Seduction
Sex, Lies, and Stardom in Howard Hughes's Hollywood
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- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی
September 24, 2018
Longworth (Meryl Streep: Anatomy of an Actor), creator and host of the Hollywood history podcast You Must Remember This, centers this deeply researched look at Howard Hughes around the famed aviator and film producer’s exploitative treatment of women. She relates that Hughes was born rich in 1905 to the Hughes Tools family and died at 70 in 1976, even richer but isolated and afflicted by physical and mental health issues. Longworth ably summarizes Hughes’s film career and notable productions, such as Hell’s Angels, Scarface, and, most pertinently, his scandalously risqué western The Outlaw. Most vividly, she anatomizes his obsession with “collecting” and controlling the women in his life and his films. In addition to his well-publicized romances with established stars, including Katherine Hepburn, Ida Lupino, and Ginger Rogers, Hughes was also given to signing unknown young actresses to contracts, installing them in bungalows with guards posted outside, and then stalling on putting them in his RKO films. Unfortunately, the narrative is weighed down by digressions into Hughes’s family, associates, planes, and erratic business sense, and by Longworth’s apparent determination to use every single item from her research. This lack of focus dilutes the effectiveness of what could have been a sharp and timely study of film industry misogyny.
September 15, 2018
A history that shows clearly how powerful men exploited actresses long before the #MeToo movement began.Hollywood historian Longworth (Hollywood Frame by Frame: The Unseen Silver Screen in Contact Sheets, 1951-1997, 2014, etc.) has mined memoirs, biographies, magazines, newspapers, and archives to create an entertaining, gossip-filled portrait of the film capital's golden age, from the 1920s through the 1960s. Central to the story is the enormously wealthy, paranoid, and erratic Howard Hughes (1905-1976), businessman and aviator, whose self-proclaimed goal was "to become the world's most famous motion picture producer" and whose leering desire for buxom young actresses represented the proclivities of many other men in the industry. These were women "whose faces and bodies Hughes strove to possess and/or make iconic, sometimes at an expense to their minds and souls." They were harassed, abused, surveilled, and, in some cases, imprisoned by a man with the money and power to make or break their careers. Hughes, writes the author, "was not the only mogul in Hollywood who profited off treating actresses as sex goddess flavors of the month, good for consumption in a brief window but disposable as soon as the next variety came along," but he acted "more crudely, and with even less of a regard for the person these actresses were before they came into his life." Those actresses range from the barely remembered (Billie Dove, Faith Domergue) to major stars: Jean Harlow, Katharine Hepburn (who shared Hughes' home for a while), Bette Davis, Ida Lupino (whose directing career Hughes supported), Ginger Rogers, Ava Gardner, Lana Turner, and Jean Peters (whom Hughes, uncharacteristically, married). Hughes was so famous that he could lure women merely by promising them future stardom: Choosing a young woman's photo from a newspaper or magazine, he sent a team of men to track her down, have his own photographer take new pictures, and, if he was pleased, invite her to Hollywood--and took control of her life. The media, dazzled by his self-created myth, perpetuated his image as an iconoclastic folk hero.A lively--and often sordid--Hollywood history.
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November 1, 2018
A lot has been written about the famously reclusive Howard Hughes. Some of it is insightful; some of it is ludicrous. This new book, which mainly focuses on Hughes' years as a Hollywood power player, is full of insight. When Hughes first came to Hollywood, he was young, rich, and very much in touch with the pulse of the people. Hughes understood how easily the gap between perception and reality could be made to disappear, and soon he captured the attention not just of the film community's movers and shakers but also of the general public?and, let's not forget, of some of Tinseltown's most attractive women: Jean Peters, Katharine Hepburn, and Ava Gardner, among them. Author Longworth adopts a conversational tone?this isn't a treatise on the subject of wealth and power in the first half of the twentieth century as much as it is a story about a man who traded in seduction, mystique, and money. Not a beginning-to-end biography of Hughes, the book is instead a deep dive into a part of his life. Illuminating and memorable.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2018, American Library Association.)
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