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Books > Arts & Architecture > Performing arts > Individual actors & performers
I've written another book and this will be one of those that when
you pick it up, you'll begin to regret it. You see, I don't read
books; I read the Sun newspaper. Actually, that's a lie; because
when I get to page three I can't let go of my cock, so I can't turn
the pages.
IN "THE SOUNDTRACK OF MY LIFE," music legend Clive Davis recounts
an extraordinary five-decade career in the music business, while
also telling a remarkable personal story of triumphs,
disappointments, and encounters with some of the greatest musical
artists of our time, including Bob Dylan, Janis Joplin, Simon &
Garfunkel, Barry Manilow, the Grateful Dead, Patti Smith, Whitney
Houston, Carlos Santana, Dionne Warwick, Aretha Franklin, and
Alicia Keys.
Orphaned in his teens, Davis earned a full scholarship to New York
University and another to Harvard Law School. He served as General
Counsel of Columbia Records and, in a totally unexpected stroke of
fate, became head of the company overnight. More surprisingly, he
learned he had "ears," a rare ability to spot special talent and
hit records. Those ears contributed to the success of three
companies--Columbia, Arista, and J--where Davis dis-covered and
developed more unique artists than anyone in the history of the
music industry.
What began on the grass at the Monterey Pop Festival with the
signing of Janis Joplin has evolved into a lifelong passion and
calling, spanning genres, including rock, pop, R&B, country,
jazz fusion, and hip-hop. His is the imprimatur that has helped
shape contemporary music and, over the years, our popular culture.
"The Soundtrack of My Life" is an essential book for anyone
interested in the story of popular music, the fascinating ups and
downs of the music business, the alchemy of hits, and the dramatic
life of a brilliant leader . . . and listener. It is a riveting
read from beginning to end.
In celebration of his one-hundredth birthday, a charming,
irresistibly readable, and handsomely packaged look back at the
life and times of the greatest entertainer in American history,
Frank Sinatra.Sinatra's Century is an irresistible collection of
one-hundred short reflections on the man, his music, and his
larger-than-life story, by a lifetime fan who also happens to be
one of the poetry world's most prominent voices. David Lehman uses
each of these short pieces to look back on a single facet of the
entertainer's story--from his childhood in Hoboken, to his
emergence as "The Voice" in the 1940s, to the wild professional
(and romantic) fluctuations that followed. Lehman offers new
insights and revisits familiar stories--Sinatra's dramatic love
affairs with some of the most beautiful stars in Hollywood,
including Lauren Bacall, Marilyn Monroe, and Ava Gardner; his fall
from grace in the late 1940s and resurrection during the "Capitol
Years" of the 1950s; his bonds with the rest of the Rat Pack; and
his long tenure as the Chairman of the Board, viewed as the
eminence grise of popular music inspiring generations of artists,
from Bobby Darin to Bono to Bob Dylan.Brimming with Lehman's own
lifelong affection for Sinatra, the book includes lists of
unforgettable performances; engaging insight on what made Sinatra
the model of American machismo--and the epitome of romance; and
clear-eyed assessments of the foibles that impacted his life and
work. Warm and enlightening, Sinatra's Century is full-throated
appreciation of Sinatra for every fan.
The first book in twenty-five years from “one of our great comic minds” (The Washington Post) features Seinfeld’s best work across five decades in comedy.
Since his first performance at the legendary New York nightclub “Catch a Rising Star” as a twenty-one-year-old college student in fall of 1975, Jerry Seinfeld has written his own material and saved everything. “Whenever I came up with a funny bit, whether it happened on a stage, in a conversation, or working it out on my preferred canvas, the big yellow legal pad, I kept it in one of those old school accordion folders,” Seinfeld writes. “So I have everything I thought was worth saving from forty-five years of hacking away at this for all I was worth.”
For this book, Jerry Seinfeld has selected his favorite material, organized decade by decade. In this “trove of laugh-out-loud one-liners” (Associated Press), you will witness the evolution of one of the great comedians of our time and gain new insights into the thrilling but unforgiving art of writing stand-up comedy.
The rare woman director working in second-wave exploitation,
Stephanie Rothman (b. 1936) directed seven successful feature
films, served as the vice president of an independent film company,
and was the first woman to win the Directors Guild of America's
student filmmaking prize. Despite these career accomplishments,
Rothman retired into relative obscurity. In The Cinema of Stephanie
Rothman: Radical Acts in Filmmaking, author Alicia Kozma uses
Rothman's career as an in-depth case study, intertwining
historical, archival, industrial, and filmic analysis to grapple
with the past, present, and future of women's filmmaking labor in
Hollywood. Understanding second wave exploitation filmmaking as a
transitory space for the industrial development of contemporary
Hollywood that also opened up opportunities for women
practitioners, Kozma argues that understudied film production
cycles provide untapped spaces for discovering women's directorial
work. The professional career and filmography of Rothman exemplify
this claim. Rothman also serves as an apt example for connecting
the structure of film histories to the persistent strictures of
rhetorical language used to mark women filmmakers and their labor.
Kozma traces these imbrications across historical archives.
Adopting a diverse methodological approach, The Cinema of Stephanie
Rothman shines a needed spotlight on the problems and successes of
the memorialization of women's directorial labor, connecting
historical and contemporary patterns of gendered labor disparity in
the film industry. This book is simultaneously the first in-depth
scholarly consideration of Rothman, the debut of the most
substantive archival materials collected on Rothman, and a feminist
political intervention into the construction of film histories.
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