cover image Burt Lancaster: An American Life

Burt Lancaster: An American Life

Kate Buford. Alfred A. Knopf, $27.5 (464pp) ISBN 978-0-679-44603-3

At the height of the Hollywood blacklist, FBI director J. Edgar Hoover received a letter telling him to ""check the moving picture Crimson Pirate because in it Burt Lancaster makes a speech about workers"" that ""sounds like a commie plug."" Lancaster's decades-long political involvement with liberal causes (and his constant run-ins with the House Un-American Activities Committee in the 1950s) are a central theme in this well-researched and engaging biography, which also details the artist's acting career, his turns as a producer and his personal life. Buford, a regular commentator on National Public Radio, has constructed a complex portrait of a man who was a noted womanizer, yet also engaged in sex with men; who was kind and generous, yet often resorted to violence in his personal relationships; who was a mainstream ""megastar"" (who was parodied in Mad magazine) before reinventing himself as a major figure in Italian art films; and who broke from the imprisoning studio system and revolutionized the industry by beginning an independent production company. By carefully contextualizing Lancaster's more than 50-year career--which began in the circus and included such film classics as From Here to Eternity and Elmer Gantry--within the tumultuous political and economic changes of the postwar years, Buford's finely detailed, sensitive biography ranks among the best of its genre. (Mar.)
close

You are viewing your first of three views. Learn more.