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Great Showbiz and Theatrical Anecdotes: A Connoisseur's Collection (Paperback)
$15.72 - Save $0.06 - RRP $15.78 Free delivery worldwide (to United States and
all these other countries) Usually dispatched within 48 hours | |Short Description for Great Showbiz and Theatrical Anecdotes* The ultimate collection of showbiz tales * 'There are many delicious morsels waiting to be savoured...this book will prove a hit with anyone interested in showbiz tittle-tattle.' Mail on Sunday
Full description- Publisher: JR Books Ltd
- Published: 01 October 2008
- Format: Paperback 432 pages
- See: Full bibliographic data
- Categories: Theatre Studies | Dance & Other Performing Arts | Humour | Humour Collections & Anthologies
- ISBN 13: 9781906217846 ISBN 10: 190621784X
- Sales rank: 546,821
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Full description for Great Showbiz and Theatrical Anecdotes
'Makes you feel you knew the man...It's a long, luxurious lunch in the Garrick, stuffed with tales' Guardian Containing thousands of anecdotal gems, witty or malicious putdowns, potted biographies and caustic one-liners, collected and collated by the master of gossip and connoisseur of showbiz lore, this is the ultimate collection of theatrical anecdotes. Which Lyric writer perpetrated the immortal line 'Every pedagogue goes to bed agog?' Which Holly wood Actress was told by an even more famous British one that she was 'so sane for a movie star'? And who, in response to an estate agent giving details of a possible house to purchase that came with a maid, a secretary and a chauffeur, wrote a telegram: 'AIRMAIL PHOTOGRAPH OF CHAUFFEUR'? From Norma Shearer to Showbiz Telegrams and from Casting to George Clooney, this is a treasure trove of fascinating stories. Lovers of showbiz in all its forms, from theatre to television and musicals to operatta, will welcome this new much-admired work. Ned Sherrin worked for both the BBC and ITV, including ground-breaking shows such as That Was The Week That Was. A film producer, theatrical director, presenter and sparkling raconteur he was best known for his many years on Radio 4's Loose Ends. 'Sherrin was the doyen of gossip' Mail on Sunday

