The Seductive Sapphic Exploits of Mercedes de Acosta: Hollywood's Greatest Lover

Author:   Darwin Porter ,  Danforth Prince
Publisher:   Blood Moon Productions, Ltd
Volume:   3
ISBN:  

9781936003754


Pages:   494
Publication Date:   25 October 2020
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Our Price $72.99 Quantity:  
Add to Cart

Share |

The Seductive Sapphic Exploits of Mercedes de Acosta: Hollywood's Greatest Lover


Add your own review!

Overview

A self-defined ""seductress of beautiful women"" and the by-product of an immense fortune, lesbian activist Mercedes de Acosta (born in 1892) was descended from Spain's Dukes of Alba and a beneficiary of the best education and best social skills that her parents' Gilded Age fortune could buy. From her perch within the aristocracy of the Belle Époque, and continuing as an arts-industry ""swinger"" until her death in 1968, she became notorious for seducing-and describing to socialites on both sides of the Atlantic-at least a dozen women who fast-evolved into the most widely publicized and romantically ""unattainable"" celebrities in the world. During her heyday-the sexually permissive ""Pre-Code"" free-for-all of the Silent Screen and Hollywood's early talkies-her lovers included the self-enchanted silent screen mogul, Nazimova; the ""live fast and die young"" tragedienne Jeanne Eagels; the blue-blooded aristocrat of the Jazz Age Broadway stage, Katharine Cornell; the most famous film goddess of the 30s and early 40s (Greta Garbo); and at least a dozen others. Within the deeply entrenched, phobically closeted lesbian circles of America's mid-century, Mercedes become quirkily famous as ""Hollywood's Greatest Lover."" One of her paramours, the German-born bisexual Marlene Dietrich, put Mercedes' promiscuous indiscretions into context: ""During Germany's Weimar Republic (1919-1933), in Paris, London, Berlin, and in the dives and cabarets of Hollywood and New York, promiscuity was rampant and without any particular preference for any specific gender."" In 1960, Mercedes published a ""watered down"" memoir (Here Lies the Heart) that instantly became notorious. In it, she ""outed"" many of her same-sex partners. A few years later-aging, crippled, blind in one eye, and desperately in need of money, she sold, for publication, some of the love letters addressed to her decades ago from, among others, Greta Garbo. And near the end of her life, within his home (historic Magnolia House on Staten Island), she was frank, unvarnished, and unapologetic during extensive interviews with film historian Darwin Porter, the co-author of this book. Suspecting that one day he might pass on some of the secrets she revealed, she cautioned him, ""Don't be vulgar, dear, and promise me that you won't publish anything while my friends are still alive."" Porter honored her request by waiting until 2020 to release this astonishing insight into the underground lesbian contexts of the stage, screen, and publishing scenes of the first half of ""The American Century."" No other book has ever interconnected so many dots. No one, until now, has ever had the courage.

Full Product Details

Author:   Darwin Porter ,  Danforth Prince
Publisher:   Blood Moon Productions, Ltd
Imprint:   Blood Moon Productions, Ltd
Volume:   3
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.653kg
ISBN:  

9781936003754


ISBN 10:   1936003759
Pages:   494
Publication Date:   25 October 2020
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Table of Contents

Reviews

"Blood Moon Productions has, for the past decade and a half, given the world a raft of unauthorized bios of the uber-famous of Hollywood, American politics, and pop culture, all with great admiration for their subjects' art and accomplishments, while not shying away from their more ignominious and often plainly degenerate proclivities. Darwin Porter knew many of these icons and raconteurs personally, and they had some stories to tell, believe you me. One such acquaintance was Mercedes De Acosta, who Porter met in her twilight years and was immediately fascinated by, not only for the stories she had to tell about quite literally anyone who was anyone in the first trimester of the 20th century, but for the sheer force of her personality and rapturous approach to life. Mercedes had just written her 1960 memoirs, Here Lies The Heart, and in physical decline, but willing to share her often-beyond-belief experiences with the young writer. This is something of a departure from the usual Blood Moon offerings, as De Acosta is relatively obscure compared to the likes of Brando, Marilyn, Bogie, the Clintons, and the Kennedys, et. al., but this detailed and heavily illustrated tale is every bit as un-put-downable as any of Porter and Prince's other works. Mercedes' sapphic dance card includes names like Gertrude Stein and Alice B. Toklas, Tallulah Bankhead, Katharine Cornell, Isadora Duncan, both of Valentino's wives, and most notably, Greta Garbo and Marlene Dietrich. She certainly deserved to have her name be synonymous with unabashed, joyful and prolific sensual abandon like Casanova and Don Juan, and in a world where female sexuality is not defined by the male gaze, she certainly would be. She was admittedly a bit of a groupie when it came to the artists of the Belle Epoque and the Roaring Twenties, but she definitely had taste. And keep in mind, this was when the famous were famous for actually doing something (sorry, Facebook/YouTube/Tik Tok ""superstars""). She was the original Six Degrees of Separation, mingling with and inspiring everyone from Pavlova to Enrico Caruso to Puccini to Barrymore to Marie of Romania to the aforementioned legends of film and letters. Mercedes was herself a poet, playwright, and screenwriter, though never as well known as many of her vast circle of friends and lovers, but her life could certainly be considered a work of art at its purest and most outrageous. Someone please make a biopic or documentary about this woman now. Maggie Bloodstone Seattle Gay News"


Blood Moon Productions has, for the past decade and a half, given the world a raft of unauthorized bios of the uber-famous of Hollywood, American politics, and pop culture, all with great admiration for their subjects' art and accomplishments, while not shying away from their more ignominious and often plainly degenerate proclivities. Darwin Porter knew many of these icons and raconteurs personally, and they had some stories to tell, believe you me. One such acquaintance was Mercedes De Acosta, who Porter met in her twilight years and was immediately fascinated by, not only for the stories she had to tell about quite literally anyone who was anyone in the first trimester of the 20th century, but for the sheer force of her personality and rapturous approach to life. Mercedes had just written her 1960 memoirs, Here Lies The Heart, and in physical decline, but willing to share her often-beyond-belief experiences with the young writer. This is something of a departure from the usual Blood Moon offerings, as De Acosta is relatively obscure compared to the likes of Brando, Marilyn, Bogie, the Clintons, and the Kennedys, et. al., but this detailed and heavily illustrated tale is every bit as un-put-downable as any of Porter and Prince's other works. Mercedes' sapphic dance card includes names like Gertrude Stein and Alice B. Toklas, Tallulah Bankhead, Katharine Cornell, Isadora Duncan, both of Valentino's wives, and most notably, Greta Garbo and Marlene Dietrich. She certainly deserved to have her name be synonymous with unabashed, joyful and prolific sensual abandon like Casanova and Don Juan, and in a world where female sexuality is not defined by the male gaze, she certainly would be. She was admittedly a bit of a groupie when it came to the artists of the Belle Epoque and the Roaring Twenties, but she definitely had taste. And keep in mind, this was when the famous were famous for actually doing something (sorry, Facebook/YouTube/Tik Tok superstars ). She was the original Six Degrees of Separation, mingling with and inspiring everyone from Pavlova to Enrico Caruso to Puccini to Barrymore to Marie of Romania to the aforementioned legends of film and letters. Mercedes was herself a poet, playwright, and screenwriter, though never as well known as many of her vast circle of friends and lovers, but her life could certainly be considered a work of art at its purest and most outrageous. Someone please make a biopic or documentary about this woman now. Maggie Bloodstone Seattle Gay News


Author Information

Darwin Porter is the award-winning author of at least 50 celebrity exposés. A reviewer (Examiner.com) once described him as the master of guilty pleasures. He is the Nietzsche of Naughtiness, the Goethe of Gossip, the Proust of Pop Culture. Porter knows all the nasty buzz anyone has ever heard whispered in dark bars, dim alleys, and confessional booths. And lovingly, precisely, and in as straightforward a manner as an oncoming train, his prose whacks you between the eyes with the greatest gossip since Kenneth Anger. Some would say better than Anger. Danforth Prince sustained a long and widely traveled career as a researcher and co-author of many editions of the FROMMER GUIDES, once one of the planet's premier travel guidebook series. . Today, he presides over Blood Moon Productions, a feisty independent press devoted to celebrities who used to consume the imagination of the American public. Master of many trades and talents, always with a fascination for personalities who influenced the course of history, he's also the Innkeeper for MagnoliaHouseSaintGeorge.com, a historic, arts-oriented and celebrity-centric AirBnb on Staten Island in New York City.

Tab Content 6

Author Website:  

Customer Reviews

Recent Reviews

No review item found!

Add your own review!

Countries Available

All regions
Latest Reading Guide

Aorrng

Shopping Cart
Your cart is empty
Shopping cart
Mailing List