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The actors and entertainers themselves vary in perspective on the commonality or reason for divorce in Hollywood. In 1961 Anne Baxter stated Hollywood was "the most difficult place in America for marriage" due, in part, to the "terrible extremes of success and failure" both spouses may face. [8]
Hollywood Wives is a 1983 novel by the British author Jackie Collins.It was her ninth novel, and her most successful, selling over 15 million copies. [1]Hollywood Wives tells the stories of several women in Hollywood, ranging all the way from long-time talent agents and screenwriters to vivacious screen vixens and young, innocent newcomers.
A 1920 book review described a new novel as "plot simplicity itself, being concerned essentially with the struggle of two wealthy girls, a vulgar American 'Dollar Princess' and a charming Lancashire lass, for the love of a young farmer baronet who cleaves, like his forefathers, to the old religion."
Below, Eller breaks down those qualities so you can look for—and foster them—in your marriage. 1. Partner knowledge. No surprise here: Partners in successful marriages genuinely know one ...
Hollywood Babylon is a book by avant-garde filmmaker Kenneth Anger, which details the purported scandals of famous Hollywood denizens from the 1900s to the 1950s. The book was banned shortly after it was first published in the U.S. in 1965, and remained unavailable until reprinted ten years later. [ 2 ]
From Kim Kardashian and Kris Humphries to Britney Spears and Jason Alexander, revisit the shortest celebrity marriages of all time. See why these former flames called it quits so soon:
Hollywood Husbands is a 1986 novel by the British author Jackie Collins. It was her 11th novel, and the second in her "Hollywood" series, after her 1983 hit Hollywood Wives . Hollywood Husbands is an indirect sequel to Hollywood Wives and features a new cast of characters (though the character of talent agent Sadie LaSalle from Hollywood Wives ...
Its purpose is an examination and condemnation of violence and sexuality in cinema, as well as other media, such as TV and rock music. [2] Medved argued in the book that since the 1960s, American popular culture, especially Hollywood cinema, had been producing art that was excessively violent, sexual and disrespectful to authority, and that such art was having a harmful effect on American ...