and the patent was granted on August 11, 1942. It specified
that a high-altitude observiation plane could steer the
torpedo from above.
Putting the idea into practice was not
so simple. Despite the enthusiasm that Antheil said Kettering
expressed, others were skeptical. One examiner at the Inventors
Council doubted the clockwork mechanism that moved the perforated
tape could be accurate enough. Antheil lobbied for support
for further research from among others, William C. Bullit,
Special Assistant to the Secretary of the Navy. He argued
that the Germans were superior to the Americans in naval
technology and that something had to be done about it. He
seemed driven in part by an urge to prove his patriotism
after all his years in Europe. Hedy Lamarr meanwhile demonstrated
her loyalty by raising seven million dollars in a single
evening selling war bonds.
Despite Antheil's lobbying, the Navy
turned its back on the invention, concluding that the mechanism
would have been too bulky to fit into a torpedo. Antheil
disagreed; he insisted that it could be made small enough
to squeeze into a watch. And he thought he knew why the
Navy was so negative: "In our patent Hedy and I attempted
to better elucidate our mechanism by explaining that certain
parts of it worked like the fundamental mechanism of a player
piano. Here, undoubted, we made our mistake. The reverend
and brass-headed gentlemen in Washington who examined our
invention read no further than the words 'player piano.
'My god,' I can see them saying, 'we shall put a player
piano in a torpedo.'"
In other words, it was a culture clash:
the thick-headed brass hats were incapable of considering
the idea that musical technology could play any part in
a complicated piece of weaponry. But Antheil's explanation
is too simple; the invention had other problems. Describing
them requires looking at other developments in torpedo control
at the time, especially in Germany.
In the United States Hedy Lamarr and
George Antheil, shunned by the Navy, no longer pursued their
invention. But in 1957, the concept was taken up by engineers
at the Sylvania Electronic Systems Division, in Buffalo,
New York. Their arrangement, using, of course, electronics
rather than piano rolls, ultimately became a basic tool
for secure military communications. It was installed on
ships sent to blockade Cuba in 1962, about three years after
the Lamarr-Antheil patent had expired. Subsequent patents
in frequency changing, which are generally unrelated to
torpedo control, have referred to the Lamarr-Antheil patent
as the basis of the field, and the concept lies behind the
principal anti-jamming device used today, for example, in
the U.S. government's Milstar defense communication satellite
system.
Information
Source: American Heritage of Invention & Technology,
Spring 1997, Volume 12/Number 4 |