Description
In the first book to focus exclusively on these modern fairy tales, Karen McNally traces the history of this genre from silent cinema to contemporary film and television to show its significance to both Hollywood and broader American culture. Drawing on extensive archival research, she provides close readings of a wide range of films, from Souls for Sale (1923) to A Star is Born (1937 and 1954) and Judy (2019), moving between fictional narratives, biopics, and those that occupy a space in between. McNally considers the genre's core set of tropes, its construction of stardom around idealized white femininity, and its reflections on the blurred boundaries between myth, image, and reality. The Stardom Film offers an original understanding of one of Hollywood's most enduring genres and why the allure of fame continues to fascinate us.
About the Author
Karen McNally is senior lecturer in film and television studies at London Metropolitan University. She is the author of When Frankie Went to Hollywood: Frank Sinatra and American Male Identity (2008), editor of Billy Wilder, Movie-Maker: Critical Essays on the Films (2011), and coeditor of The Legacy of Mad Men: Cultural History, Intermediality, and American Television (2019).
Reviews
The Stardom Film is a lively and insightful introductory account of this genre from its early days to the present. In following that history, Karen McNally offers original and well-researched readings of familiar and rarely studied works. Recommended reading for anyone interested in stardom and the many complex ways Hollywood has treated it on film. -- Steven Cohan, author of Hollywood by Hollywood: The Backstudio Picture and the Mystique of Making Movies
The Stardom Film is an engaging, lucid, and comprehensive study of a narrative mode that continues to exert fascination not only in U.S. cinema but around the world, both in the past and the present. McNally convincingly argues for the significance of several previously neglected films and makes the book a valuable resource for anyone interested in the tropes by which celebrity and stardom remain intertwined with our social and professional identities. -- Adrienne McLean, author of Being Rita Hayworth: Labor, Identity, and Hollywood Stardom
Book Information
ISBN 9780231184014
Author Karen McNally
Format Paperback
Page Count 160
Imprint Columbia University Press
Publisher Columbia University Press
Series Short Cuts