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Though Dominick Dunne seemed to live his entire adult life in the
public eye, Robert Hofler reveals a conflicted, enigmatic man who
reinvented himself again and again. Dunne was, in turn, a
television and film producer, Vanity Fair journalist, and author of
best-selling novels. Money, Murder, and Dominick Dunne brings to
light a number of his difficult and tragic relationships: his
intense rivalry with his brother, gay lovers he hid throughout his
life, and fights with his editors. Hofler discusses the painful
rift in the family after the murder of Dunne's daughter,
Dominique--and Dunne's coverage of her killer's trial, which
launched his career as a reporter.
Henry Willson was one of the quintessential power brokers in
Hollywood during the late 1940s and 1950s when he launched the
careers of Rock Hudson, Lana Turner, Tab Hunter, Natalie Wood, and
many others. He was also a true casting couch agent, brokering sex
for opportunity on the silver screen. While this practice was
rampant across Hollywood, for gay actors and film professionals the
casting couch was a dangerous cliff: a public revelation could and
would ruin a career. "The Man Who Invented Rock Hudson" is an
incredible biography as well as a harrowing look into Hollywood at
a time of great sexual oppression, roaming vice squads searching
for gay and/or communist activity, and the impossibilities for gay
actors of the era.
Dominick Dunne seemed to live his entire adult life in the public
eye, but in this biography Robert Hofler reveals a conflicted,
enigmatic man who reinvented himself again and again. As a
television and film producer in the 1950s-1970s, hobnobbing with
Humphrey Bogart and Natalie Wood, he found success and crushing
failure in a pitiless Hollywood. As a Vanity Fair journalist
covering the lives of the rich and powerful, he mesmerized readers
with his detailed coverage of spectacular murder cases-O.J.
Simpson, the Menendez brothers, Michael Skakel, Phil Spector, and
Claus von Bulow. He had his own television show, Dominick Dunne's
Power, Privilege, and Justic. His five best-selling novels,
including The Two Mrs. Grenvilles, People Like Us, and An
Inconvenient Woman, were inspired by real lives and scandals. The
brother of John Gregory Dunne and brother-in-law of Joan Didion, he
was a friend and confidante of many literary luminaries. Dunne also
had the ear of some of the world's most famous women, among them
Princess Diana, Nancy Reagan, Liz Smith, Barbara Walters, and
Elizabeth Taylor. Dunne admitted to inventing himself, and it was
that public persona he wrote about in his own memoir, The Way We
Lived Then. Left out of that account, but brought to light here,
were his intense rivalry with his brother John Gregory, the gay
affairs and relationships he had throughout his marriage and
beyond, and his fights with editors at Vanity Fair. Robert Hofler
also reveals the painful rift in the family after the murder of
Dominick's daughter, Dominique-compounded by his coverage of her
killer's trial, which launched his career as a reporter.
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