Shopping with Audrey Hepburn...Clubbing with Peter O'Toole...Going to
the races with Omar Sharif...Witnessing a domestic spat between Rex
Harrison and his wife Rachel Roberts...Taking Katharine Hepburn's
chicken salad to a sick friend...Watching Marlene Dietrich pelted with
beets... These are just some of the stories and people Frawley Becker
encountered during his years as a movie dialogue coach in Paris. The
author reminiscences about his work on the sets and in the dressing
rooms of Hollywood personalities, providing glimpses into the private
lives of a stellar array of actors and actresses. Besides these and
other stars, Becker also discloses fascinating details of working with
world-famous directors John Huston, William Wyler, Nicholas Ray, Anatole
Litvak, René Clément, and Vittorio de Sica. The events recounted here
take place against the backdrop of Europe, and particularly Paris, in
the 1960s--a time of unrest and political upheaval--from the Paris
student revolution of May 1968 to the sex and murder scandal that
touched a French film star and shook a president--from the paranoia in
Poland under communism to the most elegant, expensive brothel in the
world. This is a fascinating chronicle of a time and place, of the stars
who moved around Europe, and the dialogue coach who moved with them.