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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Cole Porter , Cliff Eisen , Dominic Broomfield-McHughPublisher: Yale University Press Imprint: Yale University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 0.50cm , Length: 23.50cm Weight: 1.106kg ISBN: 9780300219272ISBN 10: 030021927 Pages: 672 Publication Date: 08 October 2019 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock ![]() The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsReviews[A] gorgeous book -Roger Lewis, Daily Mail (Book of the Week) [An] extensive commentary - Clive Davis, The Times The letters [. . .] reveal previously hidden details about the life and work of Cole Porter. [. . .] This extensive collection of letters uncovered by the researchers - most of which are being published for the first time - feature Cole's correspondence with stars such as Irving Berlin, Ethel Merman and Orson Welles, as well as his friends and lovers -Bigstamp It is a thought-provoking portrait of a brave, well-intentioned, if often misguided queen - Gareth Russell, The Times Suavely edited by Cliff Eisen and Dominic McHugh [. . .] so detailed and precise that anyone wanting to write the story of Porter's life could start here -Christopher Bray, Spectator This is an amazing feat of collation [. . .] brilliant scholarship -Oliver Soden, Literary Review Cole Porter was considered one of the greatest songwriters of his time, and the originality, wit, and artistry, of both his music and his lyrics, have lost none of their lustre in the ensuing years. Yet his personal life has been clouded in mystery and gossip, much of it exaggerated or simply untrue. This new book offers the perfect solution: by reproducing a rich selection of Porter's letters from across his life and activities, the editors have allowed him to speak in his own words. -Kevin Kline, actor and singer 'Well, did you evah!' Cole Porter's letters are full not just of delightful gossip but of the detail of working on Broadway and in Hollywood during the golden age of the American musical. 'What a swell party it is!'-or at least was for Porter moving through high society across several continents. His words read as gloriously as his music sounds. -Tim Carter, author of Oklahoma! The Making of an American Musical The considerable legacy of Cole Porter remains a powerful force in American music and this new collection of his letters is revelatory. It's the closest we'll ever get to an autobiography and is fascinating how a group of letters, sometimes written casually, collectively unmask previously hidden details about the man. -Michael Feinstein, singer and Ambassador of The Great American Songbook A magnificently researched, compulsively readable, and delightfully de-lovely volume. -Geoffrey Block, author of Richard Rodgers Essential to understanding the private man behind the public myths Porter himself so persistently perpetuated. -Kim H. Kowalke, editor of Speak Low: The Letters of Kurt Weill and Lotte Lenya These letters offer fascinating glimpses into some previously unseen corners of the personal and creative lives of one of America's greatest songwriters. Eisen and McHugh provide a gilded frame for the source material in the form of expert glosses and annotations. The result is a new kind of Cole Porter biography. -Jeffrey Magee, author of Irving Berlin's American Musical Theater -- Jeffrey Magee An absolute must for any fan of the golden age, musical theater, or the incredible Porter himself. -Matthew Shaftel, editor of A Cole Porter Companion -- Matthew Shaftel Essential to understanding the private man behind the public myths Porter himself so persistently perpetuated. -Kim H. Kowalke, editor of Speak Low: The Letters of Kurt Weill and Lotte Lenya -- Kim H. Kowalke A magnificently researched, compulsively readable, and delightfully de-lovely volume. -Geoffrey Block, author of Richard Rodgers -- Geoffrey Block The considerable legacy of Cole Porter remains a powerful force in American music and this new collection of his letters is revelatory. It's the closest we'll ever get to an autobiography and is fascinating how a group of letters, sometimes written casually, collectively unmask previously hidden details about the man. -Michael Feinstein, singer and Ambassador of The Great American Songbook -- Michael Feinstein `Well, did you evah!' Cole Porter's letters are full not just of delightful gossip but of the detail of working on Broadway and in Hollywood during the golden age of the American musical. `What a swell party it is!'-or at least was for Porter moving through high society across several continents. His words read as gloriously as his music sounds. -Tim Carter, author of Oklahoma! The Making of an American Musical -- Tim Carter Cole Porter was considered one of the greatest songwriters of his time, and the originality, wit, and artistry, of both his music and his lyrics, have lost none of their lustre in the ensuing years. Yet his personal life has been clouded in mystery and gossip, much of it exaggerated or simply untrue. This new book offers the perfect solution: by reproducing a rich selection of Porter's letters from across his life and activities, the editors have allowed him to speak in his own words. -Kevin Kline, actor and singer -- Kevin Kline Cole Porter was considered one of the greatest songwriters of his time, and the originality, wit, and artistry, of both his music and his lyrics, have lost none of their lustre in the ensuing years. Yet his personal life has been clouded in mystery and gossip, much of it exaggerated or simply untrue. This new book offers the perfect solution: by reproducing a rich selection of Porter's letters from across his life and activities, the editors have allowed him to speak in his own words. -Kevin Kline, actor and singer `Well, did you evah!' Cole Porter's letters are full not just of delightful gossip but of the detail of working on Broadway and in Hollywood during the golden age of the American musical. `What a swell party it is!'-or at least was for Porter moving through high society across several continents. His words read as gloriously as his music sounds. -Tim Carter, author of Oklahoma! The Making of an American Musical The considerable legacy of Cole Porter remains a powerful force in American music and this new collection of his letters is revelatory. It's the closest we'll ever get to an autobiography and is fascinating how a group of letters, sometimes written casually, collectively unmask previously hidden details about the man. -Michael Feinstein, singer and Ambassador of The Great American Songbook A magnificently researched, compulsively readable, and delightfully de-lovely volume. -Geoffrey Block, author of Richard Rodgers Essential to understanding the private man behind the public myths Porter himself so persistently perpetuated. -Kim H. Kowalke, editor of Speak Low: The Letters of Kurt Weill and Lotte Lenya [A] gorgeous book -Roger Lewis, Daily Mail (Book of the Week) [An] extensive commentary -Clive Davis, The Times an intimidating marvel of scholarship. . . . The Letters of Cole Porter amounts to the last word [on Porter], a work as disjointed and delightful as any of Porter's unforgettable songs. -David Kirby, Washington Post Porter's ghost could not ask for better care than he has been given in The Letters of Cole Porter . . . . Laid out with a meticulous scholarly apparatus, as though this were the correspondence of Grover Cleveland, every turn in the songwriter's story is deep-dived for exact chronology, and every name casually dropped by Porter gets a worried, explicatory footnote. -Adam Gopnik, New Yorker The letters [. . .] reveal previously hidden details about the life and work of Cole Porter. [. . .] This extensive collection of letters uncovered by the researchers - most of which are being published for the first time - feature Cole's correspondence with stars such as Irving Berlin, Ethel Merman and Orson Welles, as well as his friends and lovers -Bigstamp It is a thought-provoking portrait of a brave, well-intentioned, if often misguided queen -Gareth Russell, The Times Suavely edited by Cliff Eisen and Dominic McHugh [. . .] so detailed and precise that anyone wanting to write the story of Porter's life could start here -Christopher Bray, Spectator This is an amazing feat of collation [. . .] brilliant scholarship -Oliver Soden, Literary Review Cole Porter was considered one of the greatest songwriters of his time, and the originality, wit, and artistry, of both his music and his lyrics, have lost none of their lustre in the ensuing years. Yet his personal life has been clouded in mystery and gossip, much of it exaggerated or simply untrue. This new book offers the perfect solution: by reproducing a rich selection of Porter's letters from across his life and activities, the editors have allowed him to speak in his own words. -Kevin Kline, actor and singer 'Well, did you evah!' Cole Porter's letters are full not just of delightful gossip but of the detail of working on Broadway and in Hollywood during the golden age of the American musical. 'What a swell party it is!'-or at least was for Porter moving through high society across several continents. His words read as gloriously as his music sounds. -Tim Carter, author of Oklahoma! The Making of an American Musical The considerable legacy of Cole Porter remains a powerful force in American music and this new collection of his letters is revelatory. It's the closest we'll ever get to an autobiography and is fascinating how a group of letters, sometimes written casually, collectively unmask previously hidden details about the man. -Michael Feinstein, singer and Ambassador of The Great American Songbook A magnificently researched, compulsively readable, and delightfully de-lovely volume. -Geoffrey Block, author of Richard Rodgers Essential to understanding the private man behind the public myths Porter himself so persistently perpetuated. -Kim H. Kowalke, editor of Speak Low: The Letters of Kurt Weill and Lotte Lenya Author InformationCliff Eisen is professor of music history at King’s College London. Dominic McHugh is reader in musicology at the University of Sheffield and a leading authority on Broadway. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |