Books

Book Review: ‘Life. Hollywood,’ by Taschen

• Bookmarks: 1


A massive, two-volume coffee table book revisits the heyday of classic Hollywood glamour as seen in Life magazine.

Some of the most famous images of midcentury American history — Robert Capa’s dispatches from D-Day, a sailor and a nurse entangled in a V-J Day kiss, Robert F. Kennedy lying mortally wounded on the floor of a California hotel kitchen — first appeared in Life magazine.

Emerging on the scene in 1936, the weekly photo publication was perfectly positioned to capture the great years of classic Hollywood glamour and power, as documented in the coffee table book LIFE. HOLLYWOOD (Taschen, $250). And once you get past the images you’ve seen time and again (James Dean walking through a rainy Times Square, a trio of darkly dressed Italian women looking askance at a scandal-ridden Ingrid Bergman), this massive two-volume set offers a mix of striking celebrity portraiture and behind-the-scenes reportage.

Marlon Brando, left, at the Birmingham Veterans Hospital in Los Angeles, studying for his performance in “The Men” (1950).Ed Clark/TI Gotham, Inc., via Life Picture Collection, Meredith
Melvin Van Peebles, the filmmaker behind the 1971 indie hit “Sweet Sweetback’s Baadasssss Song,” photographed in New York City that year.John Shearer/TI Gotham, Inc., Life Picture Collection, Meredith
Ingrid Bergman films “Stromboli” in the titular Italian village, 1949.Gordon Parks/TI Gotham, Inc., Life Picture Collection, Meredith
Natalie Wood swings from the hands of Nick Adams (left) and Dennis Hopper in a spoof of the movie “Trapeze.”TI Gotham, Inc./Life Picture Collection, Meredith

See Alfred Hitchcock going small and filming “Shadow of a Doubt” on location in Santa Rosa, Calif., prevented from using his typical intricate studio sets because of wartime material restrictions. Or Cecil B. DeMille directing thousands of Egyptian extras in “The Ten Commandments,” a remake of his own silent film from three decades prior. A filthy Katharine Hepburn and Humphrey Bogart on location in what was then the Belgian Congo for John Huston’s “The African Queen.”

Filming one of Esther Williams’s trademark “aqua ballets” for the 1944 musical comedy “Bathing Beauty.”Ralph Crane, MGM Studios

As we sit firmly in the age of C.G.I., perched on the precipice of the A.I. era, these reminders of tactile Hollywood land in ways both exciting and heartbreaking.

Grace Kelly carries her dresses out of MGM Studios after wrapping a film, 1956.Allan Grant/TI Gotham, Inc.,Life Picture Collection, Meredith
Kirk Douglas, left, and Burt Lancaster, center, rehearse for the 1958 Academy Awards with the choreographer Jack Cole.TI Gotham, Inc./Life Picture Collection, Meredith
A special effects crew films a scene for the 1943 World War II movie “A Guy Named Joe,” in a large water tank at MGM studios.Walter Sanders/TI Gotham, Inc., Life Picture Collection, Meredith
Henry Fonda and Lucille Ball on the set of the 1962 TV movie “The Good Years,” set between 1900 and 1914.TI Gotham, Inc./Life Picture Collection, Meredith

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