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7 Reviews
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16 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Fantastique!,
By A Customer
This review is from: Josephine Baker: The Hungry Heart (Paperback)
A perfectly balanced expose of this legendary and highly complex superstar: Amoral in extremis, manic and delusional, but blessed with indomitable human spirit. Excellent historical perspective throughout. A beautifully written biography which does not succumb to the tawdry, despite its detailed narrative of Josephine Baker's pathologically decadent lifestyle. Absolutely the best biography of J.B., bar none. A Must Read for Paris cabaret enthusiasts.
18 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
THE inside scoop on Miss Josephine,
By A Customer
This review is from: Josephine Baker: The Hungry Heart (Paperback)
This is a biography of LaBaker written by one of her many adopted children. He gives the inside dish on his mom, including that both she and his adopter father were gay. He points out too that she did have some self-loathing issues regarding her race as well. This book has a great photo section. It helped me to see the ugly side of Josephine that wasn't fully presented in the great movie by HBO. I am not sure it is the best work out there, but it is a must-read for any Josephine fans and scholars. In addition, people that study Black Americans abroad or French naturalized citizens should read this.
10 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
An Absorbing Read,
By Zarah Mayes-Orowitz (Chicago, IL United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Josephine Baker: The Hungry Heart (Paperback)
Jean-Claude gives a well balanced account of the life and times of Josephine Baker. With unabashed frankness he describes her sexual escapades and decadent appetites, her manipulative and cunning business dealings, and her unbelievable selfishness. This biography paints a very clear picture of the woman who gave definition to the term "diva." Her demands of those who handled her and worked for her would go beyond unreasonable. For instance, she would borrow enormous sums of money from friends and would never pay them back, and would then call on them again for more favors as if she had never defrauded them. There was no request too outrageous for this woman to make. Realizing that her family in St. Louis was suffering the horrendous racial atrocities of America, she brought them to her home in France only to use them to work for her on her estate. At one point she disowned her brother because he would not allow her to adopt his child and raise it as her own. She would work her nurses, her maids, and the children's tutors so hard that the turnover became virtually unmanageable. Her maids would work extremely long hours, and as a result her employees became disgruntled and would often steal from her. She used men like one would use Kleenex. She brazenly carried on affairs with married men, some of whom were husbands of friends and fellow-entertainers. She engaged in enumerable sexual affairs (and orgies) with both men and women. Wild goings-on aside, she was a consummate entertainer--constantly reinventing herself and giving herself completely to her audience. In an era when black performers suffered atrocious injustices, she perseveared. She'd encountered terrible racism in many cities (especially when she returned to America), so much so that she was turned away from so many hotels that she had to stay with friends while under contract to perform. While not a tell-all tabloid type expose (thankfully), Jean-Claude Baker delivers a thorough account of the life of one of the world's most exciting and enduring icons. If you are a fan of historical figures and of biographies, this one is a must read.
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A fond, passionate portrait of a hard-to-pin-down woman,
By
This review is from: Josephine Baker: The Hungry Heart (Paperback)
Josephine Baker was enigmatic during her lifetime and even more so after her death. A chanteuse, a sex symbol, the mother of 12 adopted children, French Resistance heroine, Baker reinvented herself as often as necessary to stay at the top of her trade - whatever that trade was at any given moment. Jean-Claude Baker (one of her 'adopted' children) chronicles her life in this engaging biography with a mix of love, admiration, and incredulity. The lady had balls, and while not a tell-all book, The Hungry Heart does her ample justice.
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The good, the bad, & the very ugly sides of Josephine Baker,
By rmcrae (Houston, Texas) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Josephine Baker: The Hungry Heart (Paperback)
When most hear the name Josephine Baker, images of her sensually dancing across a stage in nothing but a skirt made of bananas comes to mind. There's much more to her than that and Jean Claude Baker (one of her adopted sons) gives us the dish.
He recounts Tumpy's (a childhood nickname) poor beginnings in St. Louis to her death as a worldwide superstar in Paris. I'd really recommend this book to anyone who wants to know what Josephine was really like. The good, the bad, and the ugly. Good things first, she was an untouchably talented dancer who has continually inspired dancers of all generations even after her death. Her voice, a shrill and lilting instrument, grew to almost Sarah Vaughn like heights. Despite her talents, Josephine could be a selfish and hurtful woman. She had a problem with lying all throughout her life. She never knew her father, but one minute she'd claim he was a successful black lawyer in Chicago and the next he was a simple Jewish man. Her whole early life in St. Louis would be flipped and turned around at her whim, to the point where published accounts would contradict themselves. Luckily, Jean Claude interviewed the people who knew her best and gave true accounts of her personality. She was also extremely promiscuous in her later teens. She went through male and female lovers like underwear and had no hestitation to use others when it would benefit her career. Even her legendary Rainbow Tribe was created out of plain publicity (shout-out to the Octomom). She barely spent time with the kids and left them in the constant care of nannies. She also had a penchant for slapping people she was angry with and her kids were no exception. She even sent one of her boys away to boarding school when she caught him with another boy, despite her own genderbending sexual history. Although Josephine could be downright mean, Jean Claude also reveals her funny and loving side. She made an effort to smother the kids with love when she had time to spend with them and she had a quick wit. Although the negative attitude of Josie is discussed at great length, Jean Claude isn't stepping into "tell all" territory. He obviously loved her, all flaws aside. He just wanted to create a more human portrait of a woman whose life has been clouded in myth and mystery.
5.0 out of 5 stars
A diva life,
By JKH "Bookaholic" (Michigan, USA) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Josephine Baker: The Hungry Heart (Paperback)
Jean-Claude Baker does an excellent job of love and research in his biography of his second mother, Josephine Baker. Through exhaustive interviews and fact-checking (where they can be checked), he sheds as much light as possible on Josephine's early life before she became a star, and the successes and excesses that came after. While obviously loving Josephine and bewitched by her charm and star power, he neither shies away from the star's self-serving side nor fails to describe for the physical and emotional toll her chosen life style cost her. A dramatic, dazzling life story that shows how different celebrities are from the rest of us.
0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Used Book,
By Yvonne Smeltzer (Las Vegas, NV, US) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Josephine Baker: The Hungry Heart (Paperback)
I received the book promptly. It was in very good shape, and i enjoyed reading it.
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Josephine Baker: The Hungry Heart by Jean-Claude Baker (Paperback - July 30, 2001)
$22.95 $14.82
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