1.

Record Nr.

UNISA990003499590203316

Titolo

Atti del congresso internazionale sulla patologia della tiroide : Salerno, 12-15 aprile 1973 / Ente Ospedaliero Generale Regionale

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Salerno : Tip. Volpe, 1973

Descrizione fisica

573 p. ; 23 cm

Disciplina

573.47

Soggetti

Tiroide - Atti di congressi - Salerno - 1973

Collocazione

FDC 169

Lingua di pubblicazione

Italiano

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

2.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910163922303321

Autore

Gilmore John

Titolo

Live Fast, Die Young

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Amok Books

ISBN

1-878923-19-6

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (1 p.)

Disciplina

791.43/028/092

B

Soggetti

Motion picture actors and actresses - United States

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Sommario/riassunto

Live Fast, Die Young: Rembering the Short Life of James Dean is a first - revealing James Dean from the inside out by someone who knew him intimately, in more ways than one. John Gilmore hung out with Dean during the early days in New York, and again in Hollywood when Dean starred in his first movie, East of Eden. They pounded the pavements of



Broadway together, raced motorcycles, had sex with the same women (and compared notes), experimented with gay sex, and tried to make love to another. "We were bad boys playing bad boys while opening up the bisexual sides of our separate personalities . . ." One sex scene between the two is played out in black leather to the music of Edith Piaf. "The sex was a game," Gilmore writes. "Jimmy was obsessed with riding the black ship to hell, and for that quick time I was on board with him." Dean found in the young Gilmore a "kind of unthreatening waste basket" into which he confided, dumping his chaotic, erotic and crazy ideas. "We enjoyed poetry and bullfighting, bongo drums, booze, and girls; knew the same crummy friends and sleepless, searching nights."Dean's insights into his brilliant Broadway success and the films that followed are revealed through Gilmore's story as are Dean's hatred of his disapproving father; his intimacy with his mother and their secret games that engendered Dean's sexual confusion in Hollywood; Dean's obsession with death; and the posthumous explosion of the legend. Through letters, diaries, tape-recorded conversations with the actor, and private remembrances by those closest to him, Gilmore constructs a never-before-seen portrait of the star.