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The perfect companion to Baz Luhrmann's forthcoming biopic Elvis, a
major motion picture starring Tom Hanks and Austin Butler. What was
it like to be Elvis Presley? What did it feel like when impossible
fame made him its prisoner? As the world's first rock star there
was no one to tell him what to expect, no one with whom he could
share the burden of being himself - of being Elvis. On the outside
he was all charm, sex appeal, outrageously confident on stage and
stunningly gifted in the recording studio. To his fans he seemed to
have it all. He was Elvis. With his voice and style influencing
succeeding generations of musicians, he should have been free to
sing any song he liked, to star in any film he was offered, and to
tour in any country he chose. But he wasn't free. The circumstances
of his poor beginnings in the American South, which, as he blended
gospel music with black rhythm and blues and white country songs,
helped him create rock and roll, had left him with a lifelong
vulnerability. Made rich and famous beyond his wildest imaginings
when he mortgaged his talent to the machinations of his manager,
'Colonel' Tom Parker, there would be an inevitable price to pay.
Though he daydreamed of becoming a serious film actor, instead he
grew to despise his own movies and many of the songs he had to sing
in them. He could have rebelled. But he didn't. Why? In the
Seventies, as the hits rolled in again, and millions of fans saw
him in a second career as he sang his way across America, he talked
of wanting to tour the world. But he never did. What was stopping
him? BEING ELVIS takes a clear-eyed look at the most-loved
entertainer ever, and finds an unusual boy with a dazzling talent
who grew up to change popular culture; a man who sold a billion
records and had more hits than any other singer, but who became
trapped by his own frailties in the loneliness of fame.
John Lennon was a rock star, a school clown, a writer, a wit, an
iconoclast, a sometime peace activist and finally an eccentric
millionaire. He was also a Beatle - his plain-speaking and impudent
rejection of authority catching, and eloquently articulating, the
group's moment in history. Chronicling a famously troubled life,
Being John Lennon analyses the contradictions in the
singer-songwriter's creative and destructive personality. Drawing
on many interviews and conversations with Lennon, his first wife
Cynthia and second Yoko Ono, as well as his girlfriend May Pang and
song-writing partner Paul McCartney, Ray Connolly unsparingly
reassesses the chameleon nature of the perpetually dissatisfied
star who just couldn't stop reinventing himself.
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