Arts and Entertainment Books
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A Hawaiian Life: A Most Captivating BiographyReview Date: 2002-03-26
A Book For Anyone Who Loves Hawai'iReview Date: 2001-01-17
More story George, please!Review Date: 2001-04-25

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Henning Kronstam: Portrait of a Danish DancerReview Date: 2002-11-25
A beautifully written book about an extraordinary manReview Date: 2002-11-02
The fact that the book is called "Portrait of a *Danish* Dancer" (rather than simply "Portrait of a Dancer") puzzled me at first. But Ms. Tomalonis has thoroughly captured Kronstam's complex personality, and in many ways that personality was the Danish national character in microcosm. It seems that many of Kronstam's inherent strengths and weaknesses were reinforced by the societal expectations of both his family and his nation. This may have contributed, consciously or unconsciously, to Kronstam's choice to remain in Copenhagen for his entire career when others chose to leave to pursue international recognition with foreign companies.
The book succeeds on so many levels. It has all the hallmarks of a good biography. The author, who personally met with and interviewed her subject extensively and also spoke with scores of his relatives and colleagues, discusses Kronstam's personal matters with tact and dignity. She portrays Kronstam with a kind of tenderness that does not detract from her clear-eyed understanding of him. The fact that Kronstam, an intensely private person, was comfortable and candid enough to reveal as much as he did to her bespeaks a level of trust in the author that few biographers enjoy. Inspite of the pervasive sadness of Kronstam's story at the end of his life, when she met with him, Ms. Tomalonis is able to show Kronstam's warmth and humor as well. It gives Kronstam an aura of nobility which he, in his typical humility, would probably have derided.
For balletomanes, like me, the book showcases Ms. Tomalonis' depth of both historical and current ballet expertise. Her writing style is so fluent and graceful, however, that the wealth of ballet detail never interferes with the book's story line. One can sense that this very expertise was part of the common language between author and subject that made it possible for Kronstam to communicate his thoughts so effectively to the author.
Finally, for anyone interested in understanding the creative process, there is a unique opportunity to hear Kronstam's own recollections of how he developed his roles, how he was able to inhabit a role with his characteristic intensity. Several of the modern ballets in which he created characters contain harrowing psychological plot lines, and one can only wonder how Kronstam was able to both shield and use his own vulnerabilities to bring these works to life. This section of the book should be required reading for dancers, because it illuminates the thoughtfulness and dedication required of any intelligent performer who wants to do more than execute steps and pantomime emotions. Actors, I am told, embrace the opportunity to "be" their characters, to try on other lives. Here Kronstam conveys that process in a human and insightful way. Ms. Tomalonis somehow manages to make herself invisible during these passages, so that it is Kronstam who emerges with tremendous immediacy... Kronstam could have expected no greater tribute than to have his story told with so much grace and feeling.
The Self-Eclipsed StarReview Date: 2002-10-27

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A GLORIOUS and STUNNING photographic theater book!Review Date: 2008-09-09
Buy this glorious book for yourself and a friend. It's sure to become an instant favorite that you'll go back too (as I have) time and time again.
Thank you Leonard Jacobs, for thinking "outside of the box" when putting together this book and giving these otherwise forgotten theater actors and theater houses a new life in the 21 century!
Enjoy!
M. Ortiz (Jersey City, NJ)
A True Masterpiece of TheaterReview Date: 2008-07-10
What a treat to find a book about the NY Theater that is NOT the same old tired pictures and dramaturgy.
The exceptional pictures - rarely if ever used before are a true theater lover's delight.
If you love the theater and or love New York this book is for you.
The author lovingly gives details for each of these pictures and it is clearly obvious that Mr. Jacob's knowledge and love of all things theatrical is far reaching.
Don't miss this, it belongs in your collection
Great Photos of Great TheaterReview Date: 2008-07-23
What makes the book compelling is that, rather than focusing on the well known stars and shows of recent memory, Jacobs skews his coverage toward older and lesser known people, places, and productions. I was especially pleased to see photos from obscure but significant shows that I cover in my Boston Conservatory course, including:
The Black Crook: (1866) What many historians consider to be the first American musical, actually just the first long-running, home-grown hit. A loosely plotted spectacle peppered with irrelevant songs as well as dances from a homeless troupe of French ballet dancers. The theater that the dancers were supposed to have performed in burned down, and the producer of The Black Crook simply added them to the mix, with no connection whatsoever to the show's Faustian plot.
Babes in Toyland: (1903) The first significant show with a score by one person, rather than a collection of previously existing popular songs. Composer Victor Herbert also made the first significant use of underscoring and connecting music.
Very Good Eddie: (1915) The first of the influential, but now largely forgotten, "Princess" musicals, so named because most of the shows played the Princess Theater (demolished in 1955). The production team of Jerome Kern (music), Guy Bolton (book) and P.G. Wodehouse (lyrics) came together to create a new type a musical, one that would attempt to integrate all the elements into a cohesive whole. The "Princess" shows (which also include Oh, Lady! Lady!, Oh, Boy!, and Sitting Pretty) were fluffy, fun, and economical, and greatly influenced such future greats as Richard Rodgers and George Gershwin.
Shuffle Along: (1921) The first successful Broadway musical produced, written, and performed by African Americans. The show broke color barriers on both sides of the footlights: it was also the first time blacks were allowed to sit in the orchestra. It was a separate section of the orchestra, but it represented the beginning of the end of segregation in the theater. The show itself was offensive by modern standards: the actors performed in blackface, and the song titles included "If You Haven't Been Vamped by a Brownskin, You Haven't Been Vamped at All" and "Uncle Tom and Old Black Joe."
Of course, the Jacobs book also features photos of such iconic musical performers as Mary Martin and Ethel Merman, and of such seminal musical works as Oklahoma!, Guys and Dolls, and Fiddler on the Roof. Plus, it's a great book for people like me: adults with ADD who don't always like to read things cover to cover, but rather just skim and skip around to our hearts' content. As the title suggests, the book comprises photos with captions, albeit in chronological order, but that doesn't mean you have to read the book that way.

The Hollywood Cookbook, Cooking For CausesReview Date: 2007-10-25
Great Recipes!Review Date: 2006-11-27
Cooking for CausesReview Date: 2006-11-08
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A totally indespensible three volume delight!Review Date: 2003-03-06
A Treasure Trove of DelightReview Date: 2003-03-09
A LABOR OF LOVE THAT MUST BE ACKNOWLEDGEDReview Date: 2003-01-14
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An autobiography that reads like an adventurous novel!Review Date: 1998-12-25
how can a human being have to endure this?Review Date: 1998-12-26
Of what "stuff" are you made? Find out in this true tale.Review Date: 1997-08-24

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A keen examination of the film and television casting process for popular modern-day shows Review Date: 2005-09-08
From the PublisherReview Date: 2005-02-12
Rob Kendt is the former Editor-in-Chief of Back Stage West magazine and is a contributing theatre critic for the Los Angeles Times.
"What all casting directors are waiting for, hoping for - dying for - is that one actor who comes in and blows them away with his or her reading. Every audition is a chance to strut your stuff, to make the casting director a fan of your talent. The bottom line: A good casting director never forgets a great actor."
- Ellie Kanner, casting director
Friends, Sex and the City, author of How NOT to Audition: Avoiding the Common Mistakes Most Actors Make (2004)
Highly Recommended for the ActorReview Date: 2005-06-10
It is so easy if you don't get a part, to think somehow you did something wrong or to feel like a failure. Well, this book will show you all the things that the Casting Directors and the Powers-That-Be go through to find the right Cast for a TV Show or Movie. I never realized how complicated it can be, and this book was a real eye-opener.
Just reading about the casting of "Friends", and the failed pilots some of the actors were in before they hit it big - well, it just amazed me. And that Lisa Kudrow almost ended up on Fraiser instead ... wow....
If you are an Actor, this book will give you a better understanding of the side of the Biz that you never see. I highly recommend it.


A Fake Giant in a World of Pygmies?Review Date: 2001-02-18
In his interview for the Film Music Archive, Hugo Friedhofer tells it like it is, and the book shows that he is not fake, but was a real giant in the Hollywood that used to be littered with talent and quality. Even if you know little about film music, this book is great history of the Hollywood of yesterday.
A Fake Giant in a World of Pygmies?Review Date: 2001-02-18
In his interview for the Film Music Archive, Hugo Friedhofer tells it like it is, and the book shows that he is not fake, but was a real giant in the Hollywood that used to be littered with talent and quality. Even if you know little about film music, this book is great history of the Hollywood of yesterday.
A rare look at a fascinating composer's life!Review Date: 1999-06-26

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Hysterical and witty!Review Date: 2008-06-28
Excellent serviceReview Date: 2008-03-15
Spiritual TestamentReview Date: 2004-01-23

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The words that comforted Elvis & ME!Review Date: 2002-02-11
The book that caused Elvis to hear his callReview Date: 2001-08-02
The answer is in this book. The book is not about Elvis. It has a little introduction about how Elvis used this book. "The Impersonal Life" was actually first published anonymously in 1916. The author has been discovered but little is known about the author. Elvis bought this book by the case and gave it out freely to friends and acquaintences. He read this book over and over and over, underlining and putting notes in the margins. He absorbed the meaning of the book and you know that is true after you read it.
The book's content is very spiritually fulfilling. It does not include religous language, symbolism or dogma but it is very spiritual. "I AM" is speaking to the reader. On page 122 it reads "I may be expressing through you beautiful symphonies of sound, color or language, that manifest as music, art or poetry, according to mortal terminology, and which so affects others as to cause them to acclaim you as one of the great ones of the day."
Does that not say what Elvis was about? This book contains the words that caused Elvis to hear and understand his call. The book is small and very easy to read. It is rich with Spirit speaking and it compels you to live out your life answering your call, whatever that may be. Wow! I am glad I discovered this book. I, too, will read it over many times. It's definitely worth more than its weight in gold.
A diamond of a little book (will move YOU like Elvis!)Review Date: 2002-06-11
This book has little to do with Elvis, except that he loved it second only to the Bible, handed out hundreds of copies to friends...and it enlightened and inspired him. The Impersonal Life was written in the early twentieth century by the enigmantic Joseph S. Brenner, who wrote and published it under the pen name ANONYMOUS.
So what is it? Firstly, it is definitely a little but very profound book. DeVorss' special Graceland-authorized edition (with a young and thin Elvis on the cover) is tiny enough to carry in your pants or jacket pocket, purse, carry on luggage etc.
Secondly, it's basically an early 20th century version of Conversations With God, although it does not venture near some of the controversial areas that the later (and I think inferior) volumes of that contemporary book did.
The Impersonal Life is also seems like a first-person work(the author speaking as that spark of divinity he contends is within all of us) that could have been written by the great Ernest Holmes, author of the landmark Science of Mind writings. Its core idea is that your mind is linked to a Higher Power so a "Thinker is a Creator...(who) lives in a world of his own conscious creation."
Brenner, writing as the voice of God and appealing and explaining to each reader's own divine spark, writes that "every thing, every condition, every event that ever transpired was first an idea in the mind. It was by desiring, by thinking, and by speaking forth the Word, that these ideas came into visible manifestation."
Why did Elvis care and be influenced by The Impersonal Life -- and why should YOU? This little book, with each of its words as potent as literary dynamite blasting away earthly mental clutter and worries, stresses the importance of belief and nonshakeable FAITH...and argues that inspiration and intuitive flashes just don't happen. There's a reason. And if you follow these impersonal flashes you can live an impersonal life....uplifted from the personal human concerns and preoccupations, better focused on spiritual concerns and increasingly empowered with increasingly documentable spiritual power.
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