My Father Was A Bit Player

by Joan M. Cunningham | Biographies & Memoirs |
ISBN: 1582441456 Global Overview for this book
Registered by wingglade1wing of McLeansville, North Carolina USA on 9/29/2006
Buy from one of these Booksellers:
Amazon.com | Amazon UK | Amazon CA | Amazon DE | Amazon FR | Amazon IT | Bol.com
This book is in the wild! This Book is Currently in the Wild!
1 journaler for this copy...
Journal Entry 1 by wingglade1wing from McLeansville, North Carolina USA on Friday, September 29, 2006
Picked up this hardback from the free shelf at the used book store today. From the book flap:

During the Depression, the motion picture industry spun timeless fantasies of romance and adventure through the silvery images of its glamorous stars. The movie theatre was a house of dreams; a place of refuge for a population struggling with economic hardship and emotional despair. We continue to study and adulate the icons of Hollywood's golden era, but what do we know of the lives of the hard-working, middle class people that made Los Angeles a unique and thriving community? My Father Was A Bit Player gives us an engaging glimpse into that other, and far more real, Hollywood of the past.

In 1933, Joe Cunningham, a struggling Philadelphia journalist, got his shot at realizing the Hollywood dream. Hired as a screenwriter at Fox Studios, he was confident that he had a lucrative and secure future in the movie business when he moved his large family to California. However, when his contract was not renewed, his ambitions were redesigned by necessity. The family's fortunes consequently began to rise and fall as Cunningham strove to carve a professional niche as a character actor, while continuing his freelance writing career. In this way he kept his lively family afloat and on the fringes of the exciting entertainment industry.

In My Father Was A Bit Player, Joe Cunningham's daughter, Joan, remembers her extraordinary childhood with a clear eye and a fond heart. She writes with beautiful clarity and graceful humor to relate her recruitment to attend Shirley Temple's fifth birthday party; how she came to witness the legendary back lot burning of Atlanta, and what it was like to cheer her own dad's larger-than-life appearances on the big screen. My Father Was A Bit Player vividly evokes a childhood experience that is uniquely American. Joan Cunningham transports us to a time and place that continues to captivate us, as she tells the compelling life story of a man who was far more intriguing than any character he depicted on film.

Journal Entry 2 by wingglade1wing at McLeansville, North Carolina USA on Monday, November 8, 2021
This book has been sitting around on Mt. TBR through two moves and 15 years! Finally got around to reading it and it is a delight. It is a slim volume, which I read in a single day, about a man I had never heard of. But Cunningham brings her father and the time (the 30s and 40s) to life in wonderful little vignettes. She tells the tale of a talented man--a writer, cartoonist, and actor--who always seems just on the verge of making it big. I'm glad I finally read it!

Journal Entry 3 by wingglade1wing at Cone Health Moses Cone Hospital in Greensboro, North Carolina USA on Thursday, November 18, 2021

Released 2 yrs ago (11/17/2021 UTC) at Cone Health Moses Cone Hospital in Greensboro, North Carolina USA

WILD RELEASE NOTES:

Congratulations! You have found a BookCrossing book, which is traveling around in search of new readers. Please take a moment to note where you found the book, and, if you can, spend some time browsing the site.

BookCrossing is a community of readers with a mission to share books by "releasing" them into the wild, as well as trading and sharing with each other. Our forums are a wonderful place to chat with other readers about what you are reading and anything else that's on your mind. It's lots of fun!

Once you are finished with this book, please take the time to make another journal entry telling what you thought about it and where it's going next. Thanks!

Are you sure you want to delete this item? It cannot be undone.