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Dream a Little Dream of Me: The Life of Cass Elliot by Eddi Fiegel
Book Summary InformationAuthor: Eddi Fiegel Edition: Paperback Audio: English (Unknown); English (Original Language); English (Published) Published: 2007-04-01 ISBN: 1556526776 Number of pages: 416 Publisher: Chicago Review Press
Book Reviews of Dream a Little Dream of Me: The Life of Cass ElliotBook Review: Two Sides of a Coin Summary: 5 Stars
I love the research biographer Eddi Fiegel has done on Mama Cass, but her math is a little erratic. One page 260 she's telling us that Cass has been offered a contract to sing in Las Vegas for the astronomical sum of $40,000 a week, which in today's terms (she says) would be more than a million dollars.
Three pages later she tells us that Cass' Vegas expenses included getting a script tailored for her by Mason Williams, a script which cost her $10,000--and today, she tells us, that would be five times that much. I'm thinking, what? Wouldn't it be more like 25 times as much? I can't figure out how she did her multiplication tables, but maybe it's about her (Eddi) being from England where they have pounds, not dollars.
The UK background slants the biography in other subtle ways. For example, Cass is painted as a total anglophile, with a peculiar love of England that we wind up never understanding. Could her devotion to England have been so total and obvious? Why is it a good thing? Nowadays when Madonna becomes more English than the English, riding horses in Nottingham Forest etc, she gets ribbed, but Cass is applauded for her good taste in preferring England, OK, we get it.
Eddi's stance also seems to be that working with the Mamas and the Papas was a horrible trip for Cass, largely due to, first, her unrequited love for Denny, then b, her horror when Michelle won Denny's heart, and also c, the disgusting ways John Phillips treated her. When the Mamas and the Papas break up, it's almost like s slave gaining her freedom. And Eddi also seems to think that the post-Mama Cass years were a period of great artistic accomplishment for Cass.
I don't think so. Outside of these questionable theses, DREAM A LITTLE DREAM OF ME is a terrific biography and will really make the reader feel what it was like to be Cass and how awful it was and yet, how empowering, for she alwsys got what she wanted (except of course for the love). No wonder the heroin use eventually went right off the charts.
Summary of Dream a Little Dream of Me: The Life of Cass ElliotThis insightful biography examines the life and music of Cass Elliot?better known as "Mama Cass"?the instantly recognizable face of the Mamas and the Papas. Untangling the truth about Cass's life, this book follows her development from her misfit teenage years to her role in the folk boom of the early 1960s. How Cass came to join the Mamas and the Papas, and the mix of love, hurt, and betrayal that fractured relationships within the group is central to the story as Cass is driven to strike out on a successful solo career. This account reveals the considerable unhappiness Cass experienced that was hidden by her jovial facade?her unrequited love for Papa Denny Doherty, her unhappy marriages and affairs, and her tragic death at age 32. Featuring interviews with many of Cass's close friends, colleagues, and relatives, this account explores the woman behind the uniquely tender voice that dominated the Mamas and the Papas's timeless hits like "California Dreamin'" and "Monday, Monday." Her charisma, wit, charm, and psychedelic persona marked her as a pop star who refused to conform to traditional female stereotypes and became a success on her own terms.
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