On a related topic:
Ferocious Ambition (2023)
Joan Crawford's March to Stardom
by Robert Dance
Subject: Actor > Joan Crawford
Reframing Vivien Leigh
Stardom, Gender, and the Archive
by Lisa Stead
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Book Presentation:
• First major single-authored scholarly monograph focused solely on Vivien Leigh
• Showcases new ways of producing histories of women's creative labor and stardom through the archive
• Uses original oral history to provide rich new understandings of Vivien Leigh's legacy and meanings for fans, collectors and archival institutions
• Illuminates a rich network of archival materials and makes new connections between a variety of different collections
Reframing Vivien Leigh takes a new look at the laboring life one of the twentieth century's most iconic stars. Author Lisa Stead reframes the dominant narratives that have surrounded Leigh's life and career, offering a new perspective on Vivien Leigh as a distinctly archival subject. The book examines the collections and curatorial practices that have built up around her, exploring material documents collated by her own hand and by those who worked with her. The book also examines the collection practices of those who have developed deep, long-standing fandoms of her life and work. To do so, the book draws upon new oral history work with curators, archivists and fan collectives and examines a variety of archived correspondence, items of dress and costume, script annotations, photography, press clippings, props and memorabilia. It argues that such material has the potential to produce a new interpretation of Leigh as a creative laborer. As such, the book casts new light on the labor of archiving itself and the significance of archival processes and practices to contemporary feminist film historiography.
About the Author:
Lisa Stead, Lecturer in Film Studies, University of Exeter Lisa Stead is a Senior Lecturer in Film Studies at the University of Exeter, UK. She has published in the areas of adaptation, interwar women's cinema and literature, fan magazines, location filming histories, and cinemagoing histories. She is the author of Off to the Pictures: Women's Writing, Cinemagoing and Movie Culture in interwar Britain (2016), and co-editor (with Carrie Smith) of The Boundaries of the Literary Archive (2013). She is Principle Investigator of AHRC Early Career Fellowship project Reframing Vivien Leigh: Stardom, Archive and Access (2019-2020).
Press Reviews:
"Most importantly, Vivien Leigh is presented here as a much more complex, intelligent woman than the generally accepted image of Screen Goddess, Tormented Beauty, and Great Lady of the Stage. Ms. Stead has created an unforgettable portrait of a professionally triumphant, privately tragic life." - Vaughan Edwards, Stage and Cinema
"Through a fascinating 'reframing' of Vivien Leigh, one of the most well-known performers of the mid-twentieth century, Lisa Stead provides a model for how feminist historiography might transform star studies. Looking beyond Leigh's glamorous image, Stead reveals her work behind the scenes as a creative collaborator and activist. All the while, Stead remains attentive to the challenges of documenting the work of female stars, examining a range of archives, popular and scholarly, where traces of Leigh's life and work might be glimpsed" - Shelley Stamp, author of Lois Weber in Early Hollywood
"Lisa Stead re-frames Vivien Leigh as an archive in motion, defying reduction and fossilisation, and demonstrates the constellation of stories, memories, items and relationships that constitute the star's presence in archives. Stead's inventive and inquisitive approach has produced a fresh framework at the vanguard of star studies: inclusive, interdisciplinary, and pioneering." - Lucy Bolton, Reader in Film Studies, Queen Mary, University of London
See the publisher website: Oxford University Press
See the complete filmography of Vivien Leigh on the website: IMDB ...
> From the same author:
Off to the Pictures (2016)
Cinemagoing, Women's Writing and Movie Culture in Interwar Britain
by Lisa Stead
Subject: Sociology