One More Time: A Memoir
Carol Burnett
(Author)
Description
Carol Burnett spent most of her childhood in a Depression-scarred Hollywood neighborhood, where she lived in a single-room apartment with her endearingly batty grandmother, Nanny, a hypochondriacal Christian Scientist with a buried past. The child of two alcoholic parents, Burnett presents a sometimes hilarious, sometimes heartbreaking coming-of-age: from her sadly hopeful mother, who was hooked on Tinseltown fantasy, to the first signs of her own comic gift; from happy weekends spent with her father, to their last tragic meeting in a public sanatorium. Featuring a new Afterword by the author, about teaming up with her daughter to bring this story to Broadway, One More Time is an intimate, touching, and astonishing narrative of a financially desperate but emotionally rich childhood on the wrong side of Hollywood's tracks.Product Details
Price
$18.00
$16.74
Publisher
Random House Trade
Publish Date
August 12, 2003
Pages
365
Dimensions
5.28 X 8.02 X 0.89 inches | 0.65 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780812969726
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About the Author
Carol Burnett has been an actor on Broadway, television, and in the movies, and was the star of the long-running The Carol Burnett Show, which won 25 Emmy Awards. She has been awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom and the Kennedy Center Honors.
Reviews
"Behind every great comedian lies a story . . . as rich in pathos as it is in humor." --USA Today "This feels like Edward Albee territory. . . . Surviving and struggling are what this book is about, and what gives it life. . . . Often moving and always honest." --The Washington Post "A first-rate job of storytelling . . . [Burnett has] the skill of a novelist." --Chicago Tribune "This isn't a celebrity bio whose author has found a new milieu in which to perform a star turn. The spirit of its ending is very much like the ending of one of Burnett's variety TV shows, when she comes out to say good night, and you momentarily sense that you're not just looking at an entertainer--you're looking into the face of a human being." --Los Angeles Times Book Review