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Books > Biography > Film, television, music, theatre
Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn (c.1606-1669) was the most
talked-about painter of the 17th-century - and quite possibly of
the following centuries too. His prodigious talent, extraordinary
emotional truth, and reckless disregard of artistic convention
astonished, delighted and often dismayed his contemporaries; and
the full gamut of these reactions is revealed in the three early
biographies published here for the first time in their entirety in
English. Sandrart, a German painter and writer on painting,
actually knew Rembrandt in Amsterdam; Baldinucci, also an artist
contemporary with Rembrandt, was one of the greatest early
connoisseurs of prints; and Arnold Houbraken, who studied under
some of Rembrandt's pupils, wrote the earliest major biographical
account of the artists of Holland. These extraordinary documents
give a vivid picture of Rembrandt's shattering impact on the art
world of his time - not only as a painter, but as a supremely
successful manipulator of the market, a dangerous example to the
young, and an unavoidable challenge to any sense of decorum and
rule-giving. Rooted firmly in the 17-century realities of
Rembrandt's life, they bring into sharper focus the qualities of
originality and psychological acuity that remain Rembrandt's
trademark to this day. The introduction by Charles Ford situates
these biographies in the context of 17th-century appreciation of
art, and the trajectory of Rembrandt's career. The translations
have been specially prepared for this edition by Charles Ford,
aided by Ulrike Kern and Francesca Migliorini, and in part
following the work of Tancred Borenius.
'Once upon a time, the London theatre was a charming mirror held up
to cosiness. Then came Joan Littlewood, smashing the glass,
blasting the walls, letting the wind of life blow in a rough, but
ready, world. Today, we remember this irresistible force with love
and gratitude.' (Peter Brook) Along with Peter Brook, Joan
Littlewood, affectionately termed 'The Mother of Modern Theatre',
has come to be known as the most galvanising director of
mid-twentieth-century Britain, as well as a founder of so many of
the practices of contemporary theatre. The best-known work of
Littlewood's company, Theatre Workshop, included the development
and premieres of Shelagh Delaney's A Taste of Honey, Brendan
Behan's The Hostage and The Quare Fellow, and the seminal Oh What A
Lovely War. This autobiography, originally published in 1994,
offers an unparalleled first-hand account of Littlewood's
extraordinary life and career, from illegitimate child in
south-east London to one of the most influential directors and
practitioners of our times. It is published along with an
introduction by Philip Hedley CBE, previously Artistic Director of
Theatre Royal Stratford East and Assistant Director to Joan
Littlewood.
This bio-bibliography provides an overview of the life and career
of the noted actress Agnes Moorehead. A brief biography discusses
her midwestern upbringing as well as her academic background and
early struggles in establishing her career. The biography also
discusses Moorehead's later career successes in addition to her
professional and personal relationships. The largest portion of the
book is devoted to detailed listings of her work in film,
television, radio and theatre. In many cases, these listings
include synopses, cast listings and credits, review excerpts, and
other information. Her most celebrated appearances are described
and discussed at length. These appearances include the films,
Citizen Kane and Magnificent Ambersons; television programs, "The
Twilight Zone," "The Wild, Wild West," and "Bewitched;" radio shows
"The March of Time," "The Shadow," and "Sorry, Wrong Number;" and
her one-woman stage production as well as her work in Don Juan in
Hell. This work is a valuable addition to the performing arts
series.
In a music business amply buffered against surprise, Danny Gatton
swam stubbornly, from country, to gospel, rockabilly, soul, and
standards. "Redneck Jazz" became Gatton's calling card for playing
whatever and whenever he wanted. Hailed as the best unknown guitar
player by both Rolling Stone and Guitar player magazines, he was a
players' player who never received the popular acclaim he deserved.
The struggle to reach a wider audience while staying true to his
own muse proved to much for him to bear, and in 1994 he took his
own life. Gatton's legend has only grown since his untimely death,
along with appreciation for his blinding speed, effortless
genre-hopping, flawless technique, and never-ending appetitie for
tinkering and problem-solving. Unfinished Business places Gatton's
musical contributions into context, as well as his influence on
those peers who admired him most, including Albert Lee, Vince Gill,
Arlen Roth, and Lou Reed.
This unauthorized biography of entertainment legend Diana Ross
strives to give a balanced account of her life and career while
giving her the historical due that seems to have escaped her
previously. Captured in vivid detail are her groundbreaking
performances leading the Supremes, the renowned concert in Central
Park amidst a raging thunderstorm, and the peaks and valleys of the
more than 40 years of her ongoing stage, studio, and screen career.
The book steers clear of dry biography, in that it is interspersed
with entertaining essays that capture the effect her life and
career have had on fans throughout the years. This book is a
must-read for anyone with an appreciation for popular culture over
the last half century.
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Here is the story of the boy from Brixton who became one of the
most famous artists of the 20th century, returned to prominence in
the 21st with music and visions informed by a sense of his own
mortality and who through his life and work, changed lives and
those of generations to come.
(Book). Outrageously talented, remarkably handsome, internationally
renowned, and dead at the age of 21. More than 40 years after the
tragic car crash that killed him, Eddie Cochran remains one of rock
and roll's most lamented "What Ifs." A trailblazing guitarist,
gifted vocalist, hit-making composer and arranger, and budding
whiz-kid producer, Cochran quickly ascended from Midwestern
obscurity in the late '50s to become one of nascent rock and roll's
leading lights. He penned or recorded many of the most recognized
songs in rock history "Summertime Blues," "Nervous Breakdown,"
"Somethin' Else," "C'mon Everybody," "Twenty Flight Rock," "Sittin'
in the Balcony" songs whose distinctive sound and defiant, often
wryly humorous lyrics have been eagerly digested, analyzed and
lovingly reinterpreted by generations of rockers after him, from
The Beatles to the Sex Pistols, The Who to U2. Three Steps to
Heaven: The Eddie Cochran Story co-authored by Cochran's nephew,
also a gifted musician is the first American biography of this
uniquely American rock legend, who was among the first to be
inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. The book is a
detailed portrait of Cochran's personal and professional triumphs
and travails, with fascinating insight into the rock pioneer's life
that only a family member can provide. 33 B/W photographs;
Hardcover.
Matt Wolf's book chronicles ten amazing years for the Donmar and
for Mendes, combining accounts of numerous productions and
extensive interviews with Mendes himself and more than sixty Donmar
alumni: Sondheim, Nicole Kidman, Gwyneth Paltrow, Alan Cumming,
Helen Mirren, Stephen Dillane and Jennifer Ehle, to name but a few.
This celebration of the Donmar's tenth anniversary is full of
candid conversation, analyses of its successes as well as its
failures, and trenchant behind-the-scenes reporting. It is also the
Donmar's farewell to Sam Mendes, who is leaving the theatre to
pursue other opportunities on the stage and screen. As director of
American Beauty, for which he won an Academy Award, and Road to
Perdition, his future is as bright as his past.
ERROL FLYNN "Those first thoughts of death, destruction and suicide
began to occur within me--which would not easily or perhaps ever
vanish. I no longer had such an interest in living. I didn't give a
damn, in fact. Much of the will to live had gone." Like Hemingway,
he sat with a gun to his head. He contemplated suicide. Three
nights in a row he sat at the edge of the bed with a revolver to
his head. The third night it was in his mouth. He, Errol Flynn, had
power, fame, money, women, yet it was all an empty victory. He had
been destroyed by the rape trial. "That which I had, my big house,
my yacht, my bank account, seemed hollow. None of these could take
the place of self respect, which I had lost." He would write in his
autobiography, "Inside I was smarting, terribly wounded from the
scar of the rape trial." He had other aspirations for his life than
becoming a phallic symbol. Everyone thought they knew Errol Flynn,
but they didn't. He was a complicated man who camouflaged his true
self from the outside world and only through some of his own
writing could one glean the type of person he really was and what
he had hoped to be. No one could enter with aplomb and grace like
him, who clicked his heels in salute like him, who was the greatest
swashbuckler like him, a terrific horseman who held his sword and
lance as if they were part of him; no one could be as great a
leader like him, tall, handsome, dashing, whose voice, eyes and
mannerisms would make ladies fall in love with him and men follow
him to the end of the earth. The Adventures of Robin Hood, The
Charge of the Light Brigade, The Sea Hawk, They Died with Their
Boots On, and Objective Burma are some of the finest films ever
made, and undoubtedly no one has been able to replace him. He was a
natural actor who lived his roles and his characters, but who
aspired to be a writer and war correspondent. He was a man marred
by an ugly childhood of neglect and abandonment, who rose out of
sheer fortitude of his character to become one of the great stars
of the golden age. This book is a probing and extensively
researched attempt to explore the people, events and factors that
made Errol Flynn who he was. It is an analysis of his triumph, his
tortured inner self and his ultimate downfall. There is in addition
a complete filmography with historical background.
The definitive biography of Chuck Berry, legendary performer and inventor of rock and roll.
Best known as the groundbreaking artist behind classics like "Johnny B. Goode," "Maybellene," "You Never Can Tell" and "Roll Over Beethoven," Chuck Berry was a man of wild contradictions, whose motives and motivations were often shrouded in mystery. After all, how did a teenage delinquent come to write so many songs that transformed American culture? And, once he achieved fame and recognition, why did he put his career in danger with a lifetime's worth of reckless personal behaviour? Throughout his life, Berry refused to shed light on either the mastery or the missteps, leaving the complexity that encapsulated his life and underscored his music largely unexplored--until now.
In Chuck Berry, biographer RJ Smith crafts a comprehensive portrait of one of the great American entertainers, guitarists, and lyricists of the 20th century, bringing Chuck Berry to life in vivid detail. Based on interviews, archival research, legal documents, and a deep understanding of Berry's St. Louis (his birthplace, and the place where he died in March 2017), Smith sheds new light on a man few have ever really understood. By placing his life within the context of the American culture he made and eventually withdrew from, we understand how Berry became such a groundbreaking figure in music, erasing racial boundaries, crafting subtle political commentary, and paying a great price for his success. While celebrating his accomplishments, the book also does not shy away from troubling aspects of his public and private life, asking profound questions about how and why we separate the art from the artist.
Berry declined to call himself an artist, shrugging that he was good at what he did. But the man's achievement was the rarest kind, the kind that had social and political resonance, the kind that made America want to get up and dance. At long last, Chuck Berry brings the man and the music together.
(Applause Books). No American composer has been more widely
celebrated, nor so consistently misunderstood as Richard Rodgers.
Although he was one of America's most brilliant and prolific
composers, whose credits include more than 900 published songs, 40
Broadway musicals and numerous films, Rodgers is widely believed to
be the almost stolid opposite of who he really was. Meryle Secrest
shows us for the first time his complex nature and the inspiration
for his art. Looking intensely at Rodger's unparalleled career,
Secrest follows his close and fruitful working relationship with
Lorenz Hart, a collaboration that resulted in more than thirty
musicals but was ultimately undone by Hart's alcoholism. Moving on
to Rodger's second collaborator, Secrest records the triumphs with
the gifted and more stable Oscar Hammerstein, including Carousel,
South Pacific and The King and I, along with many more. Rodgers'
personal life is explored, as well. Secrest writes about the
composer's childhood, and how, from an early age, he used music to
escape. And she explores Rodgers' own battle with alcohol, as well
as the deep tensions in his 49-year marriage to Dorothy Feiner.
Somewhere for Me is both a vivid portrait of American musical
theatre, and an illuminating examination of one of its greatest
artists.
(Amadeus). Born in Belgium as Clara Lardinois, the youngest of 17
children, Blanche Arral was destined for a life wilder than
fiction. During her travels, Arral befriended such legendary
figures as Sarah Bernhardt, Mata Hari, Harry Houdini, Victor Hugo,
Franz Liszt, Camille Saint-Saens and Jack London, who based a
character on her in his book Smoke Bellew . In Russia she met
Rasputin, and in Turkey, the sultan Abdulhamid II. She describes
her recording sessions with Thomas Edison and her run-ins with the
difficult Nellie Melba. Writer and opera fan Ira Glackens
discovered her living in a small New Jersey apartment and persuaded
her to record her extraordinary stories. More than 60 years later,
editor William R. Moran has confirmed the veracity of Arral's
account and annotated this extraordinary memoir.
"The Mendelssohn Companion" represents a collection of advanced
scholarly research in Mendelssohn studies that examines the
composer's life and music. In recent decades, studies of his music
manuscripts have discovered much previously overlooked work, and a
reconsideration of his biography has permitted a more realistic
portrayal of Mendelssohn. The first three chapters of this volume
place the composer in his intellectual context and discuss his
family and social circle and his professional activities. Later
chapters examine the major areas of his compositional work,
providing new analytical observations, contextual perspectives, and
interpretations. Historical views and documents are included with
each chapter and are all newly translated.
The new material in this fully documented study will appeal to
scholars, students, and music enthusiasts alike. An updated
bibliographic list of Mendelssohn's works, which identifies the
autograph manuscripts and the most important published editions
will be of special interest.
Sam Denov recounts his fascinating adventures as a musician in one
of America's greatest orchestras. This story of intrigue,
corruption and redemption is one that will appall, amuse and
enlighten everyone who loves classical music.
(Amadeus). These intensely personal and perceptive essays explore
the author's life as a pianist practicing, performing, teaching,
and writing but they could be the thoughts and reflections of any
artist. They recount the challenges, rewards, and joys of her
experiences in her chosen profession.
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