Title:
Love, Queenie : Merle Oberon, Hollywood's first South Asian star / Mayukh Sen.
ISBN:
9781324050810
Personal Author:
Edition:
First edition.
Publication Information:
New York, NY : W.W. Norton & Company, [2025]
©2025
Physical Description:
xxiv, 288 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
Contents:
Introduction -- A note on naming conventions -- My name is Queenie (1911-1929) -- I have no mother (1929-1932) -- Ann sans tête (1932-1933) -- My one ambition (1934) -- To see my mother again (1934-1935) -- Papa Goldwyn, Father Korda (1935-1937) -- An accent of my own (1937-1938) -- I am Heathcliff! (1938-1940) -- My dearest joy (1940-1942) -- I wasn't born heroic (1942-1945) -- I ruled my own life (1945-1948) -- To belong to this country (1948-1953) -- Like a virus (1948-1953) -- Being Mrs. Pagliai (1956-1965) -- The last of the great face (1965-1971) -- Where I belong (1971-1973) -- Local girl makes good! (1973-1978) -- It had haunted me ever since (1978-1979) -- Epilogue -- Acknowledgments -- Filmography -- Notes -- Selected bibliography -- Illustration credits -- Index.
Summary:
Merle Oberon made history when she was announced as a nominee for the Best Actress Oscar in 1936. Hers was a face that "launched a thousand ships," a so-called exotic beauty who the camera loved and fans adored. Her nomination for The Dark Angel marked the first time the Academy recognized a performer of color. Almost ninety years before actress Michelle Yeoh would triumph in the same category, Oberon, born to a South Asian mother and white father in India, broke through a racial barrier--but no one knew it. Oberon was "passing" for white. Born into poverty, Queenie Thompson dreamt of big-screen stardom. By sheer force of will, she immigrated to London in her teens and met film mogul Alexander Korda, who christened her "Merle Oberon" and invented the story that she was born to European parents in Tasmania. Her new identity was her ticket into Hollywood. When she was only in her twenties, Oberon dazzled as Cathy in Wuthering Heights opposite Laurence Olivier. Against the backdrop of Hollywood's racially exclusionary Golden Age and the United States's hostile immigration policy towards South Asians in the twentieth century, Oberon rose to the highest echelons of the film-world elite, all while keeping a secret that could have destroyed her career.
Personal Subject:
Genre:
OCLC Number:
on1437529676
Availability:
~0