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Mae West: It Ain't No Sin
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Simon Louvish is a biographer of comedians, an author of satirical and outrageous fiction, a part-time film teacher at the London Film Scho ol and a film screenwriter. He is married and lives in Fulham, London.

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Although at least four full-length biographies have been written about Mae West since her death at 87 in 1980, Louvish (Man on the Flying Trapeze) is the first biographer to have access to the recently opened archive of West memorabilia including a 2,000-page collection of quips and jokes and the numerous revisions of the 12 plays, eight screenplays and three novels she wrote. West created and perfected her languid sex goddess persona during years in vaudeville and by serving as her own playwright, but Louvish discovers West's secret life was filled not with lovers but long nights of polishing and refining her scripts. She was almost 40 when she made her first film, but two years later, she was the highest paid performer in the U.S. Louvish's bio is appreciative and extensively detailed, focusing on West as writer. It can sometimes feel plodding as he transcribes skits and routines (although most still sparkle seven decades later, like "I used to be Snow White, but I drifted"). Summing up West's final three decades in a mere 50 pages feels rushed. But Louvish's research cements West's reputation as the definitive siren of suggestion, without whom there would never have been any Sex & the City. Photos. (Nov. 21) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Mae West (1892-1980), whose famous lines included "Come up and see me sometime" and "It ain't the men in my life, it's the life in my men that counts," created a persona that made her a living legend. The buxom blonde started out in burlesque and vaudeville and later segued into movies. By 1934, she was the highest-paid performer in the United States and went on to costar with everyone from Cary Grant to Raquel Welch. Louvish, who has also written biographies of Laurel and Hardy and the Marx Brothers, presents a well-researched account of West's life, complete with a helpful chronology and a list of her stage plays. Other books on Mae West include Jill Watts's Mae West: An Icon in Black and White and Emily Wortis Leider's Becoming Mae West. For libraries owning one of these, It Ain't No Sin is an optional purchase, though it is the first to draw on West's recently uncovered personal papers. Recommended for larger public and academic libraries.-Barbara Kundanis, Addison P.L., IL Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

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