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The biggest surprise of Sikov's perceptive and superbly written new Bette Davis biography is that there are still fascinating details to be discovered after more than a dozen full-length biographies have been devoted to her since her 1989 death. Sikov (On Sunset Boulevard) follows the volatile actress's long career, specifying how her insecurities and craving for love "propelled her into the dueling self-medications of liquor and acting." Even she didn't seem to understand the anger that drove her to "battle everything she encountered, from Hollywood producers to the tarnished brass doorknobs in her many houses." Her personal life was littered with broken marriages, affairs, abortions, feuds and neglected family members, but professionally she created dozens of unforgettable performances. Both sides of her life make for compelling reading. Sikov spends two-thirds of the book documenting the grueling production of most of the 52 films Davis made under her 18-year contract at Warner Bros. These illuminating tales mix familiar lore with newly excavated material. Sikov loses some steam when Davis's film career sputtered in the late 1960s. The last 20 years (when she was "too ornery to die, too driven to sit still, too proud to recede into muted seclusion") is dismissed too quickly in 60 pages. Photos not seen by PW. (Nov.)
Copyright 2007 Reed Business InformationIt's a challenge for Bette Davis biographers to match their subject in wit, flinty charm, and the ability to fascinate. That many fail can't really be held against them; clearly, they want to display a kind of disinterested expertise that the much-interviewed and autobiographically prone Davis would lack. Sikov (On Sunset Boulevard) hinders his narrative flow with his own first-person ruminations and with anecdotes presented out of chronology, elements that were probably injected as variant notes in an otherwise relentless outlay of studio and interpersonal machinations. Heavily detailed about the prime of Davis's Hollywood career and well sourced to other biographies, the book covers much familiar ground-Who can resist those well-known quotations? Yet it cannot capture her as she was captured on celluloid. In Jezebel(1938), Davis and director William Wyler enabled the audience to perceive her willful character in a shocking red dress-in spite of the film being in black and white. While Davis aficionados may not find the book worthwhile, newcomers to this grand woman's life or to Hollywood's golden era may enjoy the bumpy read. Recommended for comprehensive film collections. [See Prepub Alert, LJ7/07.]
—Margaret Heilbrun
bluejayCO
Posted February 22, 2010
Very interesting and easy to read
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.As a BETTE DAVIS fan, I was thrilled to find this well written book by Ed Sikov.
The author presented Bette's life story with respect and great devotion to one of our greatest Holllywood actresses!
Bette had her problems and short-comings (all humans do) and Mr. Sikov did a wonderful job at presenting Bette's personality and her experiences with great care.
In the middle of the book there are photos of Bette as a little baby and little girl, and also of her family, and some shots of Bette later in life. Very interesting.
Anonymous
Posted February 21, 2010
it barely covers Ms Daviss' personal life. It discusses her movies and her behavior on sets which was repeatious. Its hard to follow. DO NOT BUY THIS BOOK.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted January 13, 2010
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Anonymous
Posted July 19, 2011
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Overview
The legendary Hollywood star blazes a fiery trail in this enthralling portrait of a brilliant actress and the movies her talent elevated to greatness She was magnificent and exasperating in equal measure. Jack Warner called her "an explosive little broad with a sharp left." Humphrey Bogart once remarked, "Unless you're very big she can knock you down." Bette Davis was a force of nature--an idiosyncratic talent who nevertheless defined the words "movie star" for more than half a century and who created an extraordinary body of work filled with unforgettable performances.
In Dark Victory, the noted film critic and biographer Ed Sikov paints the most ...