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HELLO,
DARLIN': |
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Most people know
of Larry in his show business guises as Peter Pan's son, Jeannie's master, and a
certain Texas oil baron who TV audiences loved to loathe. But Larry life and
career have been filled with true-life adventures and incredible experiences
that rival anything Hollywood could dream up. How many people also know, for
example, that Larry had a brief stint in the Ringling Brothers circus that
included dressing up as a lion? Or that he was enlisted in the Air Force? That,
with barely a dollar to his name, he was once forced to live in a men's
lavatory? Or that he was commonly known as the "Mad Monk of Malibu" by
his California neighbors? These are just some of the fascinating pieces of
information about himself that Larry candidly reveals in his dishy, witty and
entertaining autobiography.
In HELLO,
DARLIN': Tall (and Absolutely True) Tales About My Life, Larry shares
all the behind-the-scenes drama of his impressive career on stage, in movies,
and on television, as well as intimate details about his equally colorful
personal life. The book's friendly title indicates the big Texas charm with
which he speaks to his readers, at times tickling funny bones with outrageous
anecdotes, at others providing more emotional commentaries about various
difficulties he grappled with in life. As Larry describes his book, "Some
of it's funny, some of it's serious, and some contains the wisdom that comes
from discovering that having it all doesn't mean you actually have it all. In
writing this book, I decided to throw all that mumbo in the gumbo, to stir in
the stories, the little-known details, and the lessons I've learned..."
Born to the
legendary performer Mary Martin, and going on to have his own 50-year-long
career in entertainment, Larry life story is truly that of an actor's, one
filled with action, drama, and comedy. Larry takes readers through the many
significant events in his life, including: his initial decision, after a failed
attempt to live like a real Texas cowboy, to become an actor; his conflicts with
his step-father that led to periods of estrangement from his beloved mother; his
early efforts to break into the acting trade, barely scraping by with the few
dollars he was able to earn; his courtship of and long marriage to Maj, the
great love of his life and a vital source of support and inspiration; his stage
career, working alongside some of the biggest names and egos in the business;
his breakthrough into film and eventually to television with the hit shows I
Dream of Jeannie and Dallas , and the backstage conflict and plotting the public
never saw; the many ways his life changed as the world wondered "Who Shot
J.R.?"; and finally, his more recent health struggle and highly publicized
liver transplant operation.
What makes
Larry's book so unique, and such a tremendously enjoyable read, are the many
true tall tales he shares throughout, stories that are by turns humorous,
moving, strange, and astonishing. These incredible reminiscences and revelations
include:
when Larry attended a Woodstock, Vermont boarding school as a teen, where he
managed to break the "three biggies" prohibiting smoking, drinking,
and sex - and accidentally set fire to the boys' dorm.
how his father, as many Texan patriarchs were prone to do at the time, took him
to Mexico to lose his virginity; Larry instead simply paid off the chosen
prostitute to tell everyone what a powerful and virile young man he was.
descriptions of his alcohol binges which started at a young age, when at one
point he got so sick that his mother kicked him out of the house.
a raucous road trip when, desperate for work, he drove a theatrical crew from
New York to Florida, his passengers including a bevy of chorus girls, three
sniping Pekingese, and a woman with a close relationship with her Great Dane.
his memorable London stage debut - working in a small part in a production of
South Pacific starring his mother - when his anxiousness to introduce his mother
led to a particularly embarrassing stage entrance.
enlisting in the U.S. Air Force during the Korean War and serving as military
entertainment director for the United Kingdom - and dating a young actress named
Joan Collins before falling in love with Maj.
co-starring with George C. Scott on Broadway and seeing firsthand the actor's
infamous tirades, including dangling a terrified co-star by his heels over a
parapet.
appearing in his first movie, Fail Safe starring Henry Fonda, partying it up,
experimenting with marijuana, acid, and peyote.
behind-the-set battles on the set of I Dream of Jeannie, as Larry pushed for it
to be the great comedy he thought it could be, while wrestling for creative
control with a belligerent director.
inadvertently becoming addicted, along with his wife, to weight-loss pills,
leading to a complete physical and emotional breakdown on the Jeannie set.
his "Mad Monk of Malibu" escapades, including leading flag-waving
parades dressed in a caftan, grocery shopping in a chicken suit, and refusing to
speak on Sundays for 25 years (but offering to listen to anyone who wanted to
unburden themselves to him).
the many hilarious pranks Larry played on costars, friends, and neighbors
(including blasting "Penguin" sounds on his stereo while his irate
neighbor Burgess Meredith was hosting a party).
how he transformed a secondary part on a new nighttime soap into one of the most
popular characters in TV history, and eventually had to respond to the notoriety
of being J.R. (i.e. having old ladies hit him over the head for being such a
louse, and even having the Queen Mother demand he reveal who shot him).
the miracle of having his life saved by an unnamed donor, and the profound new
insights about life and death, and about our shared humanity, that the
experience generated for him.
Like a juicy
episode of Dallas, HELLO, DARLIN', with its outrageous episodes
and incredible developments, is a guilty pleasure of a celebrity memoir that's
just impossible to put down.
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