I do love my Broadway divas. The library finally came through for me (after three tries!) and I was able to get a copy of this through Marina, the Maryland interlibrary loan system. (My copy came from Hagerstown – thanks!)
Patti LuPone: A Memoir by Patti LuPone
(2010, Biography)
Grade: 3.5
Patti LuPone is well known as a Broadway diva, and while this memoir definitely humanizes her, it doesn’t exactly dispel the diva image. But at least LuPone has a sense of humor about it! Unfortunately, most of the book is a bit dull. It falls into the “I went here and did this, then went there and did that” style of memoir. There’s not a lot of insight beyond what she did and who she met (she even makes David Mamet seem boring, which is quite a feat), and that makes the early chapters kind of hard to get through.
The book definitely perks up with the more interesting events in her career – most notably Evita and Sunset Boulevard. The battles over the casting of Sunset Boulevard are some of the most juicy stories in recent Broadway history, and even the workmanlike description here can’t take away the drama. These two chapters were the highlight of the book. Still, I think I’d rather watch her on stage than read her prose. It’s unfortunate that none of her musical performances have made it to DVD.
Karen Wheless
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