<p>&nbsp;Much is known and written about the film and stage careers of Mae West.&nbsp; But she also worked sporadically on national radio and television during her seventy-five-year career in show business.&nbsp; <em>MAE WEST: Broadcast Muse</em> is the first comprehensive look at her television and radio appearances with Rudy Vallee Perry Como and most famously with Edger Bergen and Charlie McCarthy on <em>The Chase and Sanborn Hour</em> in 1937.&nbsp; Her portrayal of Eve opposite Don Ameche&rsquo;s Adam in the infamous &ldquo;Garden of Eden&rdquo; skit and her provocative sparring with Bergen&rsquo;s wooden companion Charlie McCarthy earned the actress condemnation and a ban from national radio that lasted more than a decade.&nbsp; It also all but ended her motion picture career.</p><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; In the 1950s she ventured into television with a surprise appearance on the 30<sup>th</sup> Annual Academy Awards presentation singing a duet with Rock Hudson guest starring appearances on <em>The Dean Martin Show</em> and <em>The Red</em> <em>Skelton Show</em> and an interview on the CBS-TV program <em>Person to Person</em> which was considered so risqu&eacute; the network cancelled the pre-recorded broadcast twenty-four hours before the show was scheduled to air.</p><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; In the 1960s she guest-starred on the popular sitcom <em>Mr. Ed</em> considered several television specials and a cartoon series and did a rare sit-down interview with Dick Cavett.&nbsp; <em>MAE WEST: Broadcast Muse</em> includes the fascinating behind the scene stories of her work on these shows and many rare photographs from the sets.&nbsp; The book also includes several proposed radio and television scripts that were written for Mae West but never made it on the air including a proposed appearance with Frank Sinatra on the Armed Forces radio show <em>Mail Call</em> in 1944 and fascinating interviews with the actress expressing her thoughts on television censorship sex and being one of the most famous sex symbols in Hollywood history.&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &ldquo;I never liked the idea of doing television because people could turn me off&rdquo; Mae West said to Joyce Haber in 1968.</p><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <em>MAE WEST: Broadcast Muse</em> explores with hilarious details all the famed actress&rsquo; radio and television ventures &ndash; those that made it on the air and the many more that didn&rsquo;t &ndash; and bring the actress back to life in a way her fans have never seen before.</p>
Piracy-free
Assured Quality
Secure Transactions
Delivery Options
Please enter pincode to check delivery time.
*COD & Shipping Charges may apply on certain items.