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Gene Arceri's fascination with Susan Hayward began as a teenage
usher at the Roosevelt Theatre on Flushing, Long Island. New York.
And began to shape itself as an idea for a book when he began
hosting a talk show over at PBS radio, in San Francisco. Everytime
he interviewed someone who had known Hayward he asked: What was she
like?." The resulting anecdotes formed the beginning of the
extensive research that went into this book. A journey that took
him from Brooklyn to Atlanta, with stops everywhere, and in-between
wanting face to face interviews, anywhere he could find some
insight into this compelling personality. With help from Hayward's
brother Walter, it ultimately brought the real person, hitherto to
life. To quote Kirkus Review -"This is the book Susan Hayward
deserves." Gene is the author of biographies on Elizabeth Taylor,
Betty Hutton and Charlie of Nob Hill (San Francisco's reluctant
celebrity cat) and a columnist for 10 years for Jo Lee
International Magazine. He has been awarded by the Bay Area for
several of his written stories. A native New Yorker he currently
lives outside San Francisco.
Although Irene Manning is best known for her film work with James
Cagney, Humphrey Bogart, and Dennis Morgan, 'The Rebellious Prima
Donna' reveals even more, including her associations with some of
the finest talents of American Musical History - including Jerome
Kern, Oscar Hammerstein II, and the team known as Lerner and Loewe,
in their very first Broadway show.
Many of the details in this book you may have read elsewhere. On
the other hand, many more are untold stories. If it were not for
Francis Stacey, Eric Stacey's widow, this book would not have been
written. For it was Fran who wanted, encouraged, and supported the
story about a special man in a magical time. Eric Stacey from
Ramsgate (Kent) England, an assistant director, who was often
relegated to the sidelines as a traffic cop, and his ultimate work
seen in Gone With The Wind. As its producer, David O. Selznick
wrote (December 5, 1942) in part, ..". Stacey's] activities were
those connected with Gone With The Wind, a picture making
extraordinary demands on his] position." In retrospect, there seems
to be a certain element of fantasy, paranoia, artifice and illusion
in these recollections. Except for the apparitions that haunted the
cast and crew of the film to the end of their lives. Native New
Yorker Gene Arceri began his career with various theatre
enterprises at the Lincoln Center and elsewhere. He now resides in
San Francisco, where he is a multi-media personality. Arceri's
books on Elizabeth Taylor, Susan Hayward, Betty Hutton and "Charlie
of Nob Hill" have been well-received worldwide, as has his column
for the past ten years for Jo Lee Magazine on the internet.
The first book on the lovely comedian/actress, Betty Hutton!
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