Hollywood Girls Club by Maggie Marr

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(Paperback - Reprint)

  • Publisher: Random House Inc
  • Pub. Date: February 2008
  • ISBN-13: 9780307346308
  • Sales Rank: 50,274
  • 304pp
  • Edition Description: Reprint
 
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Synopsis

The climb to the top of the Hollywood ladder is treacherous, especially in stilettos. And as any A-lister knows, even harder than getting to the top is staying there. Hollywood Girls Club follows the well-heeled footsteps of three power players who are determined not to lose their footing: Jessica, the agency president with hot, demanding clients and an ice-cold fiance; Celeste, the megastar whose action-flick-director husband just dumped her for a fresh-faced newcomer; and Lydia, the producer with the magic touch whose new boss is personally waging a campaign to ruin her career. They’ve been friends for a long time, and in the poisonous petri dish of the film industry, having friends with power is crucial—but having friends you can trust is even better.

For the first time, the stars have aligned and Jessica, Celeste, and Lydia are all working on the same project, a big-budget action movie called Seven Minutes Past Midnight. The movie is going to be good—blockbuster good—if they can ever get it wrapped. But between complicated personal lives, mind games and backstabbing, and a movie studio head with an unfortunate resemblance to an evil leprechaun, there has been more than the usual amount of chaos during filming. It will take all their collective clout to get this movie into theaters. Together with Mary Anne, a naive writer from Minnesota whom they plucked from obscurity to polish Lydia’s script, the girls fight, Hollywood style, to make this film a box-office hit.

Shifting from one woman’s perspective to another’s, this addictive page-turner takes you inside L.A. to reveal the inner workings of Hollywood and howstrong-willed women navigate the shifting landscape of influence and control. No more tales from the assistant’s office, Hollywood Girls Club is the story of the players themselves, with their sometimes ugly motivations, humanizing frailties, grandiose scandals, and the lasting friendships you can find, even in the Hollywood jungle.

Publishers Weekly

Hollywood power-puff Marr pulls back the curtain on the wizards of Tinseltown, exposing a quartet of shameless, shoe-crazy ladies bent on building fame and fortune through blockbusters. Here's Celese "Cici" Solange, the stunning movie queen clinging to stardom by a manicured fingernail; her agent, Jessica Caulfield, president of CTA, "the most powerful agency in town," determined to keep her top-notch client list and position; billion-dollar producer Lydia Albright, fighting to a bring a sure-fire hit to the screen before she's fired by a new studio chief; and writer Mary Ann Meyers, plucked from obscurity to write the $1.5-million screenplay that brings all the players together. Marr knows her power-hungry vipers, thanks to her stint at the talent agency ICM. Though her insider's tell-all bristles at the plight of women who compete ("Talent representation was a male business; it was sales"), this novel is less about hit-making than cold compromise—"With the paparazzi, with the press, with the studios, with the producers, with myself," as Celeste concedes. The girls' club, cutthroat and callous, turns out to be a lot like the boys' club, but cattier and more fun to read about. A sequel is in the works. (Apr.)

Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

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Biography

Maggie Marr is a writer and producer in Los Angeles for Six Mile Ridge Productions and Dahooma Productions. Her current projects include Paddeyville and King of Pipers, both Dahooma productions, which begin filming this year. She began her Hollywood career as a motion picture literary agent at ICM Talent Agency in Beverly Hills representing writers, directors, and actors. She recently completed the television pilot Pretty Is As Pretty Does and is currently working on the second Hollywood Girls Club novel.

Customer Reviews

Hollywood Girls Clubby HighHeelsandLipGloss

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October 25, 2008: I completed reading Hollywood Girls Club over the weekend, loved it. The story explores the friendship of three close girlfriends in their process of making it to the top of the Hollywood film industry. Celeste is a mega-star actress who was recently dumped by her cheating ex for a much younger wannabe actress who would do anything and everyone to make it to the top. Celeste's friend Jessica is an agent who realizes she still has feelings for her ex, yet she's engaged to someone who is possibly playing for the other team and seems a bit distant. Lydia is a hotshot studio producer who is going through hell and back trying to get her film debut all the while dealing with a newly appointed studio head who is purposely making it hard for her film to hit the big screen, it's personal. There's also newcomer Mary Anne Meyers who is new to the industry and suddenly thrust into the world of screenwriting and luckily has these three girls as mentors of some sort to guide her through this crazy world. This book is full of drama, drama, and more drama, while at the same time encouraging one to follow their dreams and to never give up.

However, Hollywood Girls Club certainly shows you the ins and outs of the film business from the eyes of a power player, which seems like a pretty catty place, at least in this book. It seems like a world where some actresses will do anything for fame, egos are center stage, backstabbing is normal, and ultimately a place where you truly have to know who your true friends are.

I enjoyed the energy and excitement of watching the three girls bond and help each other to get Lydia's film made as well as guide Marry Anne, it's quite the adventure. They stick together through thick and thin and show what true friendship is all about. What's even cooler is that each chapter of the book is named after a brand name heel: Jessica and Her Louis Vuitton Marble Leather Pumps, Lydia Albright and Her Bottega Veneta Woven Leather Platform Pumps, Celeste Solange and Her Givenchy Spikes...fun and after reading, I suddenly wanted to go shopping for shoes...and so I did!LOL!

outstandingby Anonymous

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March 26, 2007: A very well written book. Loved the inside scoop on the Hollywood scene. Have recommended the book to all of my friends.


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