I've wanted a peek at this book since it was published. I'm a huge fan of the Vanity Fair annual Hollywood issue. This book is a collection of photos from those issues, added with pictures from the magazine's 1930s run. There are some articles interspersed, which I didn't read too thoroughly. It's a textbook coffee table book.
The back cover blurb opens with 'Here is the ultimate Hollywood book,' and that's not far off. Though it could easily be dismissed (as one reviewer here did) as a collection of glossy photos of pretty people, it's really more than that. The photos are spectacular, ranging from occasional movie stills and behind-the-scenes shots to highly-regarded portraiture from the likes of Annie Liebowitz. Subjects range from the reprehensible empire-maker Ted Turner to a very young Drew Barrymore, from Joan & Jackie Collins (looking very like a jacket photo for one of the latter's novels) to Tony Curtis & Jack Lemmon (half-naked & in drag...in the 90s!). Nearly the entire span of motion picture history is given at least a glance. Captions are ably handled by Christopher Hitchens. Though the photos make up the bulk of this mighty tome, the occasional articles would've been worth a book unto themselves. Entries from P.G. Wodehouse, Dorothy Parker & Carl Sandburg (to name just the most recognisable) are at the classic end of the scale, while weightier articles from Hitchens (a boozy meander along the length of Sunset), Peter Biskind (on 70s super-agent Sue Mengers) and others fill in the more modern, newsier side. All superb reading, even if you're just a little interested. This book is a must-have for movie fans, though Cineastes may want to look elsewhere for something less frivolous.
I bought this beautiful volume in 2003, right after Christmas, and what with markdown upon markdown, this book cost me $7.50. I loved this book and so did my best friend. She'd always tell me I should give it to her; she'd appreciate it more. I never did give it to her, and in 2005, she literally dropped dead from a brain anyeursm. Eight years later, I met a wonderful elderly man who had made his living as a photographer. We sat one day going through his work and he was telling me about the photographers he admired, and most of them appear in Vanity Fair's Hollywood. It was then I decided that I was meant to give this book away and I gave it to him. He told me he went through the book from start to finish and loved it dearly. It was, in my own way, an homage to my dear friend. While I believe my rating of this book is objective, it is also filled with much emotion.
This was my 2nd return to this book. I can never get enough of my love for the vintage movie classics as well as VANITY FAIR. I read every article again and enjoyed reliving Hollywood's halcyon days.
Favorite Quote: "I am a simple, unabashed fan" (Graydon Carter, former editor of VANITY FAIR).