In this book the leading lady and woman ahead of her time speaks for herself in more than a dozen interviews conducted by journalist and author Boze Hadleigh. This description may be from another edition of this product.
Some resident reviewers say that this is Bose's book made up about Bette. There is enough material here that reads like the Bette we all read about, to make a good read with confidence she pitched her remarks where she wanted them to go. The only dubious report is Bose getting her in interview to almost admit to her affair with Howard Hughes whereas our Bette was quoted as saying she was "the only star in Hollywood who didn't have an affair with H.Hughes". Well, it's iffy. But who cares now? Her photos included here are lovely - it breaks your heart. Anyone who has worked in the industry knows they all dished the dirt - it was their world, present and future and they reveled in it. They were all larger than life. This book does in effect find a balance between Bette the Difficult and Bette, the professional actor born with great drive and talent who just wanted to do the best job everytime.
Excellent insight and fresh material
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 24 years ago
This book is really worth buying and reading over and over if you are a Bette Davis fan. I have read a great deal of Bette Davis-related books over the years, and this book contain about 80% fresh materials, which is nothing short of a miracle more than 10 years after her death. The style of the book is simply the text of several extended interviews the author had with Miss Davis, as well as with others who had worked with her. The questions are interesting (as are the answers), and the style makes the information seem much more interesting and believable. A must for any fan, and, once again, I was particularly impressed with many fresh topics. Excellent!
The wit of the acid tongue
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 28 years ago
She called Merle Oberon a social climber, Spencer Tracy a mean drunk and said that Fred MacMurray was "personality minus." Queen of the Silver Screen Bette Davis definitely had a way with words, and readers have an opportunity to delight in her ascerbic, no nonsense go-for-the-jugular outlook. The work is a compilation of more than a dozen interviews conducted with the author from the mid-1970s until her death in which she candidly expounds on a broad spcetrum of people and personal feelings -- many which probably displeased the person discussed. Topics range from her philosophy on acting and the public's misconceptions of Hollywood personalities to steamier topics such as casting couches, cheating spouses and rival co-stars. While the question-and-answer format used by the author helps reproduce the interview setting, the reader may find the flow a bit choppy at times. This didn't, however, depreciate the value of many of the witty and catty remarks she made to the author, with one stellar observation being made about "Dynasty" stars Joan Collins and Linda Evans: "My dear, it takes more than draping a body in something expensive to create real glamour. Hah! What's elegant about all the cleavage? My God, they might as well be at the beach. I also had very good breasts, but I was never costumed to resemble a street walker -- unless I was playing a street walker." You can almost hear the throaty laugh and smell the smoke curling from the cigarette.
ThriftBooks sells millions of used books at the lowest everyday prices. We personally assess every book's quality and offer rare, out-of-print treasures. We deliver the joy of reading in recyclable packaging with free standard shipping on US orders over $15. ThriftBooks.com. Read more. Spend less.