Once Upon a Time in Hollywood: From the Secret Files of Harry Pennypacker -- Michael B. Druxman
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Once Upon a Time in Hollywood: From the Secret Files of Harry Pennypacker
Michael B. Druxman
Paperback, 6x9 in, 132 pages, Illustrated
Wheatmark, December 2008
ISBN: 9781604941883
Endorsements
"So, you think you know Hollywood lore? You think you've
heard all there is to hear about the stars and their films? Well,
forget all you've read, because Michael B. Druxman and Stuart
Blumberg have uncovered the real dirt behind the legends. I
don't want to give away anything in this blurb, but my mouth
was agape as I read the strange and sometimes sordid newly
discovered tales in this book. Things I never knew about Clark
Gable and John Wayne and The Wizard of Oz and James Dean and
more -- I was mesmerized, I was astonished, I was giggling. A
book that makes Kenneth Anger's Hollywood Babylon seem
like Fun with Dick and Jane. Are these tales true? Is the
pope Jewish?"
-- Bruce Kimmel, author of the Benjamin
Kritzer trilogy and writer/director of the cult movie favorite
The First Nudie Musical
"Always full of surprises, Druxman takes us on a wild and zany
ride down a yellow brick road of filmdom myth that's fun and
amusing; it's a sure bet for plenty of laughs."
-- Steve Kanaly, actor, Dallas
"A diverting humorous satire on Tinseltown."
-- James Robert Parish, author of
It's Good to Be the King: The Seriously Funny Life of Mel
Brooks
Description
Once Upon a Time in Hollywood: From the Secret Files of Harry
Pennypacker is a revisionist history of Hollywood's Golden Era
and the tabloid press that covered it.
Harry Pennypacker was a prolific and revered newspaper
columnist; a colleague of Louella Parsons, Walter Winchell, and the
other great columnists of the day.
Unfortunately, nobody has ever heard of him because the papers
never ran his articles.
They were too hot. Too dangerous. Too likely to
tarnish the delicate image of silver screen icons.
The newspaper syndicate couldn't fire him because he had an
ironclad contract, so Pennypacker wrote his stories ... and the
editors buried them.
Until now.
The secret files of Harry Pennypacker are secret no longer.
About the Author
Michael B. Druxman is a veteran Hollywood screenwriter whose
credits include Cheyenne Warrior with Kelly Preston,
Dillinger and Capone starring Martin Sheen and F. Murray
Abraham, and The Doorway with Roy Scheider, which he also
directed.
He is also a prolific playwright, his one-person play,
Jolson, having had numerous productions around the
country.
Additionally, he is the author of twelve other published books,
including several nonfiction works about Hollywood, its movies, and
the people who make them (e.g., Basil Rathbone: His Life and His
Films, and Make It Again, Sam: A Survey of Movie
Remakes), plus two novels, Nobody Drowns in Mineral Lake
and Shadow Watcher.
A native of Seattle, Mr. Druxman currently resides in Los
Angeles with his wife, Sandy.