One of my two favorite books about Bette Davis.
My dear friend John bought me this book in 2006, and I have dogeared it to death!
I have read, re-read, and memorized favorite moments in this personal biography- a stylish and intimate look at the legendary actress, told as a series of interviews, accounts both from Bette Davis herself, and family, friends, and coworkers.
Often misunderstood as a demanding diva and perfectionist, Charlotte Chandler only enhances the genuine accounts that while Bette Davis might have had a mercurial personality, the real truth was all La Davis wanted was the best for herself and her loved ones. She was also self aware of how her brutal honesty might have hurt others, and let it be known when she was unhappy of something that warranted true criticism.
La Davis relished how she tackled her work with a lack of vanity. A fierce critic of method acting, she was explicit that she did not "live" through her characters behind the cameras.
But as an actress, Davis was meticulous in her singular portraits of complicated and flawed women. The only American and British actresses today who probably match Davis’s style and ethic are Meryl Streep, and Frances McDormand.
Ms. Chandler later writes about and shows Bette Davis' empathy, vulnerability, and loneliness after the end of her marriages and the betrayal of her beloved daughter BD with such heartbreak and melancholy that it only was appropriate that Bette Davis soldiered on to legendary status right before her death.
Reading what Ms Davis had to say about feeling betrayed by her beloved BD really hurt. The way she confesses her sorrow and broken heart is truly candid and heartbreaking.
Overall, Chandler has crafted a beautiful tribute, with peppery anecdotes from those close to Ms. Davis: William Wyler, Olivia de Havilland, Meryl Streep, Liv Ullman, Robert Wagner, Debbie Reynolds, Anne Baxter, Vincent Sherman, Elizabeth Taylor, Geraldine Fitzgerald, Robert Aldrich, and Joseph Mankiewicz.
What’s also interesting is that when Davis is asked herself of the feud she had with Joan Crawford, she always offered a conciliatory response, never demeaning Ms Crawford’s talent and professionalism. It’s always Miriam Hopkins and Faye Dunaway that really got to her skin.
Bette Davis is my favorite actress. The gutsiness she brought to her characterizations, her empathy of allowing ambiguity in even some of the seemingly most villainous roles she's played; and her ability to create portraits of flawed women looking for love, family, acceptance, and power all are reasons why she's such a gay icon- and an icon for all those who have felt like an outsider?