Sarah: The Life of Sarah Bernhardt

Author(s): Robert Gottlieb

Biographies & Memoirs

Everything about Sarah Bernhardt is fascinating, from her obscure birth to her glorious career - redefining the very nature of her art - to her amazing (and highly public) romantic life to her indomitable spirit. Well into her seventies, after the amputation of her leg, she was performing under bombardment for soldiers during World War I, as well as crisscrossing America on her ninth American tour. Her family was also a source of curiosity: the mother she adored and who scorned her; her two half-sisters, who died young after lives of dissipation; and most of all, her son, Maurice, whom she worshiped and raised as an aristocrat, in the style appropriate to his presumed father, the Belgian Prince de Ligne. Only once did they quarrel - over the Dreyfus Affair. Maurice was a right-wing snob; Sarah, always proud of her Jewish heritage, was a passionate Dreyfusard and Zolaist. Though the Bernhardt literature is vast, Gottlieb's Sarah is the first English-language biography to appear in decades. Brilliantly, it tracks the trajectory through which an illegitimate - and scandalous - daughter of a courtesan transformed herself into the most famous actress who ever lived, and into a national icon, a symbol of France.

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Product Information

Robert Gottlieb is the author of the acclaimed Balanchine: The Ballet Maker. He writes for the New York Review of Books, The New Yorker, and other publications, and is dance critic for the New York Observer. His career in publishing - as editor in chief of Simon and Schuster, Alfred A. Knopf, and The New Yorker - is legendary.

General Fields

  • : 9780300141276
  • : Yale University Press
  • : Yale University Press
  • : 0.431
  • : July 2010
  • : 210mm X 140mm X 23mm
  • : United States
  • : books

Special Fields

  • : Robert Gottlieb
  • : Hardback
  • : 792.028092
  • : 256
  • : 94 black-&-white illustrations