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Woody Allen

A Travesty of a Mockery of a Sham

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Woody Allen was once made a knight commander by France, but he didn't know because the paperwork got lost in the mail.

A decade later, he found out about the award by reading about it in the New York Times.

Across nearly nine eventful decades, Allen's life has been full of surprises. Writing jokes got him a gig as the youngest writer of Sid Caesar's television dream team. As a rising comic, he boxed a kangaroo on TV. He made a blank-check deal with a major studio for terms unmatched in Hollywood apart from early titans like Chaplin and Welles. All before Annie Hall.

Yet despite once being one of the most consequen­tial American cultural figures, Allen is now persona non grata. In this judicious biography, acclaimed biographer Patrick McGilligan charts the meteoric rise and fall of the comedian whose nonconformity proved both his secret genius and Achilles' heel.

Drawing on meticulous research, McGilli­gan reconstructs Allen's Brooklyn boyhood, his salad days as a television comedy writer, his rise to stand-up, and the thoughtful, award-winning film­making of his golden years in the 1970s and '80s. His messy relationships with wives and girl­friends, including Annie Hall costar Diane Keaton, were essential to his artistic development and undo­ing. Yet no one could have predicted his tumultuous personal and professional relationship with actress Mia Farrow, his alleged abuse of their adopted daughter Dylan, and his subsequent marriage to Mia's daughter Soon-Yi Previn.

In this comprehensive, sweeping, and rigor­ous account of Allen's life and career, McGilligan astutely reveals the writer's writer beyond the smoke and controversy, and paints a compelling portrait of the most creative, productive, and influential film­maker of his time.

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    • Library Journal

      April 1, 2023

      Reportedly even-handed in its treatment of Woody Allen, assaying both his influential oeuvre and his damaging behavior, Hollywood biographer McGilligan's new work will likely be as controversial as its subject. Prepub Alert.

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      December 16, 2024
      In this meticulous if less-than-convincing chronicle, biographer McGilligan (Funny Man) traces Woody Allen’s trajectory from self-deprecating comic through celebrated auteur to Hollywood pariah. Growing up in Brooklyn, Allen became a paid joke writer for a New York Post gossip columnist while still in his teens, and by the 1950s he was writing for numerous TV variety programs. Unsatisfied with the small screen, Allen turned to stand-up comedy before pivoting to filmmaking with 1966’s What’s Up, Tiger Lily? Thoroughly covering the making of all 50 of Allen’s films, McGilligan details how “misbehaving robots malfunctioning props” plagued the shoot for Sleeper, and how an unpublished murder mystery novel Allen wrote while filming Love and Death in Paris transformed into Annie Hall. McGilligan devotes a considerable portion of the book to relitigating the 1992 implosion of Allen’s relationship with Mia Farrow after he began an affair with her 21-year-old adopted daughter from a previous marriage, Soon-Yi Previn, as well as the sexual abuse allegations made against him soon afterward by his adopted daughter with Farrow, Dylan. McGilligan’s repeated invocation of McCarthyism to describe the inquest into Allen’s alleged abuse raises serious questions over whether readers should trust the impartiality of his account, casting a pall over even the robust recounting of Allen’s prior life and career. This is more interested in defending Allen than allowing readers to draw their own conclusions. Agent: Gloria Loomis, Watkins/Loomis.

    • Kirkus

      January 15, 2025
      Everything you always wanted to know about the nearly canceled octogenarian auteur and more. A professional joke-writer in his teens who parlayed his comedic talent into writing, directing, and starring in Oscar-winning sweet-and-sour dramedies like 1977'sAnnie Hall, Woody Allen has been--sorry, what's that? You just want to know why you should care about a filmmaker who's been mired in scandal since the early '90s? Veteran Hollywood biographer McGilligan (Funny Man: Mel Brooks, etc.) is plainly a fan of Allen's work, but also comfortable calling out the clunkers in his 50-film oeuvre, and to his credit he goes deep into the actions, alleged and confirmed, that made him a #MeToo target. Confirmed: He fell for (and later married) Soon-Yi Previn, the adopted daughter of his longtime partner, actor Mia Farrow. Alleged: That he pursued that relationship when she was a minor, and that he sexually abused Dylan, a daughter he adopted with Farrow, when she was 7. The only convictions came in the court of public opinion, and in McGilligan's reckoning, Allen preserved his demeanor: diffident, a bit callous, and fiercely defensive in ways that belie his nebbish onscreen persona. There's also plenty about his moviemaking in this hefty book, and though McGilligan himself seems to tire of recapping Allen's plots and (with rare exceptions) modest box-office income, he characterizes Allen as being gifted with actors and constantly willing to experiment. To press the case that Allen's work still resonates, McGilligan polled more than 100 film critics and scholars for their thoughts on Allen's life and work. Some demurred, but those who replied celebrated works across his career; recent sleeper hits likeBlue Jasmine andMidnight in Paris made the top 10. Not exculpatory, maybe, but evidence of an enduring artist, however problematic. Comprehensive and disinterested in pigeonholing its subject as genius or art monster.

      COPYRIGHT(2025) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      January 31, 2025

      McGilligan, the film biographer who has written about Orson Welles (Young Orson) and Mel Brooks (Funny Man), turns to Allen, tracing his filmmaking, cultural impact, personal life, and controversies. Prepub Alert.

      Copyright 2024 Library Journal

      Copyright 2024 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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