"Why don't you come up and see me some time?" Mae West invited and promptly captured the imagination of generations. Even today, years after her death, the actress and author is still regarded as the pop archetype of secual wantonness and ribald humour. But who was this saucy starlet, a woman who was controversial enough to be jailed, pursued by film censors and banned from the airwaves for the revolutionary content of her work, and yet would ascend to the status of a film legend?
Sifting through previously untapped sources, author Jill Watts unravels the enigmatic life of Mae West, tracing her early years spent in the Brooklyn subculture of boxers and underworlkd figures, nad follows her journey through vaudeville, Broadway, and finally, Hollywood, where she quickly became one of the big screen's most popular - and colourful- stars. Exploring West's penchant for contradiction and her carefully perpetuated paradoxes, Watts convincingly argues that Mae West borrowed haeavily from African Americna culture, music, adance and humour. Viewing West as a trickster, Watts demonstrates that by appropriating for her character the black tradition of double-speak and "signifying", West also may have hinted at her own African-American ancestry and the phenomenon of a black woman passing for white.
This absolutely fascinating study is the first comprehensive interpretive account of Mae West's life and work. It reveals a beloved icon as a radically subversive artist consiously creating her own complex image.
- ISBN10 0195161122
- ISBN13 9780195161120
- Publish Date 10 April 2003 (first published 23 August 2001)
- Publish Status Active
- Publish Country GB
- Imprint Oxford University Press
- Format Paperback
- Pages 400
- Language English