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The Legs Are the Last to Go

Aging, Acting, Marrying, & Other Things I Learned the Hard Way

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

It's conventional wisdom that Hollywood has no use for a woman over forty. So it's a good thing that Diahann Carroll—whose winning, sometimes controversial career breached racial barriers—is anything but conventional.

Here she shares her life story with an admirable candidness of someone who has seen and done it all. With wisdom that only aging gracefully can bestow, she talks frankly about her four marriages as well as the other significant relationships in her life, including her courtship with Sidney Poitier; racial politics in Hollywood and on Broadway; and the personal cost, particularly to her family, of being a pioneer. Carroll's storied history, blunt views, and notorious wit will be sure to entertain and inform.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from August 11, 2008
      At age 70, singer-actress Carroll, a Golden Globe and Tony Award winner, was described in a 2006 rave review by Stephen Holden in the New York Times
      as delivering a song “like an emotional volcano,” and the label works equally well for this radiant autobiography, bubbling over with sincere self-insights as well as a potent underlying theme of the “immense cruelties” and racial politics of showbiz. Revealing personal struggles with her mother and men (she details her marriage to singer Vic Damone), she pulls no punches in detailing conflicts with such major figures as Andrew Lloyd Webber, Pearl Bailey and Samuel Goldwyn. Beginning with her Harlem childhood, she traces her life from the High School of Music and Art, modeling and early club performances to theatrical triumphs (No Strings
      ; Sunset Boulevard
      ), TV (Julia
      ; Dynasty
      ), her grandchildren and plastic surgery, plus painful memories of racism. An outstanding chapter probes the “art-directed Negro squalor” and other “demeaning” aspects of the 1959 film Porgy and Bess
      , a “cliché of noble poverty as reimagined by some very talented white men.” What emerges is an astute analysis of her career along with descriptions of the highs and lows of an often glamorous life, whether she performs at dazzling Vegas venues or in an intimate cabaret space.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 26, 2009
      Author and narrator Carroll relates her life as an acclaimed actress in film, television and on stage, along with deeply personal revelations about her private life and other heated topics. Carroll's stories are the stuff of legend: recounting her lengthy affair with a married Sidney Poitier, becoming the first African-American actress to star in a TV series and facing bigotry within the industry (Andrew Lloyd Weber won't be happy with Carroll's memory of auditioning for Sunset Boulevard
      ). Carroll has a crisp and crystal clear voice and speaks with intense passion as she reads her introspective memoir, producing a deeply affecting look at Hollywood stardom, its trappings and its effects on relationships. Carroll's tone is serious, but she never fails to poke fun at herself for her vanity and past mistakes, which make her all the more fascinating. An Amistad hardcover (Reviews, Aug. 11).

    • Library Journal

      September 1, 2008
      Carroll brings readers up to date since her 1986 autobiography, "Diahann: An Autobiography", but here displays more insight and details. She expresses much regret in her choice of men (she elaborates on her affair with Sidney Poitier), about putting her career before her daughter, and about exercising her extremely high standards, which she inherited from her mother. But Carroll is unapologetic about never going out without full hair, make-up, and ensemble. She covers some old ground, reminding readers she was the first black actress to have her own TV show ("Julia") and to win a Tony for a starring role ("No Strings") and how "Dynasty" revived her career in middle age. Since then she has starred in "Sunset Boulevard", had a recurring role on "Grey's Anatomy", and now, in her seventies, performs her one-woman show. But she emphasizes that her real accomplishments have been the realization that family is most important, that being alone can be a gift, and that she can relax those high standards of hers. An enjoyable read; for all public libraries.Rosellen Brewer, Sno-Isle Libs., Marysville, WA

      Copyright 2008 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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