Kate: The Woman Who Was Hepburn by William J. Mann

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  • Publisher: Henry Holt & Company, Incorporated
  • Pub. Date: October 2006
  • ISBN-13: 9780641892325
  • Sales Rank: 1,515
  • 656pp
  • Edition Description: Bargain

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Synopsis


A New York Times Book Review Notable Book of the Year
 
One of Publishers Weekly's 100 Best Books of the Year
Katharine Hepburn was her own creation--an ambitious, vulnerable woman who charmed the public with the image of an East Coast aristocrat, wearing pants and freely speaking her mind. But that show didn't come easily to her, or without tremendous effort and concealment. None of her success did.

With this biography, William J. Mann challenges much of what we think we know about the Great Kate, and shows how a woman originally considered too controversial for Hollywood stardom learned the fine art of image making and transformed herself into an icon as all-American as the Statue of Liberty. With new material drawn from Hepburn's private papers, William J. Mann's Kate is "not just the best on Hepburn--it's a book that sets new standards in movie biography" (David Thomson, The New York Observer).

The Washington Post - Ann Hornaday

Though Hepburn emerges as a willful fame-seeker in Kate , Mann is never less than respectful and even-handed when discussing aspects of her life she may have preferred stay in the shadows. The sexual peccadilloes of Hepburn, Tracy, director George Cukor and their cosmopolitan circle could certainly be fodder for a more salacious account, but Mann handles the material with clear-eyed equanimity. Some of the most revealing passages of this biography have to do with Hepburn's remarkable third act, when in later life she exerted her indomitable determination to create yet another version of herself: not headstrong ingenue or glamorous star, but cherished American treasure. Mann offers a corrective to the hagiography that has often passed as her personal history (up to and including her own memoirs), but nonetheless manages to keep intact her image as rebellious icon, screen goddess and American original.

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Biography

William J. Mann is a journalist and the author of Edge of Midnight, Behind the Screen, and Wisecracker. He lives in Palm Springs, California.

Customer Reviews

Kate: The Woman Who Was Hepburnby Anonymous

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May 26, 2008: This rendering could have used some objective editing. At 600 pages, the overriding theme of sexuality--sorry, but who really cares which team Kate played for, or both?--became redundant and boring. After the first 100 pages I found myself saying 'Enough already!' to the heavy-handed pontificating by Mr. Mann of the sexual proclivities (documented or suspected) of the people who came into and out of Ms. Hepburn's circle. Mr. Mann notes at one point, the actress-who-was-Kate should have stopped performing after 'On Golden Pond.' I should have wished the same for this book: it's one too many in the pantheon of biographies on this enigmatic lady.

Kate: The Woman Who Was Hepburnby Anonymous

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December 17, 2006: William Mann is a wonderfully prodigious writer equally at home with fiction and non-fiction. His gay-themed novels THE MEN FROM THE BOYS, WHERE THE BOYS ARE and ALL AMERICAN BOY are moving, sexy, shocking and a true depiction of gay male life in our time. Mann's non fiction books are also astonishing. From the wit and wisdom of WISECRACKER (the life and times of William Haines) to the finally told secrets in BEHIND THE SCREEN to his affectionate and authoratative biography of John Schlesinger, Mann has shed light on the film world where no light was previously allowed. He does the same detective work in KATE. I thought I had read all that I needed to about the indominatable Kate Hepburn. I was wrong. This book peers behind the myths and legends and looks at the actress with blemishes intact. Mann does a great and lasting service to the Great Kate because he lifts her from the puff PR pieces and reveals her to be infinitely more fascinating, courageous and human than she herself could. This book is another page turner by Mann. His prodigious talents cannot be praised enough. Would that every great actor and director could be studied and painted with the penn of William Mann. Bravo!


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