“LIGHT
AND DARK SIDES OF TINSEL TOWNâ€
By
Raymond Benson
Turner
Classic Movies (TCM) has lately been getting into the publishing business with
such tomes as The Essentials (two volumes) and now this
handsomely-designed and intricately-researched book on some of the lesser
known, somewhat sensational stories from Hollywood’s past.
Written
by popular Instagrammer Carla Valderrama (@thiswashollywood and
@thiswasfashion), This Was Hollywood—Forgotten Stars & Stories (published by Running Press) presents
a bundle of Tinsel Town tales that have a slightly tabloid feel to them, and
yet they are as irresistible as a sighting of your favorite star at Hollywood
and Vine. Many of these accounts come from the long, lost vaults of movieland
history.
For
example, the book opens with the early beginnings of the town of Hollywood and
how the “movies†(as the people in the budding film industry were called
by the locals) took over and turned the sleepy community into one of the
world’s most well-known cities. There’s a piece on the first movie star,
Florence Lawrence, who was so popular that when she moved from Biograph Studios
to IMP, she was promised that she would receive an actual billing of her name
on screen. You’ll learn the remarkable story of how Rin Tin Tin was found,
brought to America, and trained to be one of the biggest stars of the silent
era.
Some
of the stories you might know. There will be more that you didn’t. Clark
Gable’s love child. Sessue Hayakawa’s years as a “sex symbol.†Olivia de
Havilland’s lawsuits against Warner Brothers. Marni Nixon and her
“ghost-singing†for famous actresses in musicals. And much, much more.
The
hardcover edition comes with a lovely jacket that feels remarkably nice
in one’s hands. Kudos to the designers of both the exterior and especially the interior,
which is lavishly illustrated.
In
short, there is enough silver screen archaeology and anthropology here to make
any Hollywood history enthusiast salivate.
Also
available in e-book and audiobook formats (although the latter would surely be
missing the great visuals), This Was Hollywood is highly recommended.
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