'I've been protected by studio publicity men most of
my life, so in some ways I'm a goddam image, not a
person. I was a commodity, a piece of property...I felt
an overwhelming obligation to my career, and so I was an
actress first, a wife second. I worked almost
constantly, and even when I wasn't working, there was
that image thing of looking like a star, conducting
myself like a star. I just went ahead like a bulldozer.
I was a very selfish woman'. Joan Crawford was a
complex, contradictory, driven human being, but not the
alcoholic, sadistic monster depicted in the notorious
book, ''Mommie Dearest'', which appeared a year after
her death. In some ways, Donald Spoto's ''Possessed'' is
the ultimate Hollywood book - about a young woman, poor,
abandoned by her father, but determined at all costs to
succeed. Born in Texas, Lucille Fay LeSueur escaped
destitution by becoming a popular dancer and then
managed to make the decisive leap that transformed her
into a luminous, unique star of the screen. She became
Joan Crawford. There were many important men in her
life, not least Clark Gable, with whom she appeared in
eight pictures and with whom she conducted a thirty-year
affair.She was married four times, once to the debonair
Douglas Fairbanks Jr, unaware that he had failed to
discontinue his relationship with Marlene Dietrich.
Dancer, dramatic actress, businesswoman, corporate
executive with Pepsi-Cola, Joan Crawford during her
lifetime (1906 - 1977) was rarely out of the news. With
the use of only recently opened archives and personal
papers, Donald Spoto probes behind the lurid headlines
to bring us Joan Crawford, the private person as well as
the movie legend. |
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