ELLEN STERNwrote the Best Bets column inNew Yorkmagazine for ten years and was a writer and editor at theNew York Daily News, the East Side Express, andGQ. Her books includeThe Very Best from Hallmark,Once Upon a Telephone,Sister Sets,Threads, and Gracie Mansion. She was born in New Haven, Connecticut, and she graduated from Juilliard. She lives in New York City.
"An in-depth biography of America’s “line king” caricaturist. Born
in St. Louis, Al Hirschfeld (1903-2003) began drawing when he was 5
years old and never stopped. Journalist Stern (Gracie Mansion: A
Celebration of New York City's Mayoral Residence, 2005, etc.)
interviewed Hirschfeld in 1987 for a GQ profile. Over the
years, she has conducted extensive interviews with those who knew
him—the book is packed with quotations—and had access to personal
letters, journals, and scrapbooks, resulting in this much-needed,
affectionate, and entertaining book-length profile. In 1912, the
Hirschfeld family moved to New York City. Although he traveled
around the world throughout his life, NYC was always home. While
still in his teens, the young, talented artist began doing
caricatures for Broadway posters and ads as well as lobby cards for
local movie companies like Goldwyn and the Selznick Corporation. He
came to be known as the “line king” for his minimalist
black-lines-on-white-paper caricatures of actors and actresses that
succinctly captured the looks and personalities of his subjects. He
was fast and reliable. His theatrical caricatures—he preferred
“character drawings”—became popular, his line “ever more surgical.”
Broadway was his milieu, and every actor wanted to be
“Hirschfelded.” He worked hard at it; sitting in his barbershop
chair, his drawing board in front of him, he worked 7 days per
week, 7 hours per day. S.J. Perelman described him as “a remarkable
combination of Walt Whitman, Lawrence of Arabia, and Moe, my
favorite waiter at Lindy’s.” In 1928, Hirschfeld started working
for the New York Times, in 1953, TV Guide, and in 1998 he
did a cover for Time. As Stern shows, his married life with
three wives was up and down, but for 75 years, he had his dream
job. As the first substantive biography of Hirschfeld, this will be
welcomed by art and Broadway lovers alike."
—KIRKUS
“This biography is as elegant and witty as Hirschfeld’s art itself,
and author Stern deftly weaves her way through the artist’s life
from his birth in St. Louis to his final days in a pink Manhattan
brownstone. Stern’s affection for and knowledge of her subject is
imbued with humor and charm and allows readers to know the man
behind the minimalism, both the good and the bad. His story
includes a stellar cast of characters from artists and entertainers
to politicians and Hirschfeld’s own daughter, Nina. This title
traverses the artist’s world of Moscow, Paris, and Hollywood;
newspapers, music, and theater. For those interested in
biographies, the art of illustration, twentieth century theater and
Broadway, it’s a journey well worth taking.”
—LIBRARY JOURNAL
“In a prose style that could be called Hirschfeldian, writer and
editor Stern, handpicked to be the artist’s biographer before his
death, renders his life out of the memories of famous New York
friends, love notes, press clippings, Hirschfeld’s own writings,
and, of course, his drawings. Her brief, anecdotal chapters mirror
his economy of space. Travels to Bali, Paris, Morocco, and Moscow
as well as adventures in his beloved home, New York, are covered
with equal value and humor. The countless details of his thousands
of works and seventy-five-year career may be impossible to collect,
especially those stuffed into a suitcase lost by the forgetful
artist, yet Stern offers appreciation of portraits, Broadway, film,
opera, and more—the real skinny on everything Hirschfeld.”
—MICHAEL RUZICKA, Booklist
“Given that Hirschfeld lived to be ninety-nine, working till the
end, the pressures on his biographer to synthesize, compress, and
keep the narrative moving briskly must have been daunting. Ellen
Stern is up to the task. A journalist who has previously written
widely about New York institutions, she is familiar with the
terrain of twentieth-century culture, high and pop. Since, as the
dust jacket states, Hirschfeld ‘knew everybody and drew everybody,’
it is not surprising that the biography doubles as a social history
of the times.”
—PHILLIP LOPATE, Times Literary Supplement
“Stern’s deft balance of detail and action makes for a fast, but
rich, read. And she has a sly sense of humor, a drive for
precision, plus a knack for writing a scene as well as any
playwright—in other words, she’s the perfect Hirschfeld
biographer.”
—ST. LOUIS MAGAZINE
Ask a Question About this Product More... |