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THE WALL OF LIFE by Shirley MacLaine

THE WALL OF LIFE

Pictures and Stories From This Marvelous Lifetime

by Shirley MacLaine

Pub Date: Oct. 22nd, 2024
ISBN: 9780593735305
Publisher: Crown

A worldly life journey candidly reflected in photos and captions.

Throughout her illustrious career, from her 1950s star-making Broadway debut as an understudy in Pajama Game to leading roles in acclaimed films like Some Came Running and The Apartment, Shirley MacLaine has diligently chronicled her life’s journey. Her bestselling memoirs, beginning with Don’t Fall Off the Mountain (1970) and including Out on a Limb (1983), have documented her professional ascent and approach to living a fully independent, well-traveled life as a modern woman. Now in her 90s, MacLaine revisits her experiences through a collection of personal photographs and extended captions, serving as a visual narrative thread. In mostly laudatory terms, her memoir showcases MacLaine’s connections with luminaries from various spheres of her personal, political, spiritual, and show business life. Such reflections include her long, unconventional marriage to businessman Steve Parker, her Rat Pack associations (Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, and Sammy Davis Jr.), and her encounters with U.S. presidents and controversial political figures like Nikita Khrushchev and Fidel Castro. Of the latter, she notes, “Castro and I had two days together. He was open, funny, and curious, especially about the Kennedys, and did not come on to me as Barbara Walters suggested he would.” On the flip side, MacLaine occasionally dishes a few subtle asides: Jerry Lewis was “overpowering and controlling, and I didn’t think he was funny,” director Herbert Ross “was an arrogant guy, very full of himself,” and of her Terms of Endearment co-star she simply comments, “I did not enjoy Debra Winger.” MacLaine’s images and captions cumulatively reflect an enviable, well-lived existence, offering glimpses into her world travels, family, friends, and various love affairs. An engaging but lightly written exploration, the scant narrative may appeal primarily to her devoted fans.

A glossy retrospective of MacLaine’s remarkable life and career, visually captivating yet offering more breadth than depth.