4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Star before Hollywood, 27 Feb 2005
By A Customer
This review is from: Fanny Kemble: A Reluctant Celebrity (Hardcover)
Few of us know much about the theatre of Georgian England, and this reviewer knows as little as any. The name of Kemble suggested only dim associations with the London stage of an earlier era and, as I recall, there is a street and a pub of that name in Covent Garden . However, we an live in an age dominated by celebrity, and for me the revelation of Rebecca Jenkins' beautifully written and engrossing book is that this began far earlier than most of us might realise, and that Fanny Kemble, the star subject of this biography was a true Celebrity before the term was used. Her picture was everywhere, her image was on mugs and headscarves, everything she did was fed by an eager press to an even more eager audience, and her performances gripped the London stage. She was a star, from the Kemble family, to whom stardom and the theatre was a way of being.
Like many stars since, she then broke the mould. Her disastrous marriage to an American plantation owner, whom she subsequently, and to her intense disapproval, found to be a slave owner, and her consequent return to London and divorce, added that touch of chaos, drama and accident which characterises star lifestyles to this day. She was then, and would be now, a gift to the media, even if this was something she never sought or planned.
Rebecca Jenkins writes with humour, wit and elegance, and is absolutely in control of her material. There has clearly been impeccable research, but this is far from a dry academic work. Those, like me, who know little of that time, but may have enjoyed reading about Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire or the other larger-than-life figures of that period will love this.
Fanny Kemble lived to an unusually old age for her time, and this book concentrates on the first half of her remarkable life. One is left waiting for the sequel, for Part Two, and I hope Rebecca Jenkins is planning to write it. If it is as good as this one, it will be worth waiting for.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
19th century theatre brought to life, 17 April 2005
By A Customer
This review is from: Fanny Kemble: A Reluctant Celebrity (Hardcover)
I'm a sucker for any film or TV programme that brings the theatre of the 19th century to life, and that is what this book does. The writing is both precise and immediate, so that although the book is long, I found I was carried through by the character of Fanny Kemble, which jumps off the page. The author combines meticulous attention to historical detail with a dry sense of humour, and never gets in the way of Fanny's own voice. A very good read, as well as being highly informative. I hope the author gets round to writing the second book to cover the second half of Fanny's life!
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
An insight to celebrity, 31 Mar 2005
This review is from: Fanny Kemble: A Reluctant Celebrity (Hardcover)
Fanny Kemble is a strong, compelling, complicated character. Rebecca Jenkins has captured the essence of a challenging personality living a celebrated life in this romantic and exciting era. You want to know what will happen next in the dramatic life of this fascinating woman. The style is colourful, funny and human, making this book a very enjoyable read.
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