The Studio
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About this book
In 1967 John Gregory Dunne asked for unlimited access to the inner workings of Twentieth Century Fox. Miraculously he got it. For one year Dunne went everywhere there was to go and talked to everyone worth talking to within the studio. He tracked every step of the creation of pictures like "Dr. Dolittle " "Planet of the Apes " and "The Boston Strangler." The result is a work of reportage that thirty years later may still be our most minutely observed and therefore most uproariously funny portrait of the motion picture business. Whether he is recounting a showdown between Foxs studio head and two suave shark-like agents watching a producers girlfriend steal a silver plate from a restaurant or shielding his eyes against the glare of a Hollywood premiere where the guests include a chimp in a white tie and tails Dunne captures his subject in all its showmanship savvy vulgarity and hype. Not since F. Scott Fitzgerald and Nathanael West has anyone done Hollywood better. "Reads as racily as a novel...(Dunne) has a novelists ear for speech and eye for revealing detail...Anyone who has tiptoed along those corridors of power is bound to say that Dunnes impressionism rings true."--Los Angeles Times
