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Gavin Lambert

    Dieser britische Autor erforscht die Komplexität der menschlichen Psyche und gesellschaftlicher Mechanismen durch einen kraftvollen und durchdringenden Erzählstil. Seine Arbeit, geprägt von einer frühen Beschäftigung mit dem Film und einem kritischen Blick auf die Realität, befasst sich oft mit den Spannungen zwischen künstlerischen Bestrebungen und alltäglichen Herausforderungen. Lamberts Prosa zeichnet sich durch Präzision und Tiefe aus und bietet den Lesern eine fesselnde Reise in die Nuancen menschlicher Erfahrung. Sein Schreiben spiegelt ein Engagement für Authentizität und sozialen Realismus wider und etabliert ihn als eine unverwechselbare Stimme in der zeitgenössischen Literatur.

    The Goodby People
    Natalie Wood: A Life
    Nazimova
    • 2022

      First published in 1971, The Goodby People is perhaps the greatest novel ever written about post-Manson, pre-Disney Los Angeles. "His elegant, stripped-down prose caught the last gasp of Old Hollywood in a way that has yet to be rivalled." (Armistead Maupin) "The bisexual draft dodger living on the skids, the glamorous young widow in search of enlightenment, the skinny gamine from out of town who wants to make it in the movies . . ."* These are the people who inhabit Gavin Lambert's mordant portrait of Southern California at the end of the 1960s: forever swapping addresses, lovers, and dreams. They live in extraordinary, suffocating wealth; or else flirting with a Mansonesque cult; or else in a fantasy where golden-age actresses make ghostly visitations to comment on their daily life. All that binds them together is their common sense of aimlessness--and the clear, judgment-free eye of a British author trying his best to be a friend to each. Cool, incisive, yet essentially kind, and very much ahead of its time, The Goodby People unfolds "in the yawning chasm between real life in Los Angeles and the fantasies manufactured by its dominant business" (*Gary Indiana), and stands as Gavin Lambert's masterpiece.

      The Goodby People
    • 2021

      Nazimova

      A Biography

      • 432 Seiten
      • 16 Lesestunden
      3,4(3)Abgeben

      The biography delves into the intricate life and career of Nazimova, highlighting her complexity, allure, and significance in the artistic realm. It paints a vivid portrait of her as a multifaceted individual, exploring both her glamorous persona and the darker elements that shaped her legacy. Through detailed storytelling, the book captures the essence of her contributions and the impact she had on her field.

      Nazimova
    • 2021

      America watched Natalie Wood grow up on the silver screen. Her childhood is still there to see in Miracle on 34th Street. Her adolescence in Rebel Without a Cause. Her coming of age? Still playing in Splendor in the Grass and West Side Story and countless other timeless movies. From the moment Natalie Wood made her cinematic debut in 1946 in Tomorrow Is Forever, to her shocking, untimely death in 1981, the decades of her life are punctuated by movies that even today, reside in the hearts and imagination of the American public. Acclaimed novelist, biographer, critic and screenwriter Gavin Lambert, whose twenty-year friendship with Natalie Wood began when she starred in the movie adaptation of his novel Inside Daisy Clover, recounts her extraordinary story. He relays to us details about her personal life, from her love affairs to her suicide attempt at twenty-six, the birth of her children to her friendships, her struggles as an actress to finally, her tragic and mysterious death at the age of forty-three. For the first time, everyone who was close to Natalie Wood speaks freely -- including her husbands, Robert Wagner and Richard Gregson, famously private people like Warren Beatty, intimate friends such as playwright Mart Crowley, directors Robert Mulligan and Paul Mazursky, and Leslie Caron, each of whom told the author stories about this remarkable woman who was so full of life but always on the brink of despair.

      Natalie Wood: A Life