Kirk Douglas: More Is Never Enough
Kirk Douglas was the son of Russian-Jewish immigrants, his father a collector and seller of rags. After service in the Navy during World War II, he moved to Hollywood, oozing masculinity and charm. Conquering Tinseltown and bedding its leading ladies, he became the personification of the American dream, moving from obscurity and (literally) rags to riches and major-league fame.

En route to his status as a myth and legend, his performances reflected both his personal pain and the brutalization of the characters he played, too. In Champion (1949), he was beaten to a fatal bloody pulp. As the sleazy, heartless reporter in Ace in the Hole (1951), he was stabbed with a knife in his gut. As Van Gogh in Lust for Life (1956), he writhed in emotional agony and unrequited love before slicing off his ear with a razor. His World War I movie, Paths of Glory (1957), grows more profound over the years. He lost an eye in The Vikings (1958), and, as the Thracian slave leading a revolt against Roman legions in Spartacus (1960), he was crucified.

All of this is brought out, with photos and stories you’ve probably never heard before, in this remarkable testimonial to the last hero of Hollywood’s swashbuckling Golden Age, an inspiring testimonial to the values and core beliefs of an America that’s Gone With the Wind, yet lovingly remembered as a time when it, in many ways, was truly great.
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Kirk Douglas: More Is Never Enough
Kirk Douglas was the son of Russian-Jewish immigrants, his father a collector and seller of rags. After service in the Navy during World War II, he moved to Hollywood, oozing masculinity and charm. Conquering Tinseltown and bedding its leading ladies, he became the personification of the American dream, moving from obscurity and (literally) rags to riches and major-league fame.

En route to his status as a myth and legend, his performances reflected both his personal pain and the brutalization of the characters he played, too. In Champion (1949), he was beaten to a fatal bloody pulp. As the sleazy, heartless reporter in Ace in the Hole (1951), he was stabbed with a knife in his gut. As Van Gogh in Lust for Life (1956), he writhed in emotional agony and unrequited love before slicing off his ear with a razor. His World War I movie, Paths of Glory (1957), grows more profound over the years. He lost an eye in The Vikings (1958), and, as the Thracian slave leading a revolt against Roman legions in Spartacus (1960), he was crucified.

All of this is brought out, with photos and stories you’ve probably never heard before, in this remarkable testimonial to the last hero of Hollywood’s swashbuckling Golden Age, an inspiring testimonial to the values and core beliefs of an America that’s Gone With the Wind, yet lovingly remembered as a time when it, in many ways, was truly great.
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Kirk Douglas: More Is Never Enough

Kirk Douglas: More Is Never Enough

Kirk Douglas: More Is Never Enough

Kirk Douglas: More Is Never Enough

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Overview

Kirk Douglas was the son of Russian-Jewish immigrants, his father a collector and seller of rags. After service in the Navy during World War II, he moved to Hollywood, oozing masculinity and charm. Conquering Tinseltown and bedding its leading ladies, he became the personification of the American dream, moving from obscurity and (literally) rags to riches and major-league fame.

En route to his status as a myth and legend, his performances reflected both his personal pain and the brutalization of the characters he played, too. In Champion (1949), he was beaten to a fatal bloody pulp. As the sleazy, heartless reporter in Ace in the Hole (1951), he was stabbed with a knife in his gut. As Van Gogh in Lust for Life (1956), he writhed in emotional agony and unrequited love before slicing off his ear with a razor. His World War I movie, Paths of Glory (1957), grows more profound over the years. He lost an eye in The Vikings (1958), and, as the Thracian slave leading a revolt against Roman legions in Spartacus (1960), he was crucified.

All of this is brought out, with photos and stories you’ve probably never heard before, in this remarkable testimonial to the last hero of Hollywood’s swashbuckling Golden Age, an inspiring testimonial to the values and core beliefs of an America that’s Gone With the Wind, yet lovingly remembered as a time when it, in many ways, was truly great.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781936003624
Publisher: Blood Moon Productions
Publication date: 05/01/2019
Series: Blood Moon's Babylon Series
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 624
File size: 22 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

About the Author

Darwin Porter is the award-winning, widely reviewed author of at almost 50 groundbreaking exposés of celebrities who found fame, pain, glory, and anguish on their way to the scandal-soaked fulfillment of their hopes and dreams.



Danforth Prince, President and Founder of Blood Moon Productions and co-author of some of the early editions of THE FROMMER TRAVEL GUIDES, is also the Innkeeper for MagnoliaHouseSaintGeorge.com, a historic, “celebrity-centric” AirBnb on Staten Island in New York City.
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