
Rage for Fame
The Ascent of Clare Boothe Luce
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Narrado por:
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Elisabeth Rodgers
A New York Times notable book
"Her technique was simple: aim for the top", an envious colleague wrote of Clare Boothe Luce. No American woman of the twentieth century aimed so accurately or rose so far as this legendary playwright, politician, and social seductress.
Born in New York's Spanish Harlem with nothing to recommend her but beauty, ferocious intelligence, and dry wit, she transformed herself into the youthful managing editor of Vanity Fair. She married two millionaires and wrote three Broadway hits, including the biting satire The Women. Her second husband, Henry Luce - the publisher of Time, Fortune, and later, at her suggestion, Life - was only one of the dozens of men she entranced. Adding politics and power to journalism and drama, Clare used sex, street smarts, acid humor, and money to plot a career more improbable than anything in her own fiction. Not content with mere wealth and the acclaim of transatlantic caf society, Clare Boothe Luce confessed to a "rage for fame".
This extraordinary audiobook - the result of more than 15 years of research by Sylvia Jukes Morris, her chosen biographer - tells how she achieved it.
©1997 Sylvia Jukes Morris (P)2015 Audible Inc.Listeners also enjoyed...




















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Three stars
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Clare Boothe Brokaw in 1929 started writing captions at Vogue to rise swiftly to the managing editor of Conde Nast’s literary jewel, Vanity Fair. In 1934 or 35 she published her first book entitled “Stuffed Shirts.” In the summer of 1932 she had a brief affair with Bernard Barack. In 1935 CBL married Henry Luce founder and editor in chief of Time, Fortune and Life. They were happily married until his death in 1967.
In 1935 CBL wrote a play “Abide with Me” which was a flop. In 1936 her play “The Women” opened at the Ethel Barrymore Theatre on Broadway as a great hit. She also wrote “Come to the Stable” which was also made into a movie. She also wrote the play “Margin for Error”. In 1940 she wrote a critically acclaimed book on the fall of France and became a war correspondent for Life magazine. On January 11, 1944 her only child Ann Clare Brokaw was killed in an automobile accident while she was a senior at Stanford University.
In 1942 Luce won a Republican seat in the U.S. House of Representatives representing Connecticut. During her second term in the House she was instrumental in the creation of the Atomic energy Commission. In 1946 she was the co-author of the Luce-Celler Act of 1946 which increased the number of Indians and Filipinos permitted to immigrate to the U.S. and allowed them to become naturalized citizens. She became a formidable political orator in congress.
In 1953 she was appointed Ambassador to Italy, the first American woman to hold a major diplomatic post. In 1959 she was nominated U.S. Ambassador to Brazil by President Eisenhower but she declined the job. She died in October 1987 as Grande dame of the Republican Party. Elizabeth Rodgers narrated the story.
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Impressive biography
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