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Bette and Joan: The Divine Feud"SISTERS UNDER THE SKIN" They were born under the same sign, Aries, a powerful fire sign--and in the same year, although Davis would later swear: “Crawford is five years older than me, if she’s a day.” Joan became a star first, which irritated her rival, who suggested that her rapid success came via the casting couch. “It sure as hell beat the hard cold floor,” Crawford cooly responded. Bette was the more accomplished actress, but both shared the same ruthless drive and determination to get to and to stay at the top. When Crawford, as the Princess Royal at MGM, found her fame and career waning, she left the Metro studio and moved to Warner Brothers, where Bette Davis was firmly ensconced as Queen of that domain. Crawford then proceeded to take over Davis’s roles, her leading men, and her throne. A decade later, when their careers were thought to be over, they were brought together to work in the classic 1962 film noir, What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? On screen, their stark, intense, and brilliant performances were equally matched by the fierce and sometimes deadly games of ego and star control they enacted off stage. Reviews “The book has the pace of a tennis match, as the narrative bounces from Crawford’s career to Davis’s, and back again, all told in a rip-roaring style. A definite ten.” Premiere “A hugely entertaining chroncile - juicy, unrestrained and exhaustively researched. A movie fan's dream." Syndicated columnist Liz Smith “Shaun Considines story of the two divas is vastly informative and in parts hilarious." Sunday Telegraph "Over ten years in the writing this isn't merely a catch-penny item. It is well researched throughout and quite riveting to read. Splendid stuff!" Film Review “Shaun Considine has produced a delicious and totally consuming story, written in a racy, breathless style, with one juicy anecdote tumbling swiftly after another. Ideal for lovers of the perfectly turned insult.” Five stars Empire magazine "Quite the best read I've had across the Atlantic - or anywhere else, come to that." Dame Diana Rigg "Should dead coals be raked over? Ah, but these are not women, or even human beings, but glorious, impossible monsters, as deadly and unreal as the Medusa. Their story may be fact, but it is nonetheless, and irresistibly, legend. Let me shame the devil...I loved it." Hugh Leonard, Irish playwright and columnist, The Sunday Independent |
Non-fiction
Letters and Interviews with Oscar winners, from the golden age of Hollywood
The authorized biography of Paddy Chayefsky, the
only individual screenwriter to win three Academy Awards,
The first and only detailed
account of the bitter, long-
term feud between Hollywood's
quintessential movie-star,
Joan Crawfordi,, and it's leading
dramatic actress, Bette Davis
Photographs
Photographs - New York City |