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As Memorable Today As It Was Almost Fifty Years Ago: A Comic Charmer With Solid SubstanceReview Date: 2008-10-30
the love of a girl and a blind boy and their problems.Review Date: 1999-06-25
'Butterflies'is a testament to the power of love.Review Date: 1999-02-22
A match is made even through their differences. Don and Jill start to fall for each other, Jill never giving much thought to the fact that Don is blind. That is, until Don's mother appears on the scene, eager to take her son back to Scarsdale. What transpires is a battle to free Don of the perennial 'apron-strings' that bind him. Jill discovers that she must give up some of her freedom if she wants to be with Don, and Mrs. Baker must give her son more if she truly loves him.
Leonard Gershe uses humor and pervasive sarcasm to chip away at the intensity of the storyline. He shows how love can help a person change themselves, and does so in a way that can only be described as enthralling. As riske and hilariously funny as it is in the first act is how touching, bittersweet, and poignant it is in the second. It is a human, universal story, a beautiful way of describing different types of love.
An hour out of your timeReview Date: 2000-04-07

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A great novelization of the coming-of-age movieReview Date: 1998-06-15
so good... I loved it.Review Date: 1998-07-17
It was a really fun book to read!Review Date: 1998-08-21
CAN'T HARDLY WAITReview Date: 1999-01-24

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Perfect for the backyardigans fan!Review Date: 2006-07-25
THis is such a fun book for us to read at bedtime together.
If she feels like it she gets to "read" along with me when I get to the picture clues.
Ever since they came out with the backyardigans books she wants at least one read everynight at bedtime. I really dont get sick of them myself, yet :).
3 1/2 Year Old Daughter LOVES This bookReview Date: 2006-03-31
My Daughter loves this book and memorized it in the first day. She reads it daily.
Great Book for Beginner ReadersReview Date: 2006-04-18
In the softcover book Castaways!, Uniqua, Pablo, and Tyrone pretend that their leaky ship was lost at sea, and now they're stranded on a desert island.
What they don't realize is that Austin has been "stranded", too, but he's too shy to say "Ahoy!" to the rest of the castaways.
While Uniqua, Pablo, and Tyrone look for wood, vines and leaves to build a hut for shelter, they soon realize that everything they need mysteriously shows up. Where did it come from? Could it be that they aren't alone on the island?
Castaways! is a Level 1 Ready-to-Read book which uses simple stories and rebuses to help teach reading. My son loves this book and can now read it on his own. It's a colorful, engaging bedtime story for younger children, and good for older children who are beginning to read.
GREAT book!Review Date: 2006-01-21
It's a long book for a little one, but it's great since the story is simple, cute, and fun to read!!

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Just Excellent!Review Date: 2004-07-10
Fantastic book on an often over-looked directorReview Date: 2004-08-20
DeMille was not really that simple of a person. He made some very personal films, some really entertaining films, and even some daring films for the time. Although he was politically conservative, several of his films preached the dangers of religious intolerance. His battle with the Radio performer's union was a matter of principle, and not money. And while the stereotypical Hollywood director was modeled on him, part of it was an act. DeMille had a great respect for his actors, as long as they were professional. DeMille also had a sense of humor, as some of his cameo appearances in films show.
Robert Birchard has assembled an incredible history of DeMille's film and radio work. DeMille was around during the birth of Paramount in 1915, and he was still a successful director all of the way through the 1950s. Using DeMille's original papers, telegrams from studio moguls like Jesse Lasky, and other direct sources of information.
You will read about DeMille's struggles with technical issues like poorly perforated film stock, cameramen, good and difficult actors, and pressure from management to get his films completed on time and under budget. Mr. Birchard has viewed all of DeMille's films that still exist, and he gives a candid review of all of them. The book also contains very detailed cast and crew listings, a list of DeMille's many cameo appearances, and everything is painstakingly documented in the end notes.
I can guarantee you that after reading this book, you will be very tempted to rent or buy a Cecil B. DeMille film and rediscover this master director yourself.
Hollywood's Epic FilmmakerReview Date: 2004-06-23
Today, of course, DeMille is remembered for "The Ten Commandments" and "The Greatest Show on Earth," but Demille was far more than that. The Great Man directed westerns and bedroom comedies, time travel adventures (in the silent days, no less), and even a musical.
Remarkably, most of Cecil B. DeMille's five decades of film work survive, and Robert Birchard has seen all fifty years worth, and written about each film in a lucid, graceful prose; Birchard has delivered a feast of information for anyone who's interested in the history of Hollywood. (Did you know that Charlton Heston, the star of "The Ten Commandments," was making less than Yul Brynner? Did you know that during the filming of C.B.'s FIRST "Ten Commandments" (a gargantuan hit in 1923) that the slaves who were supposedly sweltering in the Egyptian desert were actually extras on the central California coast FREEZING in chilly Spring weather, and who bundled themselves into coats as soon as the director yelled "Cut"? Mr. Birchard lets us in on the behind-the-scenes action on each of C.B's films (each movie has its own individual chapter), as well as when the films were shot, when they were released, what they cost and what they made at the box office.
This is a book for anyone who wants to know where American films have been...and how we got to where we are today.
Surprisingly in-depth and thorough researchReview Date: 2006-04-16
Another highlight for me personally is how the book goes through DeMille's films chronologically, with a chapter on almost every film he directed (and he produced many more) often giving a summary of the plot, which is especially interesting in the case of his early silent films which are not readily available at present. Besides details of cast, crew and plot, many business aspects of the film industry are related, giving an overall comprehensive story of the course of DeMille's career such as how he moved from one type of film to another, or from one studio to another when circumstances changed. Even though this book deals with hard facts only, it is easy and enjoyable to read, and does not get bogged down with too much detail. As a bonus, there are sections of many good photos, further notes and information in the appendixes for anyone who is looking for more in-depth material. For anyone interested in DeMille's work and getting a realistic look into the film industry from the early 1910s onwards, this book will definitely fit the bill.

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fabulous bookReview Date: 1998-04-24
U must read thisReview Date: 2002-05-04
Great series I love it!Review Date: 1998-03-21
another amazing book!!!Review Date: 1997-12-05

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It's all that jazz!Review Date: 2008-10-25
AMAZING!!! THE BEST YET!!!Review Date: 2003-06-13
Difficult to play, but fun to have!Review Date: 2003-06-21
Chicago: A Musical VaudevilleReview Date: 2003-05-18

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GREAT READING!Review Date: 2000-09-10
GREAT READING!Review Date: 2000-09-10
Great for Film Students - not for the general public or fanReview Date: 2000-11-15
Walken deserves betterReview Date: 2000-08-24

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A+Review Date: 2008-06-20
The Cuisine of CinemaReview Date: 2005-09-10
I Love This Cookbook!!Review Date: 2004-11-20
Individual recipes are served up with an on-air witReview Date: 2003-11-14


A Self-Made ManReview Date: 2008-11-03
Soister does it again!Review Date: 2000-06-01
A great bookReview Date: 2008-04-22
Exceeded expectationsReview Date: 2008-04-13

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What a great book !Review Date: 2001-04-03
YOU SHOULD DEFINETLY READ ITReview Date: 2000-04-24
This is the most spiritual series and it has changed my lifeReview Date: 1999-08-23
The Most Rewarding Series I've Ever Read!Review Date: 1999-03-31
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BUTTERFLIES ARE FREE was suggested by the life of Harold Krents (1944-1987), who was so skillful that he attained national celebrity when his local draft board refused to believe he was in fact blind and classified him as eligible for military duty. Kent, who studied at Harvard and Oxford and became a noted Washington D.C. attorney, worked closely with playwright Leonard Gershe, serving as technical advisor to the play and ensuring that the play depicted both blindness and the coping skills the blind use in an accurate and unsentimental manner.
Set in the late 1960s, the play concerns Don Baker, a young blind man who has spent his life being cared for by his wealthy family--but who now feels that he spent his life inside a comfortable but restrictive cocoon. Desperate to break out, he leaves his mother's Scarsdale home for a low-rent apartment in New York, where his next door neighbor turns out to be Jill, a free-spirited hippie chick who has lived her life running from emotional responsibilities. Jill is astonished to learn that Don is blind; she is also sexually and emotionally attracted to him, and the two soon begin an affair. But they reckon without Don's mother, who appears on the scene determined to coax Don back to the safety of home. And she is not above playing on Jill's resistence to emotional involvement to motivate Don to come back home.
At the time, BUTTERFLIES ARE FREE was considered a bit of a sexual shocker, for Jill takes Don to bed in a very casual manner--and much of the second act is played with the actors stripped down to their underwear after clearly having spent the past few hours in bed with each other. It wasn't something that was done on Broadway at the time, and one reason the play sold so well was the titillation factor involved. But audiences that came to the play just for the sight of skin also found themselves at an extremely well-written comedy-drama with very strong dramatic underpinnings: how blind people manage in the sighted world, the many challenges they face and risks the must take, and to top it off the story of a mother so concerned for her son that she would rather suffocate him than let him take the risks necessary for him to grow up.
The script is particularly memorable for its witty zingers, and although these do not always read well on the page I have seen the play in an excellent production and can attest to the fact that they do indeed work on the stage; the audience roars with laughter. Yes, BUTTERFLIES ARE FREE is indeed a "light" play, but it's light qualities are supported by supported by excellent construction and thematic foundations that continue to resonate. Strongly recommended.
GFT, Amazon Reviewer