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The Astaires  By  cover art

The Astaires

By: Kathleen Riley
Narrated by: Barbara Edelman
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Publisher's summary

Before "Fred and Ginger" there was "Fred and Adele", a show-business partnership and cultural sensation like no other. In our celebrity-saturated era, it's hard to comprehend what a genuine phenomenon these two siblings from Omaha were. At the height of their success in the mid-1920s, the Astaires seemed to define the Jazz Age. They were Gershwin's music in motion, a fascinating pair who wove spellbinding rhythms in song and dance. In this book, the first comprehensive study of their theatrical career together, Kathleen Riley traces the Astaires' rise to fame from humble midwestern origins and early days as child performers on small-time vaudeville stages (where Fred, fatefully, first donned top hat and tails) to their 1917 debut on Broadway to star billings on both sides of the Atlantic. They became ambassadors of an art form they helped to revolutionize, adored by audiences, feted by royalty, and courted socially by elites everywhere they went. From the start, Adele was the more natural performer, spontaneous, funny, and self-possessed, while Fred had to hone his trademark timing and elegance through endless hours of rehearsal, a disciplined regimen that Adele loathed. Ultimately, Fred's dancing expertise surpassed his sister's, and their paths diverged: Adele married into British aristocracy, and Fred headed for Hollywood.

The Astaires examines in depth the extraordinary story of this great brother-sister team, with full attention to its historical and theatrical context. It is not merely an account of the first part of Fred's long and illustrious career but one with its own significance. Born at the close of the 1800s, Fred and Adele grew up together with the new century, and when they reached superstardom during the interwar years, they shone as an affirmation of life and hope amid a prevailing crisis of faith and identity.

©2012 Oxford University Press (P)2013 Audible, Inc.

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  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

I should have gotten a book solely about Fred

I wanted to know about Fred's career when he was successful, his work ethnic, and his understanding of dance. This book is about him and his sister especially their beginning careers. If that's what your looking for then it's a great book.

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Dull Story

Not at all what you would expect about the life of one of America's greatest dancers. Far too much focus on the childhood years of brother and sister (30 minutes would have been adequate). It's a long book and the first 7 hours are tedious with the rare morsel of interesting detail. Finally after hours of this there is what I consider a very inadequate section that focuses on Fred Astaire's gifts as a dancer and how he became who he became. I would have also been interested in the years when his career was slowing down. There are so many ways a great book could have been written about this brilliant yet difficult man. It would have been interesting to learn more about his personal life- and not about the vaudeville scene when he and his sister were kids. I can't believe that there hasn't been a great book written about him (or at least it's not available in audio format). Very disappointed in this. Thought I would love it! Instead it was so dreary I could hardly listen. I am hoping that Audible will be looking for more books on Fred Astaire that would tell his story as it deserves to be told- I would snatch that up in a second!

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  • Overall
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for all fans of astaire

I loved every second of this book, and wish there were a part 2. A wonderful trip back to a special time and place.

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Wonderful Story Beautifully Read

The dancing partnership between Fred and older sister Adele is, naturally, under appreciated today. We can only imagine the stir they created from looking at the old photographs, usually with Adele’s startlingly frank gaze meeting ours while Fred looks adoringly at her.

Their personalities come alive in this audiobook and each is given their share of attention. Adele, especially, comes across as the more fascinating of the two: bold, comic and sparkling, while Fred was more serious, but the better dancer. At times, I felt an ache that I would never see the numbers described, such as The Whichness of the Whatness from Stop Flirtin’.

Their stories are continued past Adele’s retirement to a largely tragic life punctuated by lost children and tried by two alcoholic husbands, while Fred overcame initial doubts as to his future without her to go on to the more famous partnership with Ginger Rogers and his well-known detestation of it. (And their mother was a formidable offstage presence of what was really a trio both professionally and personally.)

The crisp and energetic reading by Barbara Edelman is a performance, with her adopting a distinct voice for every quote, right down to Fred’s first wife’s pronunciation of “r’s” like Spaceball’s imposing cleric who opens his mouth and utters “mawwiage.” This might not appeal to some. Even her normal reading voice is very expressive, with slightly ear-catching idiosyncrasies. The only slight complaint is that the contrast between her normal reading voice at times and the sudden, louder brashness of her other voices did not always make for even volume.

However, I confess I found it extremely charming, and did not at all feel it detracted from the material. I could listen to it again, having just finished it, for the pleasure of Edelman’s voice, which is at turns velvety and slightly quirky even when not quoting. (My wife overheard it and commented that she liked it, too.) It seemed particularly suited to the material.

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