Hart Break

A new trend in show biz biographies is something I call a "corrective."  You, famous and beloved celebrity that you are, pen your autobiography.  Then, a few years later — probably after you're dead — someone else writes the book that unearths your skeletons and says, in effect, "He made half that stuff up.  Here's what really happened."  For example, Joseph McBride's Frank Capra: The Catastrophe of Success was a corrective to Capra's own The Name Above The Title.

One of my favorite Broadway memoirs, Moss Hart's Act One, now has a corrective in Dazzler: The Life and Times of Moss Hart, a new book by Steven Bach.  Hart's widow, Kitty Carlisle-Hart, declined to cooperate, possibly because Bach was interested in things like Moss's sexuality, which he suggests (on pretty vague evidence, it would appear) was diverse.  Bach is also at times overly-critical of Hart's lesser works and seems to dwell overlong on the negatives of many projects.  Still, he has unearthed an amazing array of facts about the man, many of them contrary to what Hart himself wrote in Act One.  For instance, most of that autobiography is about how he got his first play — Once In A Lifetime, co-written with George S. Kaufman — to Broadway, and how everything was riding on its success.  Bach reveals that Hart had already had one (unsuccessful) play on Broadway and also that, when Once In A Lifetime went up, he already had a contract for further work.

Dazzler is full of things like that…facts we needed to know, even though they undermine some of the drama and fun of Hart's version.  More interesting to me are the corrections made to previously-published works about the making of My Fair Lady, which Hart directed.  These chapters act as a corrective to another of my favorite autobiographies, Alan Jay Lerner's The Street Where I Live.

I suppose my main complaint about Dazzler is that much of it is dry and that it keeps its subject at arm's length.  Hart wrote or co-wrote brilliant comedies and was constantly around brilliant, witty people, but this book is curiously unfunny and remote.  This surprised me because I really enjoyed Bach's previous book, Final Cut: Dreams and Disaster in the Making of Heaven's Gate.  Bach was the studio exec who shepherded Michael Cimino's famously over-budget flop and his recollections were fascinating and involving, perhaps because he was involved.  But his new book isn't, and it also sets me to wondering about the accuracy of all first-hand accounts, including his own.  Perhaps, even now, someone is working on a "corrective" to Final Cut.