Edith Head: The Life and Times of Hollywood's Celebrated Costume Designer, is a fantastic look at one of those legendary Hollywood names you may have heard before, but don't know too much about. I stumble across this book at The Last Bookstore in downtown LA after doing a studio tour at Paramount. I knew of Edith Head, especially from the character she partially inspired in Pixar's The Incredibles (Edna Mode, of course, darling :)
She was with Paramount's costume department from 1924 to 1967, when she went to work for Universal. The woman had no experience in art, design, and or costume design. She fudged her way into her job, and then became one of, if not the most, iconic non-acting/directing figures in the golden age of movies. She was a controversial character, and confusing to even her most loyal friends.
She worked with some of the greatest actresses to grace the silver screen: Ginger Rogers, Bette Davis, Barbara Stanwyck, Shirley MacLaine, Grace Kelly, Audrey Hepburn, and Elizabeth Taylor, to name a few. She was also the costume designer Hitchcock in several of his films (To Catch a Thief, Rear Window, Vertigo). And this books follow her entire path through Hollywood: from her little-known beginnings and first/disastrous marriage, to her ambitious and somewhat aggressive climb to the top, to her eventual passing.
But what I loved most was that the biographer (a costume designer himself) doesn't hold back. He tells the good, the bad, and the ugly of Edith's life. She was a complex, conniving, creative woman, and I absolutely loved reading about her. So if you're trying to find something to read, I recommend this book.
It's only negative might be for those not familiar with classic/old films and Hollywood celebs. The biographer name-drops left and right with actors, actresses, directors, producers, set and costume designers, etc. I'm a bit of an old movie buff, but I struggled somewhat and had to do a little leg work in looking some of these up.