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Warren Beatty: A Private Man
 
 
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Warren Beatty: A Private Man [Hardcover]

Suzanne Finstad (Author)
3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)


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Book Description

September 27, 2005
“Whatever you have read or heard about me through articles or gossip, forget it. I am nothing like that Warren Beatty. I am nothing like what you have read.” —Warren Beatty

Warren Beatty guarded his privacy even before he became a movie star, when he burst onto the screen in 1961 as the earnestly handsome all-American boy in Splendor in the Grass. When he started acting, Beatty kept secret the fact that actress Shirley MacLaine, already a star, was his older sister. Over time, he has cultivated a mystique, giving few interviews and instructing others not to talk about him. Until now.

Through years of groundbreaking research, lauded biographer Suzanne Finstad gained unprecedented access to Beatty’s family, close friends, and film colleagues, including such luminaries in the arts and politics as Jane Fonda, Goldie Hawn, Leslie Caron, Robert Towne, Mike Nichols, and Senators John McCain, George McGovern, and Gary Hart. Weaving hundreds of these candid interviews, photographs from private albums, personal letters, diaries, and the previously unpublished papers of the late Natalie Wood and mentors such as directors Elia Kazan and George Stevens, playwrights Clifford Odets and William Inge, and agent Charles Feldman, Warren Beatty unveils the real Beatty—a complex, sensitive visionary torn between the “fairly puritanical, football-playing boy” from Virginia and his Hollywood playboy image.

Finstad paints a rich, fascinating portrait of the secretive film legend, taking us back to the “unrealized genius” parents who molded arguably the most famous brother and sister in Hollywood history, tracing the family influences and events in Beatty’s past that directly inspired McCabe & Mrs. Miller, Shampoo, Heaven Can Wait, Reds, Ishtar, Dick Tracy, Bugsy, Love Affair, and Bulworth, and led to his political activism, culminating in a near-bid for the White House. Finstad constructs the definitive, myth-shattering account of Beatty’s evolution from Hollywood’s enfant terrible to producer of the revolutionary Bonnie and Clyde, launching him as the premier actor/director/writer/producer of his generation, the only person to twice earn Oscar nominations in all five major categories.

Here also is the truth about Beatty the lover, setting the record straight on his storied relationships with such iconic actresses and beauties as Jane Fonda, Joan Collins, Natalie Wood, Leslie Caron, Julie Christie, Goldie Hawn, Michelle Phillips, Diane Keaton, Isabelle Adjani, and Madonna. Finstad’s astute insights illuminate Beatty’s private struggle to attain happiness, his complicated bond with his sister, Shirley, and the deeper reasons why, at fifty-four, the archetypal bachelor married actress Annette Bening.

Stunningly researched, engrossing, and exquisitely detailed, Warren Beatty: A Private Man gives us a new understanding of the enigmatic, fiercely intelligent star who embodies the American dream.


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Amazon.com Exclusive: Joe Laitin and Warren Beatty Excerpted Interview
Excerpt and photographs courtesy of the author, Suzanne Finstad, by permission of Peter Laitin.


Beatty with Joe Laitin
JL: There apparently aren't that many people who really know you anyway. I don't know whether you deliberately keep people at arm's length. I suppose you do...

WB: I am finding more and more that it's really very hard to please a lot of people. And I would say it's impossible. And so I have been allowing that need to try to please a lot of people to slip away from me in the past couple of years. So that I realize now that there will be a lot of people that dislike me just on principle, there will be a lot of people that will resent me, there will be a lot of people that will like me, and there'll be an awful lot of people that just don't really care one way or the other. So if I allowed myself to be upset by that, then I'd be a pretty upset person.

So I've got to just enjoy my own work. My business is not exploitation and my business is not selling pictures. My business is not figuring out good angles for press and so forth. My business, or my work, is acting right now. And once I forget about that, I'm gonna be a boring actor and I'm not gonna have any fun at it. And that's why I hire people to do--that's why I have an agent, that's why I have somebody who's a press representative, and that's why I have a business manager. Because I don't want to think about those things. And I find that if I try to think about them, I don't do it well. All I know is when I'm enjoying my work in acting and when I'm not, when I think I'm doing well and when I don't.

It's like the more attention that is brought to you, the more obstacles that are put in your path, just doing an honest day's work creatively. There are more obstacles.

With sister Shirley Maclaine
It's nice to have a guy from Time magazine want to come and talk to you on the set. On the other hand, he wouldn't want to come and talk to you if you were doing a play off-Broadway somewhere, and maybe you would be able to concentrate a little better. And if he comes onto the set, you've gotta either be polite to him and acknowledge his presence and talk to him, or you have to forget about him--if he tries to talk to you, ignore him and just think about your work. In which case, he's gonna think you're a nut, or that you're trying to be rude to him or offend him in some way. And that's why, when a lot of strangers come on the set, I usually go to my dressing room or something. But there can be an awful lot of those obstacles, and those obstacles, I think they can just eat you up.
JL: Are these quotes of yours and Shirley's [Maclaine] in print without any direct communication between you, is that widening whatever breach there is between you, Warren?

WB: Not on my part, it certainly isn't, and I don't feel that there's a specific breach between us. And I'm sure that she feels the same way...

JL: Now this is the only part that I'm really interested in, because if you don't really want to communicate with her, I'm very curious to know why. It may explain a part of your character that I don't know anything about.

WB: Well, I don't blame you for being curious, but that doesn't mean that I've got to, you know, go into my sister.



Review

"Compelling . . . Finstad's admiring portrait of the actor is rooted in his childhood . . . and the background was especially remarkable . . . because it also produced Beatty's talented and fascinating sister Shirley MacLaine. . . Beatty's life has something to teach people about eluding fame's snares." —Deirdre Donahue, USA Today

"One of the six must-reads for fall . . . you must read it because this is the first serious biography of the enigmatic actor-writer-producer-director and legendary lover boy, and it provides a detailed look into the conservative Southern childhood that shaped and motivated him." —Cox News Service

"For nearly 600 pages of interesting and thoughtful prose, Finstad follows Beatty as he slaloms, sometimes graciously, sometimes like Niccolo Macchiavelli, through one of civilization's most treacherous proving grounds, the movie business." —David Gilmour, Toronto Star

"Finstad, an excellent, sympathetic writer, goes a long way here to explain the mysterious, often monosyllabic Warren . . . Finstad, who wrote the haunting and controversial Natalie Wood bio Natasha, packs her Beatty book with exclusive interviews and info on all things Warren . . . this is a fascinating look at a man who has lived a public life without selling his soul to that public." —Liz Smith, New York Post

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 608 pages
  • Publisher: Harmony; First Edition ~1st Printing edition (September 27, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1400046068
  • ISBN-13: 978-1400046065
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.3 x 1.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.4 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,771,609 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
3.6 out of 5 stars (10 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An incredible read!, October 28, 2005
This review is from: Warren Beatty: A Private Man (Hardcover)
I read this book while wearing two hats. The first hat was my "settle down with a good book" hat, worn when I am just looking for a good story that I can pick up and put down and won't make me think too hard. But once I started with "Warren Beatty, A Private Man," I didn't want to put it down! I was absolutely fascinated by his beginnings -- the mix of Canadians and Virginians, the artistic bent that ran through the family, the disappointment of his father, etc. The author layered it so beautifully and painted such a clear picture of Beatty's childhood, I really felt I knew all of them personally. Warren and Shirley were kids I could easily have grown up with. And, ironically, I had a rather close (though non-romantic) friendship with Warren when we were both working on "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis." Unfortunately, there were times when I found it difficult to recognize the charming, amusing and polite young man I knew - and who Ms. Finstad captures so well --in the man who went on to become a Hollywood heartthrob and seemingly ruthless heartbreaker. All the pick-ups, the orgies, the conniving.... . And the difficult side of him when he started getting jobs, all the takes, mumbling, etc. Why would anyone hire him a second time? But I have to say he knew exactly how to deal with people who could help him advance. Although I admire people who work their way to the top (rather than having it handed to them), I found this particular side of Warren very unlikable.
My second hat, my writer's hat, was paying attention to the boundless research Ms. Finstad did, and was awed by the very real picture she painted of such a complicated man. I am familiar with research; my book, "The Tsar's Woman," required 15 years of poking through books, traveling to Russia, watching documentaries, etc. in order to get a handle on Russia's first tsar, Ivan IV, who became known as "Ivan The Terrible." I think she did an absolutely spectacular job, both in finding the man and explaining him to the reader in an easy, page-turning way.

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Smells like Honey, April 23, 2006
By 
Kevin Killian (San Francisco, CA United States) - See all my reviews
(HALL OF FAME REVIEWER)    (TOP 1000 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Warren Beatty: A Private Man (Hardcover)
It took me days to finish this book, and I'd say you get your money's worth by halfway through, and the rest is gravy. Oddly enough, however, the book feels a bit topheavy, so that the bulk of it is spent on Beatty's difficult period between meeting William Inge and making LILITH about four years later, and then all of a sudden the last 40 years are rushed through at a clippety clop.

WB isn't quite as entertaining as Suzanne Finstad's previous biorgaphy, the sublime NATASHA, which really did bring Natalie Wood alive again for her fans; and it's likely that the parts of the present book with the most emotional resonance are the years Beatty spent with Natalie, trying to cheer her up after Wagner betrayed her. Finstad does an admirable job of showing us the psychological underpinnings of Beatty's affairs with Joan Collins (almost persuading us that Collins is a real person, not just a glitzy British sex bomb--almost, but not quite), Natalie Wood, Leslie Caron, and Julie Christie. But when she gets down the list to Michelle Phillips, her pretense at analysis ends. She doesn't even try. I wonder if the book wasn't originally twice as long, and she was asked to curtail the later years into a series of briefer chapters. I mean, she could have written 100s of pages on Mary Tyler Moore and Isabelle Adjani, but instead they're reduced to ciphers.

As a boy, Beatty was enraptured by the original cast album of OKLAHOMA! by Rodgers and Hammerstein and Finstad successfully shows us that, subconsciously or not, Beatty succeeded again and again in replicating the Curly-Laurie romance in his own adult life.

It does seem as though Beatty was propelled to stardom by a clutch of gay visionaries including Inge and Tennessee Williams, and crypto gay figures like Joshua Logan, who signed Beatty to a personal contract and had him screen tested kissing Jane Fonda from morning to night. Inge wrote not only SPLENDOR IN THE GRASS, but A LOSS OF ROSES and ALL FALL DOWN for Beatty, and apparently never asked him for a thing in return. The stage production of A LOSS OF ROSES turned out to be a true nightmare of conflicted egos and desperate desires, what with Barbara Baxley threatening to jump off the cliffs of Malibu if replaced by Carol Haney, and Shirley Booth quitting on opening night. Joey Heatherton, the one and only, was also fired, thus setting the scene for a long and poignant second act that never quite came.

Would Joan Collins have been effective in the movie version of DH Lawrence's SONS AND LOVERS? Would Warren have succeeded playing Tony in WEST SIDE STORY? The book gives us crazy dreams of movies that might have been. Afdera Fonda, the former wife of Henry Fonda who dallied with Beatty briefly in 1963, said that he was "naughty, charming and playful. He smelled like honey, and he came and went like a shadow in the night."
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars WB is still a private man, but we see glimpses of him in this book, October 28, 2005
By 
"KB" Kamla Srinivasan (SF Bay Area and India) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Warren Beatty: A Private Man (Hardcover)
Confession: I borrowed the book from the library, and do not own a copy.

I have always been fascinated by Warren Beatty, and the way he interpreted his movies. He is a considered thinker, and that comes across in all his movies (You might disagree with the way he interprets it, but he does put in a lot of thought into his projects.) I still have vivid recollections of "Red," and "Dick Tracy," is a movie that my husband watches quite often.

What this book revealed was how Beatty's childhood shaped his persona. This, I think is one of the strong glimpses that you get of Beatty, the private man. And this revelation perhaps helps you better understand the actor's personality.

An intelligent child with a musical gift (he played the piano), Beatty followed his sister Shirley McLaine's footsteps and joined the film industry. Most of the films he made were shaped by his interests and passions that date back to his childhood.

The book could have been condensed into a slimmer volume, and made it easier on the reader. But, other than that if you like reading biographies then this is a good one to read in your spare time.
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