Cheap Bette Davis (Book) (Barbara Leaming) Price
CHEAP-PRICE.NET ’s Cheap Price
$10.88
Here at Cheap-price.net we have Bette Davis at a terrific price. The real-time price may actually be cheaper — click “Buy Now” above to check the live price at Amazon.com.
| AUTHOR: | Barbara Leaming |
| CATEGORY: | Book |
| MANUFACTURER: | Cooper Square Publishers |
| ISBN: | 081541286X |
| TYPE: | 1908-, Acting & Auditioning, Biography, Biography & Autobiography, Biography / Autobiography, Biography/Autobiography, Davis, Bette,, Entertainment & Performing Arts - Actors & Actresses, Entertainment & Performing Arts - General, Individual Movie Actors And Actresses, Motion picture actors and actr, Motion picture actors and actresses, United States, Women, Films, cinema |
| MEDIA: | Paperback |
| # OF MEDIA: | 1 |
Related Products
Customer Reviews of Bette Davis
Interesting to read but the vocabulary was complex and the sentences were too. I'm a recemt college graduate and I had trouble understanding so many of the damn words. I had to pick up the dictionary so many times.The books is interesting at times because it analyzes bette and shows more of the "real bette." But it is sort of biased and doesn't say the wonderful things she's done. But its interesting, very intersting. You will have trouble getting through some parts of the book and a little of its boring but the last half of the book is the most fun. I read the book backwards. The authors makes claims like "bette's father actually did care for her" because of evidence of what appeared to be in photos. This is probably BullS@#t how can you tell from that! The famous battles with warners was about money also. And why not she is entitled to a lot of money if these other stars are making it. I would have done the same thing. Bette Davis was a consummate actress. she had some sort of mental illness but she wasn't a child abuser like Joan crawford. enjoy bette watch her movies especially her later ones and have fun reading the biographies. She was a wicked, fun, and interesting lady. This biography is a must read for die hard fans who want to hear the other side of the story. Sort of like a my mothers keeper but more facts to back things up and quotes from friends and directors that make it a must have! Just get your dictionary ready and a smart friend to interperet some of the sentences! tell me what you think about the book
oneofakindhotboi@aol.com
A better slant on a brilliant but bitter star...
...and what a star.
You can read the bio anywhere...born 1908 to hard-boiled New England family...could have been child of wealth but for divorced parents...coddled and championed at every turn by mother Ruthie, who had Hollywood dreams of her own...finally hit it big at Warner Brothers, where she spent 18 years arguing over contracts, scripts, directors and co-stars (thanks, Mother Ruthie, for making her believe that everything should go her way)...ended Warners 1949 and except for "All About Eve" and much later "Baby Jane", career steadily declined with lack-luster self-productions and horrid, intermittent screen appearences...finally another chance on TV, especially "Hotel", but lost again, this time to stroke...vicious book by adored daughter B.D.,...at the end, the brilliant and acclaimed "Whales of August" with Lillian Gish...cancer, more debilitations, distant daughter, paid companions (notably Kathyrn Sermak---read "This 'n That" by Michael Herskowitz for that story)...strong-willed and determined to the end not to exhibit weakness...death 1989 at 81.
What for me made this book different was the detailed but not over-bearing descriptions of each of her film experiences and how they both mirrored her life at the time and provided fodder for her future actions---whether in present or past tense, she always seemed to be playing out one of her screen performances.
Two backdrops also made for enjoyable reading...
...her mother Ruthie's insatiable push to make Bette a star--and, vicariously through her daughter, herself as well--and Ruthie's constant meddling in all (but one--thank you William Grant Sherry, B.D.'s father) of her daughter's marriages, and as many of Bette's personal and professional affairs as she could wiggle herself into
...Bette learning from her mother how to cruelly dominate, first her own sister Barbara and then everyone else who happened to cross her path as well, then unsuccessfully attempting to do the same to B.D. (and despite "Mother's Keeper", she adored her B.D. to the very end)
There are so many iterations on a life--Bette is no exception-- that one can read. What makes the difference is presentation of the material in both an informative and enjoyable format. This book held my attention from the very start.
Not The Best About Bette
As far as I'm concerned this is a horrible book on Bette Davis. I found this to be nothing more than a diatribe against a talented and extremly gifted actress (possibly the best screen actress of the 20th century). Ms. Leaming has no compassion for her subject nor any understanding of the complexities, passions, pressures and drives of Ms. Davis.
Bette Davis was a consumate professional, an actress who strove for excellence in both her working life and her personal life, she deeply cared for her family even though there were times when she wanted to scream (family members can do that to you, it doesn't mean that you do not love or care for those around you).
Ms. Davis was bascially an honest person who was truthful not only about those who touched her life but also about herself, telling on herself first and admitting wrongs. She also had a good sense of humor which was never touched on and that is too bad.
She was a human being period, she tried hard to be a good daughter, sister, wife, mother and actress. A woman who was torn by her love between family and career, a woman who left a wonderful legacy of screen acting
In the end, that is what truly matters, that she tried and I feel in more ways than one, succeeded.
My advice to anyone who wants to know all about Bette would be Donald Spoto's "More Than A Woman" or Lawrence Quirks "Fasten Your Seatbelts" the life of Bette Davis.