Description
The reviewer of the Boston Globe said point blank: Over the years, I've read hundreds of books on Hollywood and the movie business, and this one is right at the top. As the elusive, tyrannical head of the Music Corporation of America (MCA) until the 1990s, Lew Wasserman was the most powerful and feared man in show business for more than half a century. His career spanned the entire history of the movies, from the silent era to the present, and he was guru to Alfred Hitchcock, Marilyn Monroe, Marlon Brando, and Jimmy Stewart, and to a new generation of filmmakers beginning with Steven Spielberg and George Lucas. For more than four years, Dennis McDougal interviewed over 350 people who knew the man with the giant dark horn-rimmed glasses -- colleagues, relatives, rivals -- and drew on tens of thousands of pages of documents to produce this extraordinary and first-ever portrait of a legend and his times, a book that the New York Times Book Review called thoroughly reported and engrossing and that the Daily News called, simply, a bombshell.
Author: Dennis McDougal
Publisher: Da Capo Press
Published: 04/20/2001
Pages: 600
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 1.88lbs
Size: 9.08h x 5.96w x 1.41d
ISBN13: 9780306810503
ISBN10: 0306810506
BISAC Categories:
- Biography & Autobiography | Entertainment & Performing Arts
- Performing Arts | Film | Direction & Production
- Performing Arts | Business Aspects
Author: Dennis McDougal
Publisher: Da Capo Press
Published: 04/20/2001
Pages: 600
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 1.88lbs
Size: 9.08h x 5.96w x 1.41d
ISBN13: 9780306810503
ISBN10: 0306810506
BISAC Categories:
- Biography & Autobiography | Entertainment & Performing Arts
- Performing Arts | Film | Direction & Production
- Performing Arts | Business Aspects
About the Author
Dennis McDougal, an investigative reporter for the Los Angeles Times for more than a decade, has won scores of journalistic honors, including the National Headliners Award and several Associated Press awards. He lives in Long Beach, California.

