George Cukor
A Double Life
The definitive biography of master director George Cukor—a New York Times Notable Book
416 Pages
- eBook
- 9780816684885
- Published: February 1, 2013
Details
George Cukor
A Double Life
ISBN: 9780816684885
Publication date: February 1st, 2013
416 Pages
0 x 0
"Full of information about every aspect of Cukor’s career and refreshingly candid about his sexuality, McGilligan’s book throws some much-needed light on Gay Hollywood in the heyday of the studios." —The Advocate
"This funny and surprising book, with its vigorous portrait of Hollywood’s most glamorous age, is an exemplary critical biography and an important film book. It propels Patrick McGilligan into the front ranks of film biographers." —The Washington Post Book World
"McGilligan’s biography is the defense that Cukor could never bring himself to write. Much more than just a posthumous ‘outing,’ it gives Cukor his full due as a director of both style and wit, whose long career is all the more impressive given the double life he was forced to live." —Los Angeles Times Book Review
One of the highest-paid studio contract directors of his time, George Cukor was nominated five times for an Academy Award as Best Director. In publicity and mystique he was dubbed the “women’s director” for guiding the most sensitive leading ladies to immortal performances, including Greta Garbo, Ingrid Bergman, Judy Garland, and—in ten films, among them The Philadelphia Story and Adam’s Rib—his lifelong friend and collaborator Katharine Hepburn. But behind the “women’s director” label lurked the open secret that set Cukor apart from a generally macho fraternity of directors: he was a homosexual, a rarity among the top echelon. Patrick McGilligan’s biography reveals how Cukor persevered within a system fraught with bigotry while becoming one of Hollywood’s consummate filmmakers.
Patrick McGilligan’s biographies include the Edgar-nominated Alfred Hitchcock: A Life in Darkness and Light and Fritz Lang: The Nature of the Beast, a New York Times Notable Book. He coauthored (with Paul Buhle) the classic oral history Tender Comrades: A Backstory of the Hollywood Blacklist (Minnesota, 2012).