Blue Angel: The Life of Marlene Dietrich
Acclaimed biographer Donald Spoto brings to life one of the
most incandescent and elusive star to grace Hollywood, Marlene Dietrich (1901-1992). He has tapped archival
materials and conducted dozens of interviews to present a life story filled with crucial new details: her hardships and struggles for recognition in 1920s Berlin; her transformation into a screen
goddess; her entertainment of Allied troops during the World War II; and her stint as a nightclub singer in the 1950s. Spoto also includes accounts of her love affairs with Yul Brynner, Maurice Chevalier, Gary Cooper,
Douglas Fairbanks, Jr, Eddie Fisher, general George S. Patton, Erich Maria
Remarque, Frank Sinatra, and John Wayne.
ISBN-13 : 9780815410614
Publisher : Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
Publication date : 28/07/2000
Author : Donald Spoto
Editorial Reviews
Review Of Higher Education
With great care and subtlety, Donald Spoto has produced a complete biography, well written, perceptive and carefully researched.
The New York Times
Incisive and exciting, Blue Angel exhibits Spoto's greatest strenghts.
The Times
Exquisite! With considerable skill and exhaustive, painstaking research, Spoto gives us a biography we have to take seriously.
Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly
Marlene Dietrich 1901-1992 dedicated her energies to maintaining the Garbo-like image of a mysterious,
alluring, remote creature, a glamour-queen role crafted by her mentor and sometime lover, director Josef von
Sternberg. But the earthy German-born actress we meet in Spoto's marvelous, elegantly written biography was ``entirely a woman of the moment''--a sexual libertine with lovers of both sexes, a
frequent cross-dresser, a neglectful mother who condescended to her troubled daughter, an astrology addict, a `` Hausfrau who put a towel around her head'' and constantly ``complained about
almost everything.'' Spoto Laurence Olivier tells how Dietrich wrapped herself in illusions and deceptions,
denying the existence of her sister and obscuring the details of her long marriage to Rudolf Sieber, a man she rarely saw. She paid the price, Spoto writes, through emotional imbalance,
loneliness, decades of self-imposed isolation and ``a spiritual vacuum at the core of herself.'' He also details her many sexual conquests, among them Yul Brynner, Eddie Fisher, John Wayne and Gen. George Patton. An
empathetic, demystifying portrait, heartbreakingly beautiful and sad, this biography blends astute film criticism with backstage and bedroom lore. Photos. Aug.
Library Journal
Having previously published a photo-essay on Dietrich Falling in Love Again: Marlene Dietrich , Little, Brown, 1985. o.p., Spoto has now completed a full-scale biography of the star of screen and
stage. Blue Angel evidences extensive research, as did Spoto's recent Laurence Olivier: A Biography LJ 2/15/92 and his books on Alfred Hitchcock. News of Dietrich's bisexuality isn't likely to
astound knowledgeable film buffs, but Spoto goes further than previous biographers in naming sexual partners usually without citing his sources. Spoto also seems to have penetrated farther behind
Dietrich's public persona than have other writers; he is taken with her, but not taken in. A good choice for
most public libraries. Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 7/92.-- John Smothers, Monmouth Cty. Lib., Manalapan, N.J.
Kirkus Reviews
Spoto's second book on Dietrich (Falling in Love Again, 1985—not reviewed), minus the sexual fantasy and
foot-slogging style that marred his recent Laurence Olivier (p. 42). Spoto captures well the high kitsch of the twilight of the German aristocracy into which Maria Madgelene Dietrich (1901-92) was born. Her mother drilled the spontaneously honest child never to show her
feelings—the birth of the actress's famous mask of alluring remoteness. Ten years of violin lessons trained her for the musical side of her career (her violin teacher deflowered her, she told
Billy Wilder) and for some of her funniest and even moving scenes under the direction of Josef von
Sternberg, the Svengali who—in The Blue Angel—turned Dietrich into a goddess after many roles in drama
school and German silents.
The skill, emotional depth, and richness of the actress's finest work (Judgment at Nuremberg) were overshadowed by the sheer emission of star-power in such "rapturously photographed" early films
as The Devil is a Woman—her own favorite picture—because she was then, Spoto points out, at her most beautiful. Dietrich married early and never divorced (though she remained parted from, if friendly with, her husband) and became
a doting mother and grandmother. In private, she was nothing like the insolent indifference of her screen image, but was an intelligent, ambitious creature who was addicted to lengthy
long-distance calls and who died a reclusive, wealthy alcoholic. Her lovers included Gary Cooper, John Gilbert,
Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Yul Brynner, Frank Sinatra—and on and on. Spoto's best biography—warm, well balanced,
restrained. (B&w photos—75—notseen.)
From Barnes & Noble
One of the world's most enigmatic stars comes to life in this provocative biography covering the great Dietrich's childhood; her career in cabarets, theaters, and films; her work during World War II; her notorious love
affairs; more. B&W photos.