From Kirkus Reviews:
Although Holden (Big Deal, 1990, etc.) in his subtitle promises some lip-smacking gossip, few readers will be shocked, while most will find consuming this overrich table of Oscar-lore like trying to swallow the dessert board on the QE II. Steadily entertaining, Holden's narrative history bulks itself out with the usual Oscar facts and figures, but differs from the leader in its field, Mason Wiley and Damien Bona's voluminous Inside Oscar (1987), by hewing to anecdote. Part of the wacky suspense that the author keeps up hangs from the temper of the country and of the Academy each year (say, toward British nominees), and from studying the predictables and past winning percentages in whatever voting category he talks about, although many readers already will have recalled the winners. Holden begins with the making of the statuette itself, taking us through every step of its casting and burnishing and laminating, with other choice information offered about its brass inscriptions, delivery anywhere in the world, etc. Regarding awards for artistic merit, one of the big thoughts that arises from this study of the 5,000- plus Oscar electorate is, as one (unnamed) director puts it: ``Institutions aren't the best judges of a work of art, just like the Acad‚mie des Beaux Arts rejected the Impressionists.'' Even better are Peter Bogdanovich's words after losing as Best Director to William Friedkin in 1971: ``The way I see it, there's only one place that does it right. Every year in Barcelona they give awards for poetry. The third prize is a silver rose. The second prize is a gold one. The first prize, the one for best poem of all, is a real rose.'' Brain-sogging, so bring digestif. (Over 100 b&w photographs- -not seen.) -- Copyright ©1993, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
From School Library Journal:
YA-An intriguing view of the American movie industry and its magnificent attempt at self-congratulation. Holden covers six decades of the award-from its birth, conceived to spur the industry and control the unions, to the present day (1991) when multimillions are generated even by a nomination. The Oscar's history is often spicy reading-the power moguls, the money, the politics, the glitz. Just as the silver screen has a mystical allure for many, the story of the world that produces the films holds the same attraction. The author explains how the winners are chosen, how the statuettes are made, how the ceremony is planned and executed, and how secrecy is assured. He makes mention of those actors and directors who grovel for the award and those who have refused it. YAs interested in film history, Hollywood, and/or acting will find this book fascinating.
Sue Davis, Cedar Falls High School, IA
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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