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Book Review of The Kid Stays in the Picture

The Kid Stays in the Picture
dizz avatar reviewed Hollywood's bad boy tells not all, maybe, but a lot on + 631 more book reviews


Outrageous, self-centered, charming, obsessive and smart as a whip, Robert Evans ran Paramount during the late 1960s through mid-1970s, after which time he became an independent producer of such movies as Chinatown, The Cotton Club, Urban Cowboy, Black Sunday and The Saint. During his tenure at Paramount as production chief, his studio went from the bottom of the barrel to the top, with such movies as Rosemary's Baby, The Godfather, Harold and Maude and The President's Analyst. As he is revealed in his own words, he's an odd mixture of deep loyalties and flagrant infidelities, lifelong friendships and epic rivalries, selfishness and selflessness. He's always funny, frequently surprising, and unsparing of himself in describing his highs and lows. After reading his book, I wound up knowing a lot about him, a lot about his generation, and a whole lot about men in general, and I learned some new cuss words as well. I highly recommend this book - the most authentic and brilliant book about Hollywood I've ever read.

This edition is the original hardcover edition published in 1994. A few pages were added to a paperback republication in 2003 when Kid Notorious came out. Evans did an audio version of the book -- telling the stories again, not reading them -- which has minor differences and some additional material.