''Lulu in Hollywood'' is a collection of essays by the silent film actress
Louise Brooks. First published in 1982, the book brings together seven previously published autobiographical essays, namely “Kansas to New York”, “On Location with Billy Wellman”, “Marion Davies’ Niece”, “Humphrey and Bogey”, “The Other Face of W. C. Fields”, “Gish and Garbo” and “Pabst and Lulu”.
Each of the pieces collected in ''Lulu in Hollywood'' were published in magazines and film journals beginning in the late 1950s. The copyright page states, "Portions of this book appeared in different form in ''
Film Culture'', ''
London Magazine'', ''Image'', and ''
Sight and Sound
''Sight and Sound'' (also spelled ''Sight & Sound'') is a British monthly film magazine published by the British Film Institute (BFI). It conducts the well-known, once-a-decade ''Sight and Sound'' Poll of the Greatest Films of All Time, ongoing ...
''". The first edition includes an introduction by ''
New Yorker'' editor
William Shawn
William Shawn (''né'' Chon; August 31, 1907 – December 8, 1992) was an American magazine editor who edited ''The New Yorker'' from 1952 until 1987.
Early life and education
Shawn was born William Chon on August 31, 1907, in Chicago, Illinoi ...
, an afterword, "A Witness Speaks," by film historian
Lotte H. Eisner
Lotte H. Eisner (5 March 1896, Berlin – 25 November 1983, Paris) was a German-French writer, film critic, archivist and curator. Eisner worked initially as a film critic in Berlin, then in Paris where in 1936 she met Henri Langlois with whom she ...
, as well as a condensed filmography and illustrations.
Publication history
''Lulu in Hollywood'' was first published by
Alfred A. Knopf in hardback in May, 1982. The following year, Knopf issued the book in softcover. Limelight Editions reprinted the book in paperback in 1989. ''Lulu in Hollywood'' was also published in England, and in translation in France (as ''Louise Brooks'', and later as ''Loulou a Hollywood''), Germany (''Lulu in Berlin und Hollywood''), Italy (''Lulu a Hollywood''), The Netherlands (''Loulou in Hollywood''), and Spain (''Lulu en Hollywood''). A Japanese edition of ''Lulu in Hollywood'', published in 1984, is radically different in its design and selection of text. The Japanese edition, titled ''Ruizu Burukkusu to "Ruru"'' (''Louise Brooks to "Lulu"'') contains Brooks’ essays, “Gish and Garbo” and “Pabst and Lulu”, along with the filmography and images contained in ''Lulu in Hollywood''.
In the late 1990s, ''Lulu in Hollywood'' went out-of-print in the United States. In the year 2000, aided in part by a grass-roots campaign led by the Louise Brooks Society, ''Lulu in Hollywood'' was republished in an expanded edition by the
University of Minnesota Press. The University of Minnesota edition was given a new look, with redesigned front and back covers. It was expanded to include an eighth essay by Brooks, "Why I Will Never Write My Memoirs,” while Shawn's introduction was replaced by
Kenneth Tynan's 1979 ''New Yorker'' profile, “The Girl in the Black Helmet”. The University of Minnesota edition was later published in Russia as ''Лулу в Голливуде''.
Reception
''Lulu in Hollywood'' was widely and positively reviewed following its initial publication. Writing in ''
Esquire
Esquire (, ; abbreviated Esq.) is usually a courtesy title.
In the United Kingdom, ''esquire'' historically was a title of respect accorded to men of higher social rank, particularly members of the landed gentry above the rank of gentlema ...
'' magazine,
James Wolcott
James Wolcott (born December 10, 1952) is an American journalist, known for his critique of contemporary media. Wolcott is the cultural critic for '' Vanity Fair'' and contributes to ''The New Yorker''. He had his own blog on ''Vanity Fair'' ma ...
described ''Lulu in Hollywood'' as "A tart, fleet, gossipy book, a whip-flicking display of wit and spite," adding "In ''Lulu in Hollywood'', Brooks writes about her contemporaries with a darting precision and down-to-earth compassion that make the mythologizing of most movie commentators sound like so much hot wheeze. . . . Louise Brooks emerges not as a white goddess wreathed in incense, but as a sassy companion, wisecracking, knowledgeable, completely free of cant and coy sentiment."
Writing in ''Sight and Sound'', the English critic
John Russell Taylor stated, "Louise Brooks is a woman of ideas. Her writings — and this, for an actor, is really extraordinary — are about something more than just herself. She has ideas about Hollywood, she has ideas about life, and she does not necessarily confuse the two. . . . If Brooks has an Achilles heel, it is her own intelligence: she tends to attribute to others as much self-awareness and analytical power as she has herself."
Other largely positive reviews were written by
William K. Everson
Keith William Everson (8 April 1929 – 14 April 1996) was an English- American archivist, author, critic, educator, collector, and film historian. He also discovered several lost films. Everson's given first names were Keith William, but he r ...
,
Herman G. Weinberg Herman G. Weinberg (9 August 1908 – 7 November 1983) was an American subtitler, film journalist and author. He pioneered the use of English subtitles for foreign films, beginning in the early days of sound film and continuing until the 1960s. He s ...
,
Stanley Kaufman,
David Thomson,
John Lahr,
Michael Dirda, and
John Updike
John Hoyer Updike (March 18, 1932 – January 27, 2009) was an American novelist, poet, short-story writer, art critic, and literary critic. One of only four writers to win the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction more than once (the others being Booth ...
.
One of the few negative reviews the book received was authored by
Auberon Waugh, son of the novelist
Evelyn Waugh. The younger Waugh wrote in the London ''
Daily Mail
The ''Daily Mail'' is a British daily middle-market tabloid newspaper and news websitePeter Wilb"Paul Dacre of the Daily Mail: The man who hates liberal Britain", ''New Statesman'', 19 December 2013 (online version: 2 January 2014) publish ...
'' that Brooks had been "hanging around" since the end of her film career in 1938. "It sounds rather a miserable life, and she sounds rather a miserable woman" Waugh noted, adding "Her book may not teach us much about the cinema, but it provides a gloomy little object lesson in sexual morals: Don't let your daughter on the stage.". One other especially negative review was written by
Lawrence J. Quirk
Lawrence J. Quirk (September 9, 1923 – October 17, 2014) was an American writer, Hollywood reporter and film historian.
Career
Lawrence J. Quirk was born in 1923 at Lynn, Massachusetts. He was the nephew of James R. Quirk, former edito ...
, nephew of ''
Photoplay
''Photoplay'' was one of the first American film (another name for ''photoplay'') fan magazines. It was founded in 1911 in Chicago, the same year that J. Stuart Blackton founded '' Motion Picture Story,'' a magazine also directed at fans. For mo ...
'' magazine editor
James R. Quirk
James R. Quirk (September 4, 1884 – August 1, 1932) was an American magazine editor.
Career
Quirk was the vice president and editor of '' Photoplay'' magazine, one of the earliest film or fan glamour magazines and particularly popular in t ...
. Its title, "''Lulu in Hollywood'': A Weird Case of Media Super-Hype, Whitewash and Cover-Up Galore," speaks to the tone of his review.
"Appendix: Errata in ''Lulu in Hollywood''" was published in the 1989 biography of the actress by
Barry Paris
Barry Paris (born February 6, 1948) is an author and journalist based in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Paris' best-known works include biographies of film stars Louise Brooks, Greta Garbo and Audrey Hepburn. He is a movie reviewer for the ''Pittsbur ...
. It points to nearly a dozen errors in ''Lulu in Hollywood''. The appendix states: "The major and minor errors in ''Lulu in Hollywood'' cited here have been identified by
Kevin Brownlow, William K. Everson,
Jane Sherman Lehac, George Pratt, Lawrence Quirk,
Anthony Slide
Anthony Slide (born 7 November 1944) is an English writer who has produced more than seventy books and edited a further 150 on the history of popular entertainment. He wrote a "letter from Hollywood" for the British ''Film Review'' magazine from ...
,
Alexander Walker, and the author, among others."
Legacy
''Lulu in Hollywood'' continues to be read and cited. In 2012,
Janet Maslin wrote in the ''New York Times'', "These eight essays are selective, nostalgic, poison-tipped and fearlessly smart. They're sharp about Hollywood's definitions of success and failure, about how actors are manipulated by their employers and pigeonholed by the press.... Brooks still shimmers as a rare loner who traveled down that road, her life in ruins -- and then came back. This book is as idiosyncratic and magnetic as its author."
In 2023, the ''
Hollywood Reporter
''The Hollywood Reporter'' (''THR'') is an American digital and print magazine which focuses on the Hollywood film, television, and entertainment industries. It was founded in 1930 as a daily trade paper, and in 2010 switched to a weekly larg ...
'' published an article listing the 100 best film books of all time". ''Lulu in Hollywood'' ranked number 44. In 2024, the ''Los Angeles Times'' ranked ''Lulu in Hollywood'' number 28 among its list of the 50 best Hollywood books of all time. The newspaper noted, "Brooks was best known for G.W. Pabst’s 1929 drama ''Pandora’s Box'', in which her Lulu, a ferocious flapper with a pageboy haircut, seduced and abandoned all men who dared stand in her path. But she was also an astute observer of show business customs and personalities, and, as it turned out, a very good writer."
[Vognar, Chris. "The 50 best Hollywood books of all time." ''Los Angeles Times'', April 8, 2024.]
References
{{reflist
American memoirs
Alfred A. Knopf books