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The Moon's a Balloon: The Guardian’s Number One Hollywood Autobiography Copertina flessibile – 27 ottobre 1994
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ONE OF THE BESTSELLING MEMOIRS OF ALL TIME WITH OVER FIVE MILLION COPIES SOLD WORLDWIDE
Discover the heartfelt, laugh-out-loud account of one of Hollywood's greatest actors and, above all, greatest men
Debonair English wit and humourist extraordinaire, star of The Pink Panther, Casino Royal and Around the World in 80 Days, few Hollywood actors are remembered as fondly as David Niven.
In this bestselling autobiography, Niven shows how, even as an unknown young man, he knew how to live the good life, regaling us with tales of school expulsion and wartime hi-jinks. However, it is his accounts of working and partying with the legends of the silver screen - from Lawrence Oliver and Vivien Leigh to Elizabeth Taylor, Noel Coward and dozens of others - that turn this memoir into an outright masterpiece.
An intimate, gossipy, warm and above all charming account of life inside Hollywood's dream factory, The Moon is a Balloon is a classic to be read and enjoyed time and again.
***
'An immensely enjoyable, witty and racy memoir' Sunday Times
'Forthright, bawdy, and often hilarious, zany and zestful, his anecdotes should keep you entertained for hours' Sunday Express
'Niven's life was Wodehouse with tears' John Mortimer
- Lunghezza stampa336 pagine
- LinguaInglese
- EditorePenguin
- Data di pubblicazione27 ottobre 1994
- Dimensioni21.6 x 13.8 x 2.03 cm
- ISBN-100140239243
- ISBN-13978-0140239249
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Forthright, bawdy, and often hilarious, zany and zestful, his anecdotes should keep you entertained for hours. ― Sunday Express
Niven's life was Wodehouse with tears. -- John Mortimer
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Dettagli prodotto
- Editore : Penguin; Reprint edizione (27 ottobre 1994)
- Lingua : Inglese
- Copertina flessibile : 336 pagine
- ISBN-10 : 0140239243
- ISBN-13 : 978-0140239249
- Peso articolo : 260 g
- Dimensioni : 21.6 x 13.8 x 2.03 cm
- Posizione nella classifica Bestseller di Amazon: n. 3,019 in Biografie di attori e artisti
- n. 3,937 in Arte e spettacolo
- n. 17,785 in Biografie e autobiografie (Libri)
- Recensioni dei clienti:
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Churchill bade me take another walk in the walled garden. Things were looking grim - the war in the desert was at its lowest ebb with Rommel snapping at the gates of Alexandria and after their spectacular success in Crete, the possibility of an enemy airborne invasion of the U.K. had now superseded the threat of a conventional one. Food was getting more and more scarce and a glance at the map sent cold shivers down one's back."
The Moon's a Balloon is actually a poem by E.E Cummings about escaping the World and living a pain free life. I think that David Niven titled his autobiography with this moniker because he actually felt that his life whilst certainly not pain free - was something to be very grateful for. Niven certainly lived his life with purpose, taking every opportunity - according to this book anyway.
If you think about David Niven (if you even know who he was), you probably think about films like 'The Pink Panther', 'Casino Royale' and possibly 'The Prisoner of Zenda', 'Around the World in 80 days' and maybe even 'Special Tables' for which he won the Oscar for best actor. You also probably imagine the archetypal British gentleman.
Niven was born in 1910 - he never really knew his father who was killed in the Battle of Gallipoli in 1915 whilst serving with the Berkshire Yeomanry (FUN FACT: I grew up in Berkshire in the UK). Niven was packed off to boarding school and after a couple of terrible experiences ended up at Stowe Public school - a new breed of school where they nurtured them into adulthood instead of what you might expect from an English Public school in 1920 (for Aussies - English Public school is generally associated with money and privilege). Stowe's first headmaster J.F Roxburgh is credited with being a major influence on 20th century English education - David Niven benefited hugely from this innovative environment.
After school he joined Sandhurst (military college) and subsequently was comissioned as an officer in the Highland Light Infantry and ended up doing a stint in Malta in command of #3 Platoon at the tender age of 18.
Niven left the army in a hurry after a slight indiscretion (by army standards anyway), resigned his commission and sailed for Canada. This was followed shortly by a failed stint as a Wine salesman just after prohibition ended and a crazy (also failed) project involving a rodeo and 150 ponies. Niven was close to broke and without many prospects! The interesting thing about him was that he just got on with it - didn't feel sorry for himself and took every opportunity that followed. One always gets the feeling that there is not a small amount of 'luck' involved in such a story however.
Niven found his way into the movies through connections & friends and also into a 7 year contract with MGM (Samuel Goldwyn himself!). He made some good films like Mutiny on the Bounty, The Prisoner of Zenda (first major success), The Dawn Patrol & Wuthering Heights opposite Olivier. Then WWII struck...
He was one of the first major British actors to (re) signup with the army (although he wanted to be a RAF pilot as it was something different to what he had already experienced). He ended up with the Second Battalion. During the 'phoney war' Niven ended up at dinner with friends. Churchill was there:
"He talked at great length about vegetables and the joy of growing one's own. He made it clear that before long, rationing would become so severe that 'every square inch of our island will be pressed into service'. He questioned me about the problems of a junior officer in the Army and listened most attentively to my answers. It saddens me most greatly that I had the enormous good fortune to have several of these 'garden tours' with this unique human being and that I remember so little of what he actually said"
He met his first wife, 'Primmie' during the war and had 2 children by the end of it. He starred in a couple of propaganda films and was involved in the Normandy landings in June 1944. At the end of the war he was a lieutenant colonel: David and Primmie went to start a new life in the USA in a new home. Tragedy struck however and Primmie died after a fall in the house - she was 25.
The book pretty much ends there - it was less about Hollywood than his early and military lives. Niven starred in some notable postwar films such as "Around the World in 80 Days" which at the time was the most successful film ever - fortunately as the producer Mike Todd (Mr Elizabeth Taylor) was writing fake cheques to get it made. It made them all rich! The Pink Panther, Force 10 from Navarone were two more.
David Niven strikes me as someone who was the same on and off the set, unpretentious, generous and a lover of life.
Recensito in Australia 🇦🇺 il 28 febbraio 2021
Churchill bade me take another walk in the walled garden. Things were looking grim - the war in the desert was at its lowest ebb with Rommel snapping at the gates of Alexandria and after their spectacular success in Crete, the possibility of an enemy airborne invasion of the U.K. had now superseded the threat of a conventional one. Food was getting more and more scarce and a glance at the map sent cold shivers down one's back."
The Moon's a Balloon is actually a poem by E.E Cummings about escaping the World and living a pain free life. I think that David Niven titled his autobiography with this moniker because he actually felt that his life whilst certainly not pain free - was something to be very grateful for. Niven certainly lived his life with purpose, taking every opportunity - according to this book anyway.
If you think about David Niven (if you even know who he was), you probably think about films like 'The Pink Panther', 'Casino Royale' and possibly 'The Prisoner of Zenda', 'Around the World in 80 days' and maybe even 'Special Tables' for which he won the Oscar for best actor. You also probably imagine the archetypal British gentleman.
Niven was born in 1910 - he never really knew his father who was killed in the Battle of Gallipoli in 1915 whilst serving with the Berkshire Yeomanry (FUN FACT: I grew up in Berkshire in the UK). Niven was packed off to boarding school and after a couple of terrible experiences ended up at Stowe Public school - a new breed of school where they nurtured them into adulthood instead of what you might expect from an English Public school in 1920 (for Aussies - English Public school is generally associated with money and privilege). Stowe's first headmaster J.F Roxburgh is credited with being a major influence on 20th century English education - David Niven benefited hugely from this innovative environment.
After school he joined Sandhurst (military college) and subsequently was comissioned as an officer in the Highland Light Infantry and ended up doing a stint in Malta in command of #3 Platoon at the tender age of 18.
Niven left the army in a hurry after a slight indiscretion (by army standards anyway), resigned his commission and sailed for Canada. This was followed shortly by a failed stint as a Wine salesman just after prohibition ended and a crazy (also failed) project involving a rodeo and 150 ponies. Niven was close to broke and without many prospects! The interesting thing about him was that he just got on with it - didn't feel sorry for himself and took every opportunity that followed. One always gets the feeling that there is not a small amount of 'luck' involved in such a story however.
Niven found his way into the movies through connections & friends and also into a 7 year contract with MGM (Samuel Goldwyn himself!). He made some good films like Mutiny on the Bounty, The Prisoner of Zenda (first major success), The Dawn Patrol & Wuthering Heights opposite Olivier. Then WWII struck...
He was one of the first major British actors to (re) signup with the army (although he wanted to be a RAF pilot as it was something different to what he had already experienced). He ended up with the Second Battalion. During the 'phoney war' Niven ended up at dinner with friends. Churchill was there:
"He talked at great length about vegetables and the joy of growing one's own. He made it clear that before long, rationing would become so severe that 'every square inch of our island will be pressed into service'. He questioned me about the problems of a junior officer in the Army and listened most attentively to my answers. It saddens me most greatly that I had the enormous good fortune to have several of these 'garden tours' with this unique human being and that I remember so little of what he actually said"
He met his first wife, 'Primmie' during the war and had 2 children by the end of it. He starred in a couple of propaganda films and was involved in the Normandy landings in June 1944. At the end of the war he was a lieutenant colonel: David and Primmie went to start a new life in the USA in a new home. Tragedy struck however and Primmie died after a fall in the house - she was 25.
The book pretty much ends there - it was less about Hollywood than his early and military lives. Niven starred in some notable postwar films such as "Around the World in 80 Days" which at the time was the most successful film ever - fortunately as the producer Mike Todd (Mr Elizabeth Taylor) was writing fake cheques to get it made. It made them all rich! The Pink Panther, Force 10 from Navarone were two more.
David Niven strikes me as someone who was the same on and off the set, unpretentious, generous and a lover of life.
I am not a particular fan of David Niven, except some memories of him being in the Pink Panther films or him playing the English gent. However, doesn't matter this is more than a story of his life, it covers the era in England and later Hollywood tha have long gone. Its historical and boy can he tell a good story. I defy any one to name drop as many people as this guy... Well worth it, I'm off now to buy his follow up.