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Parcel Arrived Safely: The Autobiography of Michael Crawford
 
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Parcel Arrived Safely: The Autobiography of Michael Crawford [Abridged, Audiobook] [Audio Cassette]

Michael Crawford
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (46 customer reviews)
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Amazon.co.uk Review

Michael Crawford is one of Britain's best-loved entertainers, with roles as varied as the hapless accident-prone Frank Spencer in the 1970s sitcom Some Mothers Do 'Ave Em, and the menacing creature of the night in Andrew Lloyd Webber's 1980s smash-hit musical The Phantom of the Opera. It's hard to believe that the ever-youthful thespian has been in the profession for over 40 years, when a lead role in the school production led him swiftly to become a fully-fledged teenage actor. Parcel Arrived Safely: Tied With String (the unusual title refers to the telegram announcing his birth) is Crawford's warm, engaging autobiography, from the early years with his mother and grandmother ("from the very beginning there didn't seem to be a time when I wasn't surrounded by women"), to the hard slog of stage work and film acclaim in the 1960s with A Funny Thing Happened On The Way To The Forum, How I Won The War, and The Jokers to name but a few.

But it is three very different roles that made Crawford's name and for which he will be best remembered: the classic comedy of idiotic Frank Spencer, black beret set jauntily at an angle as he finds himself caught up in yet another hair-raising adventure (it comes as no surprise that Crawford, a true professional, did all his own stunts), the unicycling showman of Barnum (another gruelling physical schedule), and the masked misfit who just wants to be loved in the phenomenally successful stage version of The Phantom of the Opera, which revealed Crawford's tireless energy as a performer and showcased his powerful singing voice. Parcel Arrived Safely is an unselfconscious, generous memoir, full of hilarious anecdotes and starstruck encounters. It provides an excellent overview of growing up in post-war suburbia and of British comedy in the 1960s and 70s, and above all Crawford shows that his stability and focus come from the support of his late mother and grandmother, his ex-wife and their two daughters. "My mother used to tell me I had St Vitus's dance" he writes, "the truth is I was hyperactive, always running, always busy, taking things apart, putting them together; always imagining and inventing; endlessly competing, challenging, and questioning." What better way to describe Michael Crawford. --Catherine Taylor --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Book Description

Long-awaited, big from the heart and revelatory autobiography of one of Britain's best loved stars.

Product Description

This is the long awaited autobiography of one of Britain's most internationally successful stars, Michael Crawford. By turns funny, charming and sad, here is his vivid account of a war torn childhood -of a loving mother, a violent stepfather and the painful truth about his absent father. His early memories include being taught to sing by Benjamin Brittan, hilarious anecdotes involving his budding love of girls, and the beginning of a lifetime's habit of hilarious pratfalls that he would later turn to good use in the character of Frank Spencer in Some Mothers Do 'Ave Em. His early years in showbusiness led to friendships with David Hemmings, John Lennon and Oliver Reed - as well as the chance to take the mickey out of Michael Winner on set! - and then, as his career began to reach the heights there are stories of Michael making a fool of himself in front of idols Gene Kelly and Barbra Streisand while filming Hello Dolly! in Hollywood. Starring in Barnum and The Phantom of the Opera he became one of the world's biggest stars, but his behind the scenes anecdotes both professional and personal show the honest and self-deprecating quality that have given him a unique place in the affections of the British public. (19990427)
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