Leonard Bernstein (1918-90), creator of the Broadway masterpiece, West
Side Story, was the best loved and most successful conductor of his
generation. He inspired fellow American musicians, being the first
native American to direct a major American orchestra, and the first to
conquer Europe. This biography covers all aspects of Bernstein's career,
from his extraordinary early rise to fame as a conductor to his work as
a world-famous composer, including his musicals and the score for On
the Waterfront. It examines the paradoxes of a man who was brilliant,
articulate, witty and charming but could also be vain, egocentric and
demanding.