In 1954, Shirley Bassey was seventeen years old. She
had just returned from a cheesy revue tour called 'Hot
from Harlem'. Depressed, disillusioned and four months'
pregnant, she decided that her dream of being a
professional singer was over. A mere ten years later,
she was one of the biggest stars in the world. She had
sold more records than any other British singer of the
day, and was poised to conquer America. Her latest hit,
'Goldfinger', was the theme tune to the year's
blockbuster film. No longer the two-bit jazz singer from
Cardiff, she was by now an international sex siren, as
glamorous and unreal as Bond himself. Miss Shirley
Bassey explores this remarkable transformation, both of
an individual and of the British society and British
psyche that made it possible. From the vibrant,
multicultural oasis of Tiger Bay in the Cardiff
docklands through the club-lands of Soho and Las Vegas
to New York's Carnegie Hall, it is a journey from mere
mortal to international icon. Along the way she would
encounter homosexual husbands, predatory managers,
newspaper scandals, and a range of friends and
acquaintances from Sammy Davis Jr to Reggie Kray. John
L.Williams draws on original research and interviews to
provide a portrait of a young woman on the cusp of
stardom, whose rise to fame was in many ways symbolic of
a changing world. Brilliantly written non-fiction in the
style of David Peace's The Damned Utd or Nick Tosches'
Dino, this is the story of a woman who set out to be
extraordinary and - against all the odds -
succeeded. |
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