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Art Carney: A Biography
 
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Art Carney: A Biography (Kindle Edition)

by Michael Seth Starr (Author)
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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  Kindle Edition, March 31, 1997 $9.99 -- --
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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Capering into fame as Jackie Gleason's sidekick in The Honeymooners, Art Carney proved later that he was no mere television personality but a real actor. He originated the part of neurotic Felix in Neil Simon's 1965 Broadway smash The Odd Couple, and his dual role in Brian Friel's Lovers garnered a 1968 Tony nomination; he won an Academy Award in 1974 for his poignant performance in Harry and Tonto. Michael Seth Starr traces this varied career with perception and empathy, revealing a hard-drinking, introverted, extremely private man totally unlike the blithely goofy Ed Norton.


From Booklist

The story of Carney's career as a funnyman overlaps the story of his battle against alcoholism. Starr's workmanlike account of Carney's dual life adopts a friendly tone that jibes with Carney's comfy-old-shoe acting persona, which so well fit his role as a great second banana to Jackie Gleason that people were surprised when he became a star in his own right. Starr dismisses rumors that Gleason plotted to deny Carney recognition--indeed, dismisses them so often that you start to wonder. Carney's battle with the bottle furnishes a better clue to why proper recognition eluded him. Then again, even with the alcoholism, he won six Emmies fairly early in his career and later an Oscar and a Tony nomination. Because he created three classic comic characters--Ed Norton while with Gleason, The Odd Couple's Felix Unger, and Harry Combes in Harry and Tonto Carney demands a good biography. Starr's fills the bill very adequately, though not flashily. Mike Tribby

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Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An interesting, absorbing book about a show business giant, March 15, 1999
By A Customer
A pleasure to read! Starr's account of the life of this incredibly talented actor deserves great recognition! One has a true compassion for the trials of Art's life and how he has overcome adversity so completely. The casual observer will be surprised to learn of Carney's range as an actor(it could have been titled "There's More Than Norton"!). The only mild criticism is the jumbling of the storyline sequencing in both "Harry and Tonto" and "Going in Style". This book was a delight and I appreciate Mr. Starr taking the initiative to put this great chronicle together! Steve Schockow Brighton, NY
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Dull book about a comic genius, March 21, 2000
By A Customer
It's hard to believe that someone could write a boring book about somebody as funny as Art Carney,but Michael Starr did it.I had to struggle to finish the book.You get almost no sense of what made Carney a comic genius.Starr instead prefers to write at length about Carney's drinking problem and depression.Frankly,it got tedious after awhile.You'll noyice that there's been only one other review of this book in the 3 years that it's been out.Other reader's must have followed the old maxim"If you can't say something nice,don't say anything at all."
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3.0 out of 5 stars Interesting book, but 3 stars because it makes a dangerous assumption; "Honeymooners" fans, be careful, September 3, 2009
By Scott MacGillivray (Massachusetts, USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)      
This might have been a wonderful, well-rounded chronicle of Art Carney's life, but it's rather disappointing because the author makes a dangerous assumption.

If you're looking for a "Honeymooners Companion," this isn't it. Although the front cover features a big mug shot of Carney as happy-go-lucky "Ed Norton," the actual text AVOIDS Norton in favor of Carney's overall career as a working actor. The author assumes that everybody knows Norton, and gives the character little more than casual mention and only one photograph. The author concedes that Norton was Art Carney's most famous character, but tells the reader nothing about what made him so special. No examples of Carney's comic cleverness and improvisations on the set, no descriptions of classic Norton bits, nothing about how the "Honeymooners" shows were staged. The entire life span of the series is introduced and then dismissed within only three paragraphs: it went on, it wasn't a huge hit first-run, it caught on in reruns. And that's all, because it is assumed that we know. Not one of the 39 episodes is described, or mentioned by title. Art Carney's pivotal character comes across as merely a footnote in his own biography.

Surprisingly for a comedian's story, there is little joy in the book. Most of the behind-the-scenes anecdotes dwell on Carney's problems with alcoholism and their effect on his personal and professional life. The author quotes many of Carney's colleagues, who offer their impressions of what went wrong. It is a measure of Carney's integrity that he always managed to pull himself back together and go from strength to strength. The reader admires how the actor battled his personal demons, but because the thrust of the book is distorted, the face of the subject is indistinct. We don't get to know him as well as we'd like. Many of his achievements and appearances are mentioned either in passing or not at all.

Carney's life story is interesting and the author doesn't sugar-coat the backstage drama, so "Art Carney: A Biography" is recommended with reservations. This reader likes Art Carney, as a comedian and as a dramatic actor, and it's good to see him recognized as a versatile performer. But the book might as well be titled "Where's Norton?"
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars AAAART CARNEY!!!!!
Any fan of the Honeymooners (I was tempted to write "even casual" but with that show, you've got to be a huge fan from day one)) will love this book; or anyone who got see Art on... Read more
Published on June 3, 2007 by Phil S.

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