The biography of the suave, confident, and charming gentleman who was the original Henry Higgins in My Fair Lady tells of Harrison's modest Liverpool upbringing, his shaky start as an actor, and his six failed marriages. 25,000 first printing. National ad/promo.
"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.
Not very stylish biography of Harrison (1908-90), by Wapshott (Peter O'Toole, 1984). Born Reginald Carey Harrison, the future Henry Higgins was a sickly boy, ``cosseted and nursed by his mother and spoilt by his two sisters, who treated him as a doll to pet and coddle''--which, Wapshott says, set the pattern for his lifelong lack of deep male friendships and need for six wives. While he became a leading Shavian, Harrison found Shakespeare's language too much to handle, never played the Bard after failing as a messenger in Richard III, and, instead, achieved acclaim for his urbanity as a light comedian--although he later stretched himself for his praised Caesar in the Burtons' Cleopatra, for Pirandello, and for the odd serious role. For all the love the world bestowed on him, he apparently was a rude, abysmally self-centered husband who crushed his wives and tromped on his fellow actors. The two great tragedies of his life were the suicide of his mistress, actress Carole Landis, while he was married to Lilli Palmer, and the death from myeloid leukemia of his third wife, Kay Kendall. Harrison kept the fatal nature of her illness a secret from Kendall, who also had been his mistress while he was married to Palmer, who divorced Harrison so that he could marry Kendall for her last year or so, with plans for remarriage once Kendall was dead. When they did not remarry, and Harrison downplayed Palmer's kindness in his autobiography (Rex, 1973, lightly updated in his A Damned Serious Business, 1990), Palmer set the truth straight in her own autobiography. Later, Terrence Rattigan wrote After Lydia, a play about Palmer's last days with Harrison, and Harrison played himself (as a crabbed literary critic) on stage--but only after defanging the critic into a jolly fine chap. Wapshott tells all this rather solemnly, allowing Harrison's waspishness to take on an irresistible gleam through the windowpane prose. (Sixteen pages of b&w photos--not seen.) -- Copyright ©1992, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
British biographer Wapshott ( Peter O'Toole ) offers a readable popular life history of the film and stage actor noted for his sophisticated and charming persona. Best remembered in the U.S. for his portrayal of Prof. Henry Higgins in My Fair Lady , Harrison (1908-1990) was raised in the English middle class and began acting as a teenager, devoting himself to a craft that did not come to him naturally. Wapshott details his subject's long and successful career as well as his personal life, which spanned six marriages and numerous affairs, including one with Hollywood actress Carole Landis that ended in her suicide. While acknowledging Harrison's professionalism and talent, the author depicts him as an egocentric male chauvinist who gave little in his love relationships, except in his marriage to Kay Kendall, to whom he provided emotional support during her losing battle with leukemia. A revealing portrait. Photos. (May) *PAPERBACKS*
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.
(No Available Copies)
Search Books: Create a WantIf you know the book but cannot find it on AbeBooks, we can automatically search for it on your behalf as new inventory is added. If it is added to AbeBooks by one of our member booksellers, we will notify you!
Create a Want