Patricia Neal: An Unquiet Life

Przednia okładka
University Press of Kentucky, 19 maj 2006 - 508

The internationally acclaimed actress Patricia Neal has been a star on stage, film, and television for nearly sixty years. On Broadway she appeared in such lauded productions as Lillian Hellman's Another Part of the Forest, for which she won the very first Tony Award, and The Miracle Worker. In Hollywood she starred opposite the likes of Ronald Reagan, Gary Cooper, John Wayne, Paul Newman, Fred Astaire, and Tyrone Power in some thirty films. Neal anchored such classic pictures as The Day the Earth Stood Still, A Face in the Crowd, and Breakfast at Tiffany's, but she is perhaps best known for her portrayal of Alma Brown in Hud, which earned her the Academy Award for Best Actress in 1963. But there has been much, much more to Neal's life. She was born Patsy Louise Neal on January 20, 1926, in Packard, Kentucky, though she spent most of her childhood in Knoxville, Tennessee. Neal quickly gained attention for her acting abilities in high school, community, and college performances. Her early stage successes were overshadowed by the unexpected death of her father in 1944. Soon after she left New York for Hollywood in 1947, Neal became romantically involved with Gary Cooper, her married co-star in The Fountainhead, an attachment which brought them both a great deal of notoriety in the press and a great deal of heartache in their personal lives. In 1953, Neal married famed children's author Roald Dahl, a match that would bring her five children and thirty years of dramatic ups and downs. In 1961, their son, Theo, was seriously injured in an automobile accident and required multiple neurosurgeries and years of rehabilitation; the following year their daughter, Olivia, died of measles. At the pinnacle of her screen career, Patricia Neal suffered a series of strokes which left her in a coma for twenty-one days. Variety even ran a headline erroneously stating that she had died. At the time, Neal was pregnant with her and Dahl's fifth child, Lucy, who was born healthy a few months later. After a difficult recovery, Neal returned to film acting, earning a second Academy Award nomination for The Subject Was Roses. She appeared in a number of television movie roles in the 1970s and 1980s and won a Golden Globe for Best Actress in a Dramatic TV Movie in 1971 for her role in The Homecoming.

Patricia Neal: An Unquiet Life is the first critical biography detailing the actress's impressive film career and remarkable personal life. Author Stephen Michael Shearer has conducted numerous interviews with Neal, her professional colleagues, and her intimate friends and was given access to the actress's personal papers. The result is an honest and comprehensive portrait of an accomplished woman who has lived her life with determination and bravado.

 

Spis treści

Part One
1
Chapter One
3
Chapter Two
15
Chapter Three
29
Chapter Four
41
Chapter Five
51
Chapter Six
63
Chapter Seven
75
Chapter Sixteen
183
Chapter Seventeen
193
Chapter Eighteen
209
Chapter Nineteen
227
Chapter Twenty
239
Part Three
251
Chapter Twenty One
253
Chapter Twenty Two
271

Photo Gallery 1
82
Chapter Eight
87
Chapter Nine
99
Chapter Ten
107
Chapter Eleven
119
Part Two
131
Chapter Twelve
133
Chapter Thirteen
147
Chapter Fourteen
159
Chapter Fifteen
171
Photo Gallery 2
178
Photo Gallery 3
274
Chapter Twenty Three
283
Chapter Twenty Four
301
Chapter Twenty Five
313
Chapter Twenty Six
327
Chapter Twenty Seven
337
Appendix
349
Notes
385
Selected Bibliography
413
Index
419
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Informacje o autorze (2006)

Stephen Michael Shearer, who has worked as a professional actor, has written for The Film Collectors Registry and contributed research to the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences.

Informacje bibliograficzne