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Books > Language & Literature > Biography & autobiography > Film, television, music, theatre
"If they gave out Emmys for best book about an Emmy-award winning
TV series, Executive Producer Barney Rosenzweig would have another
to add to his huge collection. If you love Cagney & Lacey-as I
do-this is a must read. Triple love it " -Rosie O'Donnell,
comedian, actress, host of award-winning "The Rosie O'Donnell
Show," and co-host of "The View"
""Cagney & Lacey ... and Me" is terrific-a must-read for
anyone interested in how the television business really works. From
insecure stars with over-sized egos, to network executives
blundering their way to success in spite of themselves, Barney
Rosenzweig's chronicle of the rise and fall of the hit series
Cagney & Lacey has it all: tempers, tears, greed, deceit,
duplicity and sex-in short, more juicy melodrama than a daytime
soap opera." -Steven Bochco, producer writer of award-winning
series "Hill Street Blues, LA Law" and "NYPD Blue"
"One of Hollywood's greatest producers is also a brilliant
storyteller. Barney recounts tales from the front lines of network
television battlefields-with candor, intelligence and inimitable
wit. If you want to know how television really works, this is the
book for you"-Linda Bloodworth and Harry Thomason, award-winning
creators, writer, producers and director of "Designing Women"
"Barney wrote a book?" -Peter Falk, Emmy-winning star of iconic
television series, "Columbo" and twice nominated Academy Award star
of motion pictures too numerous to mention
"Just as William Goldman's Adventures in the Screen Trade is
considered a bible for screenwriters, Rosenzweig's new memoir
offers a Master Class for television producers."-Kevin Howell,
"Publisher's Weekly"
I am Tommy Lee, born Thomas Lee Bass in Athens, Greece, on October
3, 1962, and raised in a suburb of California by an American father
and a Greek mother. At seventeen, I joined Motley Crue and we
became one of the baddest-ass rock bands in history. We sold over
40 million albums, we wreaked havoc, we scared parents, and we
titillated too many fathers' daughters. I've been married three
times: once for just a few days to a Penthouse Pet, for seven years
to Heather Locklear, and then for five years to Pamela Anderson,
with whom I have two beautiful sons. I've gotten into a lot of
fights and I've been to jail a few times.
But this book isn't your typical journey in a straight line from
day one to day now. I'm more interested in revealing what's most
important about my life, like how I cook my steaks; what I think of
the tabloids, the truth, my ex-wives, my ex-band, my music; and
what an innocent observer might find hanging around my house any
given Sunday. You'll get plenty of facts and I'll tell you a story,
but my real mission here is to paint you a picture of my life. I
want to show you how my memories smell.
I'd like to get into it now, so please take your seats. I advise
you to keep your arms and legs inside the car at all times. If you
have a pacemaker, a heart condition, or if you are pregnant or too
damn short to reach the safety bar, I ask that you turn back
immediately. Those with weak stomachs, strict morals, or chronic
indigestion should put the book down now. For the rest of you,
there's one truth that's real across the board: What you send out
is what you get back. Send out the good, people, and it will come
back to you. There's another thing I've learned over the years, in
court, in fights, and in arguments with people I love: There isn't
one truth, there are many. This book is my truth.
Dana Gillespie, the award-winning first lady of the Blues has
enjoyed an incredible life and career. Now, she has chronicled her
exploits, and as anyone who knows Dana would expect, it is
intelligent, insightful, outrageous, and funny. Detailing high
points, low points and everything in-between, the book covers,
amongst many other things, liaisons with David Bowie, Bob Dylan,
Keith Moon, and the cream of 1960's rock royalty; Recording with
Jimmy Page and Elton John; Performing as Mary Magdalene in the
original London production of Jesus Christ Superstar, and as the
Acid Queen in Tommy; Acting in films directed by Nicholas Roeg, Ken
Russell and Mai Zetterling; Performing Shakespeare with Sir John
Gielgud and Arthur Lowe; Topping the pop charts across Europe;
Performing to an audience of one million people in India; And... oh
yes... Being British junior waterski champion for 4 years!
For readers unfamiliar with her subject, Maryanne Raphael's
biography, Anais Nin, The Voyage Within, is a sensitive,
uncomplicated introduction to the life and work of one of the 20th
century's most quintessentially feminine artists. For Nin devotees,
the biography is a refresher course taking us back through the vast
material of the Diaries and novels that enchanted and inspired our
love. Raphael accepts Nin entirely on her own terms. Thanks to a
warm, personal relationship with Rupert Pole, Nin's surviving
husband and executor of her estate, Raphael opens up some of the
mystery that has heitherto surrounded Nin's relationship with her
husbands--an aspect of Nin's life that was never explicitly
described in the original Diaries. The result is a
multi-dimensional portrait in which Nin's two selves, artist and
woman are fully integrated. Nin the woman consciously chooses to
realize female desire, give form to female imagination, always
loving as she remains completely focused on birthing a new
unabashadly feminine literature. Thank you, Maryanne Dolores
Brandon, Author of IN THE SHADOW OF MADNESS, A Memoir.
"SETTLING SCORES: A Life in the Margins of American Music" details
one life lived in the margins of America's musical consciousness.
From a working-class background in gritty North Philadelphia to the
sanctity of European concert stages, from imagined dangers lurking
along the waterfronts in mysterious Asian cities to the real
dangers lurking in the narrow minds of those who uphold the status
quo in American music, this book reveals the life of one who
embraced change, and, in the process, gained political leverage and
intellectual freedom. It is the story of Joseph Franklin and a
legion of collaborators, and it is a snapshot view of a slice of
America's musical landscape in the final quarter of the 20th
century, including a history of Relache and The Relache Ensemble.
Born in Philadelphia, Joseph Franklin is a graduate of the
Philadelphia Musical Academy and Temple University's Graduate
School of Music. He has composed works for mixed instrumental/vocal
ensembles, film, video, theater and dance. In 1977 he co-founded
The Relache Ensemble, which evolved into Relache, Inc. a presenting
and producing organization in support of the Relache Ensemble. He
served as founding executive and artistic director of Relache until
1998. Independently, and as Director of Relache, he has been a
producer of concerts, festivals, recordings, radio programs,
residency programs, international tours and other related music
events, including the NEW MUSIC AMERICA 1987 Festival, NEW MUSIC AT
ANNENBERG at The University of Pennsylvania and MUSIC IN MOTION, a
nationwide audience development project. He formerly served as
Artistic Director for Helena Presents--The Myrna Loy Center, a
performing arts and film center located in Helena, Montana. He has
published criticism and book reviews in the Philadelphia Inquirer
and Philadelphia City Paper. While living in Louisiana he developed
and taught courses in arts administration and an overview of 20th
century music at the University of New Orleans while serving as an
independent consultant to arts organizations. He currently serves
as executive director for Chamber Music Albuquerque, a presenting
organization dedicated to presenting world-class chamber music
ensembles in concert.
Memories of You is a compilation of author Veta Gardner's
recollections of her marriage with The Coaster's lead singer Carl
Gardner. She tells of his early days struggling to be discovered as
an artist, his successes, and their life together on the road with
The Coasters. They had 17 wonderful years before tragedies began to
complicate their lives. Last year Veta lost Carl to devastating
illnesses and, in Memories of You, she shares that emotional
journey.
Stories like Joey Giambras' have been attempted many times in many
different styles. So what's the difference? This is the truth. The
Gods' honest, ghetto style, Italian-American truth. Dramatic and
intimate details about his childhood, life and death experiences,
and life in the world of boxing controlled by the mafia. Rising
from poverty during the Great Depression, to dining with royalty
and celebrities. The book is finally here to reconstruct each and
every moment of a man who would eventually be denied of the very
thing he trained and fought so hard to attain. This is a story
teeming with challenge, love, abuse, and family. Both kinds... It
has a heart warming love story, a quality about the underdog makes
good and the seedy truths about the controlled history of the
boxing world feared to be told before now. The Golden era of boxing
from the forties, fifties, and sixties... Famous and infamous
Italian Mafia members trying to kill and then saving the young
Giambra, despite him not joining the Mafia or playing hardball with
them to throw fights for an eventual title shot... Mobsters, such
as Vito Genevese, Carlo Gambino, Frankie Carbo, and Jack Ruby were
all key figures in Giambra's career. He had real friendships with
major sports figures such as heavyweight champions Rocky Marciano
and Cassius Clay (Muhammad Ali), who was taught the "Rope-A-Dope"
by the young Giambra. A middleweight champion, Sugar Ray Robinson,
openly stated he would not fight Giambra for the title when he was
champ Lightweight champion Willie Pep and baseball legend Joe
DiMaggio were two of Giambra's biggest fans And being in Hollywood
during the romantic era of the 60s, he acted in movies, such as The
Misfits, and the television series, Mission Impossible and The Joey
Bishop Show, a comedy series, and also had friendships with Ann
Margaret, Marilyn Monroe, Clark Gable, and Joey Bishop. The
original self-published book, The Uncrowned Champion, has sold over
100,000 copies since its release in 1980, despite not being
marketed. A lot of material was left out of the original book due
to sensitivity to subject matter, people, and many situations.(RE:
mafia) This is the new book and is a tell-all. This book is a piece
of American history. Told by the warrior... Joey Giambra
In "Staying Happy, Healthy and Hot," author Dick Summer
introduces us to his brand new "Louie Louie Generation." Louie
Louie Ladies and Lads don't look like the people in the beer
commercials with their fancy abs and perky breasts any more. But
like their theme song, they have an avalanche of "attitude." It's a
happy attitude. And as you know, being happy helps keep you
healthy. And when you're healthy you tend to be hot.
"Staying Happy, Healthy And Hot" is a collection of true stories
about Dick Summer's life as a husband, a father, a grandfather, and
just an every day guy. There are stories about his days as a
national broadcasting personality, his career as a hypnotherapist
and his passion for flying his airplane. But mostly it tells about
his long, hot romance with his wife Barbara, or as he calls her,
"My Lady Wonder Wench."
With humor and candor, this memoir shows how one man refuses to
allow all the candles on his birthday cake to set off any sprinkler
system that could put out the fire in his love affair with life,
and with his wife.
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