The Odyssey and The Idiocy, Marriage to an Actor, A Memoir


Book Description

I once was told there are three kinds of men I should never marry. Working actors. Non-working actors. Between jobs actors. That describes my husband to a T. For twenty years I hung in with this guy. Supported him, massaged his ego, responded to his every whim, cried with him, rejoiced with him, and had his children. And, all the while, gave up my career in theater and film so I could stand by him until at last he knew success. And with his success came adulation, and with adulation, came sexual affairs, and with sexual affairs came divorce. If the marriage was hell, divorce proceedings were Armageddon. He did everything to intimidate me, belittle me and frighten me. Do I regret that I never married the boy back home? Absolutely not. If had stayed in Huron, South Dakota, I would have missed the experiences with: Marilyn Monroe, Mel Brooks, Vivian Blaine, Hume Cronyn, Jessica Tandy, Daniel Mann, Jacqueline Onassis, Roy Scheider, Kurt Vonnegut and a summer living with Veronica Lake. My odyssey began when I attended the University of Iowa, Iowa City and, a year after graduating from The American Theatre Wing, I danced at NYC's Copacabana as one of the "World Famous Copa Girls." After that I went on to tour and to appear in summer stock when I was accepted into Lee Strasberg's acting classes. It was there I met my charming future husband. How could I ever have guessed that years later, he would file for a divorce during the longest Screen Actors Guild strike in the union's history. He testified in court that his leading man days were over, and he was now just an out-of-work actor. As for paying alimony, he was penniless. He conveniently never mentioned the many times I supported him in our earlier days of struggle. He forgot that when I made the movie, "Carnival of Souls," which is now a cult classic, my salary freed him from his waiter job at a Manhattan hamburger joint. The judges were sympathetic to him and agreed with his lawyer that I should be tested by a psychiatrist to find out why I had this fantasy that I was an actress. A shrink would discover my true aptitude. I was encouraged to write. My psyche turned over as I took on the plight of an aspiring writer. However, the court found that my creative lifestyle was not worthy of support and reduced alimony to one dollar a year. After years of lawyers, and courtrooms, and legal machinations, when life was 'running on empty, ' with no money left for the rent, my ultimate triumph came, thanks to a fortuitous inheritance, which gave me the time to finish this memoir. Dear goddess, you were listening after all author_bio: Candace Hilligoss is the Competition Coordinator for the Beverly Hills Theatre Guild--Julie Harris Playwright Award. This is the largest competition for new plays in the U.S. She is also familiar to audiences for the movie "Carnival of Souls." After that she toured in a number of plays: "A Streetcar Named Desire," " Idiot's Delight," "The Boyfriend, " and appeared at Arena Stage in Washington D.C. and at Olney Playhouse, Olney, MD. Playwrights Jerome Lawrence and Robert Lee cast her in their Broadway play, "Turn On the Night" opposite Joseph Wiseman. For a couple of theaters, she repeated her Marilyn Monroe roles in "Bus Stop" and "The Seven Year Itch." keywords: Humorous Memoir, with Mel Brooks, Jacqueline Onassis, Veronica Lake, Marilyn Monroe & Strasberg, Carnival of Souls--Cult Film, No-Fault Divorce, Comparable to Nora Ephron partnered with Anita Loos. "




Salem to Moscow


Book Description




An Actor's Odyssey


Book Description

Though Arthur Anderson will never be a household name, I can claim to have been performing professionally since 1935, making a living - sometimes a very good one - and in that time I've had some joyful experiences, some depressing ones, and have worked with many fascinating people - and a few rotters. But in their own way they were fascinating, too. -- Publisher website.







Tracers


Book Description

THE STORY: A composite or collage of interrelated scenes, the play follows the lives of a group of grunts as they move from basic training, on to combat in Vietnam, and finally to the shattering realization that their lives will be forever affect




2001 Memories


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Six Ensemble Plays for Young Actors


Book Description

Six Ensemble Plays for Young Actors is an anthology of work written for actors aged 11-25. Ideal for youth theatre groups, schools and amateur dramatic companies, it contains a diverse selection of plays suited to large casts and ensemble performance. Varying in style and subject matter, the plays offer performers, directors and designers a range of exciting challenges: from recreating the mythological world of The Odyssey to a dramatisation of two hundred years of slavery that will take the audience on a journey from eighteenth century Africa to 1990s London in Sweetpeter. Contemporary urban living is confronted in plays ranging from the starkly realistic to the playful, lyrical and surrealistic. From the innocent and imaginative world of a school playground to issues of racism, peer pressure, crime and communication in a mobile phone obsessed culture, this is a wide-ranging anthology that will enrich the repertoire of youth theatre groups and the curriculum in schools. The volume is introduced by Paul Roseby, artistic director of the National Youth Theatre.




Salem to Moscow


Book Description

Covers 30 years in the British theatre, but the book begins in the 1980s when Cox, despite success on both sides of the Atlantic, was nevertheless seeking a fresh sense of purpose for his life and work. His journey culminated in directing "The Crucible" at the Moscow Art Theatre School.




Fahim Speaks


Book Description

A Warrior-Actor's Odyssey from Afghanistan to Hollywood and Back Fahim Fazli is a man of two worlds: Afghanistan, the country of his birth, and America, the nation he adopted and learned to love. He’s also a man who escaped oppression, found his dream profession, and then paid it all forward by returning to Afghanistan as an interpreter with the U.S. Marines. When Fahim speaks, the story he tells is harrowing, fascinating, and inspiring. Born and raised in Kabul, Fahim saw his country and family torn apart by revolution and civil war. Dodging Afghan authorities and informers with his father and brother, Fahim made his way across the border to Pakistan and then to America. After reuniting with his mother, sisters, and another brother, he moved to California with dreams of an acting career. After 15 turbulent years that included two unsuccessful arranged marriages to Afghan brides, he finally qualified for membership in the Screen Actors Guild—and found true American love. Though Fahim's California life was happy and rewarding, he kept thinking about the battlefields of Afghanistan. Haunted by a desire to serve his adopted country, he became a combat linguist. While other interpreters opted for safe assignments, Fahim chose one of the most dangerous: working with the Leathernecks in embattled Helmand Province, where his outgoing personality and deep cultural understanding made him a favorite of both Marines and local Afghans—and a pariah to the Taliban, who put a price on his head. Fahim Speaks is an inspiring story of perseverance and patriotism—and of the special love that one man developed for his adopted country. A gold medal winner from the Military Writers Society of America!




Captain Blood


Book Description

Physician and country gentleman Peter Blood is forced to turn from medicine to piracy in this swashbuckling classic brimming with stolen treasure, adventure on the high seas, and romance.