About the Author:
Diane Jacobs has been a frequent contributor to The New York Times and the Village Voice. She is the author of Hollywood Renaissance (1977) and ". . . but we need the eggs": The Magic of Woody Allen (1982).
From Publishers Weekly:
The writer and director of such classics as The Lady Eve , Sullivan's Travels , The Great McGinty , Hail the Conquering Hero and The Miracle of Morgan's Creek , Sturges (1898-1959) led a fabled, boom-or-bust life, as frenetic and full as one of his movies. His eccentric mother, Mary Desti, owned a perfume house (the Maison Desti) and traveled extensively with her best friend and one of Sturges's artistic influences, dancer Isadora Duncan. His adoptive father was a staid, reassuring Chicago stockbroker. After achieving an overnight success as a playwright, Sturges went to Hollywood and became one of the first writers who directed his own work. At his height of popularity, he was the third-highest paid person in the U.S., but because he lived lavishly, was generous with friends, dabbled in many money-losing businesses, and never saved, he died penniless--after spending most of the the last decade of his life writing scripts that were never produced. Author of Hollywood Renaissance and a book about Woody Allen, Jacobs offers a detailed account of Sturges's life and work, filling in many of the gaps in Sturges's autobiography that appeared two years ago. Unfortunately, her narrative is too dry for such a witty, colorful subject. Photos not seen by PW.
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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