Book description
Film musicals: you either love them or they make you want to kill
yourself slowly with plastic cutlery. Nothing has the power to lift
your heart or turn your stomach like Howard Keel in fake sideburns
singing Bless Your Beautiful Hide or Julie Andrews singing...well,
just about anything. There are few situations where the question What
would Barbra do? doesn't have relevance in a world which is
much better lived to a soundtrack of show-tunes.
This is a book for people who know that
* People don't tend to die in musicals, but those who do deserve it
* True love waits long enough for an element of mistaken identity to
be introduced (especially if one of the couple is a Nazi)
* Women carry the show.
* Talented women wind up alone...
* ...But they have the consolation of the torch song, which in
Hollywood musicals is more fulfilling than a husband.
Emma Brockes has been a feature writer at the
Guardian
for several years. In 2001 she won Young Journalist of the Year at the
British Press Awards, and in 2002 she was voted Feature Writer of the
Year, one of the youngest ever recipients of the award. After living in
London, where she indulged her passion for musicals at every
opportunity, Emma has now moved to New York where she hopes to do the
same.