Since the earliest days of the movie industry, Hollywood has mythologized itself through stories of stardom. A female protagonist escapes the confines of rural America in search of freedom in a western dream factory; an ambitious, conceited movie idol falls from grace and discovers what it means to embody true stardom; or a fading star confronts Hollywood’s obsession with youth by embarking on a determined mission to reclaim her lost fame. In its various forms, the stardom film is crucial to understanding how Hollywood has shaped its own identity, as well as its claim on America’s collective imagination.
In the first book to focus exclusively on these modern fairy tales, Karen Mc Nally traces the history of this genre from silent cinema to contemporary film and television to show its significance to both Hollywood and broader American culture. Drawing on extensive archival research, she provides close readings of a wide range of films, from Souls for Sale (1923) to A Star is Born (1937 and 1954) and Judy (2019), moving between fictional narratives, biopics, and those that occupy a space in between. Mc Nally considers the genre’s core set of tropes, its construction of stardom around idealized white femininity, and its reflections on the blurred boundaries between myth, image, and reality. The Stardom Film offers an original understanding of one of Hollywood’s most enduring genres and why the allure of fame continues to fascinate us.
Cuprins
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Core Stardom Narratives
2. Genre and Hybridity
3. Character, Star, and Myth
Afterword
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Despre autor
Karen Mc Nally is senior lecturer in film and television studies at London Metropolitan University. She is the author of
When Frankie Went to Hollywood: Frank Sinatra and American Male Identity (2008), editor of
Billy Wilder, Movie-Maker: Critical Essays on the Films (2011), and coeditor of
The Legacy of Mad Men: Cultural History, Intermediality, and American Television (2019).