En 1959, Kirk Douglas met en chantier, en tant que producteur, un projet considérable : l'adaptation de Spartacus, best-seller d'Howard Fast. Stanley Kubrick sera le réalisateur, Douglas jouera le célèbre esclave rebelle, Laurence Olivier, Tony Curtis, Jean Simmons, Peter Ustinov, Charles Laughton tiendront des rôles secondaires. Pour l'adaptation, Douglas engage le grand scénariste Dalton Trumbo. Or celui-ci, inscrit sur la liste noire de Joseph McCarthy, vient de passer un an en prison. Il doit donc travailler sous pseudonyme. Dans ce livre publié aux Etats-Unis en 2012, l'acteur décrit la mise en place d'un projet de grande envergure ; les relations orageuses avec Kubrick, avec qui il venait de tourner - et de produire - Les Sentiers de la gloire ; les caprices des acteurs, notamment la rivalité entre Ustinov et Laughton ; les difficultés pour parvenir à un montage définitif. Livre à la fois au passé et au présent, mémoires et prise de parole d'un acteur soucieux depuis toujours de la chose politique, I am Spartacus raconte l'épopée du film qui permit à Hollywood de tourner enfin la page de la liste noire.
Kirk Douglas Livres
Kirk Douglas était un acteur, producteur et auteur américain de cinéma et de théâtre, connu pour incarner des personnages forts et inoubliables. Sa carrière prolifique en a fait l'une des plus grandes légendes du cinéma américain, célébré pour ses interprétations dynamiques dans un large éventail de rôles. L'impact de Douglas sur l'art cinématographique est évident dans sa capacité à dépeindre des êtres humains complexes avec intensité et conviction. Son héritage continue de résonner auprès du public, offrant un aperçu captivant de l'âge d'or d'Hollywood.







Le fils du chiffonnier
Mémoires
Cinéma (1989) - Kirk DOUGLAS Le Fils du chiffonnier - Mémoires de Kirk Douglas - PRESSES DE LA RENAISSANCE - Grand livre broché
A Song in the Air
- 416pages
- 15 heures de lecture
Shona MacInnes, a crofter's daughter, meets much prejudice when she qualifies to train as a vet--not least from handsome Ross MacMaster, also a vet. Their fiery relationship turns to love, but soon differences are revealed, and they part. Can they ever be reconciled?
Dance With The Devil
- 368pages
- 13 heures de lecture
But it's been awfully good to Danny Dennison. But Danny Dennison has been living a lie. His true identity is buried half way around the world in the ruins of a Nazi concentration camp. Danny believes his secret to be safe - until he meets Luba, a young, sensuous call girl, whose mesmerising sexuality begins to shatter his well-guarded facade.
The Ragman's Son
- 478pages
- 17 heures de lecture
He was born Issur Danielovitch Dempsky, the son of an illiterate rag collector. From his brutal childhood to his acting triumphs to his many fabled love affairs, Douglas recalls his life, his loves and his forty years of Hollywood fame.
Roughly 68 million North American women currently grapple with the challenges of midlife, faced with a culture that tells them their "best-before date" has long passed. In Navigating the Messy Middle, Ann Douglas pushes back against this toxic narrative, providing a fierce and unapologetic book for and about midlife women. In this deeply validating and encouraging book, Douglas interviews well over one hundred women of different backgrounds and identities, sharing their diverse conversations about the complex and intertwined issues that women must grapple with at midlife: from family responsibilities to career pivots, health concerns to building community. Readers will find a book that offers practical, evidence-based strategies for thriving at midlife, coupled with compelling first-person stories. Offering purpose and meaning in a life stage that can otherwise feel out of control, Douglas pushes back against the message that women at midlife are no longer relevant and needed, highlighting the far-reaching economic, political and social impacts of these messages and providing a refreshing counter-narrative that maps out a path forward for women at midlife. Both a midlife love letter and a lament, Navigating the Messy Middle both celebrates the beauty and rages at the many injustices of this life stage and provides readers with the tools to chart their own course.
Climbing the Mountain
- 272pages
- 10 heures de lecture
With the simple power and astonishing candor that made his 1988 autobiography, The Ragman's Son, a number one international bestseller, Kirk Douglas now shares his quest for spirituality and Jewish identity -- and his heroic fight to overcome crippling injuries and a devastating stroke. On February 13, 1991, at the age of seventy-four, Kirk Douglas, star of such major motion-picture classics as Champion, Spartacus, and Paths of Glory, was in a helicopter crash, in which two people died and he himself sustained severe back injuries. As he lay in the hospital recovering, he kept wondering: Why had two younger men died while he, who had already lived his life fully, survived? The question drove this son of a Russian-Jewish ragman to a search for his roots and on a long journey of self-discovery -- a quest not only for the meaning of life and his own relationship with God, but for his own identity as a Jew. Through the study of the Bible, Kirk Douglas found a new spirituality and purpose. His newfound faith deeply enriched his relationship with his own children and taught him -- a man who had always been famously demanding and impatient -- to listen to others and, above all, to hear his own inner voice. Told with warmth, wit, much humor, and deep passion, Climbing the Mountain is inspirational in the very best sense of the word.
My Stroke of Luck
- 208pages
- 8 heures de lecture
Relaxing at home one sunny afternoon in 1995, Kirk Douglas suddenly felt a strange sensation in his right cheek. When he tried to describe what was happening, all that came out was gibberish. The cinema icon and movie legend was having a stroke. In this heartfelt and inspiring account, Kirk Douglas describes in powerful detail the helplessness and fear he felt following the attack, the depression that took him to the brink of suicide, and the love and support that pulled him through. Poignant and humorous, this is the deeply moving tale of a remarkable man whose gentle dignity and courage can be an inspiration to us all.
This modern classic by one of our leading scholars seeks to explain the values prevalent in today's mass culture by tracing them back to their roots in the Victorian era. As religion lost its hold on the public mind, clergymen and educated women, powerless and insignificant in the society of the time, together exerted a profound effect on the only areas open to their influence: the arts and literature. Women wrote books that idealized the very qualities that kept them powerless: timidity, piety, and a disdain for competition. Sentimental values that permeated popular literature continue to influence modern culture, preoccupied as it is with glamour, banal melodrama, and mindless consumption.This new paperback edition, with a new Preface, will reach yet more readers with its persuasive and provocative theory. Richard Bernstein of The New York Times said: "Her remarkable scholarship is going to set the standard for a long time to come."
Highland Sisters
- 336pages
- 12 heures de lecture
1910. When eighteen-year-old Lorne Malcolm runs off on her wedding day with the landowner's son, Daniel MacNeil, the jilted groom, turns to Lorne's older sister, Rosa, for comfort. Rosa's feelings for Daniel grow and the pair soon marry. But are tragedy and heartbreak just around the corner?
