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OverviewFor millions of fans, Judy Garland will forever remain a relentlessly cheerful adolescent (Dorothy) skipping along a yellow brick road toward the other side of the rainbow. Liza followed her down that hallucinogenic path, searching for the childhood, the security, and the love that eluded her. Ferociously loyal but fiercely competitive, they live, laugh, and weep again in the tear-soaked pages of this remarkable biography from the entertainment industry's most prolific archivists, Darwin Porter and Danforth Prince. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Darwin Porter , Danforth PrincePublisher: Blood Moon Productions, Ltd Imprint: Blood Moon Productions, Ltd Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 3.90cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 1.012kg ISBN: 9781936003693ISBN 10: 1936003694 Pages: 734 Publication Date: 10 July 2020 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In stock We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviews"Judy Garland & Liza Minnelli: Too Many Damn Rainbows, by Darwin Porter & Danforth Prince As Reviewed by DIANE DONOVAN, Senior Editor at California Bookwatch, The Midwest Book Review, & Donovan's Bookshelf More than anything ever published before, this book provides a comprehensive overview of Judy Garland's troubled, scandal-soaked marriages to five men, three of whom were gay, and deep insights into her repeated humiliations. Husbands were not her only problem: Her show-biz career in the aftermath of her ""firing"" from MGM was a traumatized mix of buoyant and/or sometimes suicidal movie deals and concerts, many of them sold out and delivered to audiences of devoted (sometimes fanatically loyal) fans. Her beaux were memorable and varied, many of them show-biz stars and in some cases, political lions in their own right. They included John F. Kennedy, bandleader Artie Shaw, avant-garde filmmaker Orson Welles, billionaire Prince Aly Khan, matinee idol Tyrone Power, Yul (""The King and I"") Brynner, and James Mason, her co-star in A Star Is Born. Also prominent (and notorious since she was underaged at the time) was her teenaged dalliance with the much older actor, Spencer Tracy. And the book covers, non-judgmentally and tenderly, but with a disarming candor, the ""frantic"" behind the scenes politicking of her (aborted) CBS-TV series, depressions ""as deep as the Mariana Trench,"" her inglorious, self-destructive manias, and the multiple embarrassments (and boyfriends) in the years preceding her demise. Because so much information is included, it would have been too easy for Too Many Damn Rainbows to have become weighty and overloaded. The information is complimented (and the weighty feel of over 700 pages is countered) by the book's inviting structure. Sidebars of information, photos on nearly every page, and an attention to lively, controversial, appealing details makes this read a delight. The only prerequisite to enjoyment is some basic familiarity with or interest in either Judy Garland or Liza Minnelli. Permeating everything is an abiding respect and admiration for a woman who's remembered as ""the greatest entertainer in the history of American show-biz.""" Judy Garland & Liza Minnelli: Too Many Damn Rainbows, by Darwin Porter & Danforth Prince As Reviewed by DIANE DONOVAN, Senior Editor at California Bookwatch, The Midwest Book Review, & Donovan's Bookshelf More than anything ever published before, this book provides a comprehensive overview of Judy Garland's troubled, scandal-soaked marriages to five men, three of whom were gay, and deep insights into her repeated humiliations. Husbands were not her only problem: Her show-biz career in the aftermath of her firing from MGM was a traumatized mix of buoyant and/or sometimes suicidal movie deals and concerts, many of them sold out and delivered to audiences of devoted (sometimes fanatically loyal) fans. Her beaux were memorable and varied, many of them show-biz stars and in some cases, political lions in their own right. They included John F. Kennedy, bandleader Artie Shaw, avant-garde filmmaker Orson Welles, billionaire Prince Aly Khan, matinee idol Tyrone Power, Yul ( The King and I ) Brynner, and James Mason, her co-star in A Star Is Born. Also prominent (and notorious since she was underaged at the time) was her teenaged dalliance with the much older actor, Spencer Tracy. And the book covers, non-judgmentally and tenderly, but with a disarming candor, the frantic behind the scenes politicking of her (aborted) CBS-TV series, depressions as deep as the Mariana Trench, her inglorious, self-destructive manias, and the multiple embarrassments (and boyfriends) in the years preceding her demise. Because so much information is included, it would have been too easy for Too Many Damn Rainbows to have become weighty and overloaded. The information is complimented (and the weighty feel of over 700 pages is countered) by the book's inviting structure. Sidebars of information, photos on nearly every page, and an attention to lively, controversial, appealing details makes this read a delight. The only prerequisite to enjoyment is some basic familiarity with or interest in either Judy Garland or Liza Minnelli. Permeating everything is an abiding respect and admiration for a woman who's remembered as the greatest entertainer in the history of American show-biz. Author Information"Darwin Porter is the award-winning author of at least 50 celebrity exposés. Alan Petrucelli at Examiner.com once described him like this: ""There are guilty pleasures. Then there is the master of guilty pleasures, Darwin Porter. He is the Nietzsche of Naughtiness, the Goethe of Gossip, the Proust of Pop Culture. Porter knows all the nasty buzz anyone has ever heard whispered in dark bars, dim alleys, and confessional booths. And lovingly, precisely, and in as straightforward a manner as an oncoming train, his prose whacks you between the eyes with the greatest gossip since Kenneth Anger. Some would say better than Anger."" Danforth Prince is co-author of many of editions of the European series of the FROMMER TRAVEL GUIDES and the founder of what's been described as the feistiest independent press in America, Blood Moon Productions. He's also the Innkeeper for MagnoliaHouseSaintGeorge.com, a historic, ""celebrity-centric"" AirBnb in New York City." 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