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Child Star: An Autobiography
Child Star An Autobiography
Author: Shirley Temple Black
Shirley Temple. She was a curly-topped moppet with a saucy grin that lit up the screen and an irrepressible spirit that won America's heart. But what was life really like for this extraordinary child growing up on the back lots and sound stages of Hollywood? This BOMC alternate reveals the ups and downs of stardom at age four and tells the f...  more »
ISBN-13: 9780070055322
ISBN-10: 0070055327
Publication Date: 10/1988
Pages: 546
Rating:
  • Currently 4/5 Stars.
 13

4 stars, based on 13 ratings
Publisher: McGraw-Hill
Book Type: Hardcover
Members Wishing: 1
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boomerbooklover avatar reviewed Child Star: An Autobiography on + 431 more book reviews
Better than average Hollywood autobiography of the biggest movie star of the Thirties. Although she made more money at times from endorsements, for dolls and dresses, than she did from her movie studio salary, as with many child stars, her funds dwindled to very little by the time she was an adult. Invested by her father, in her parents' names - supposedly for tax reasons, the majority of her funds were spent on homes, living expenses, and security during her childhood. This was to be one of two volumes and covers her life until her second marriage and birth of her children. Her later career as a diplomat was to be in a next book, which evidently never materialized.
reviewed Child Star: An Autobiography on + 14 more book reviews
The author mentions that she kept a diary and that she has always had an extraordinary memory (obvious with all the dialogue she had to memorize as a very young actress). Add in her access to letters belonging to her mother, and the result is an autobiography with amazing memory details going back to toddlerhood.

Shirley's book is an interesting glimpse not only into her life but also into the movie industry under the contract system. Many actors and actresses and studio heads are discussed as seen through the eyes of a little girl and later as a teenager and adult. Shirley Temple fans should find her autobiography pretty entertaining.
reviewed Child Star: An Autobiography on
Surprisingly honest account from America's most famous child actor.


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