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   rec.arts.movies.past-films      Past movies      192,336 messages   

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   Message 190,894 of 192,336   
   Denise Noe to All   
   Review of audiobook on Yvette Vickers   
   26 Sep 21 05:56:12   
   
   From: denise.noe521@gmail.com   
      
   My Friend, Yvette Vickers: In Her Own Words as told to John O’Dowd   
   Reviewed by Denise Noe   
      
   Blonde beauty Yvette Vickers (1928-2010) won fame in the 1950s and 1960s for   
   her career as an actress. Although she was almost 30 at the time she played a   
   juvenile delinquent in Reform School Girl (1957), her perky good looks made   
   her believable in it. A    
   Reform School Girl poster of her fighting with Gloria Castillo has become a   
   collector’s item. In 1958, she played small town temptress Honey Parker in   
   the unforgettable cult classic Attack of the 50 Foot Woman. It is shapely   
   Vickers who dances in the    
   local bar with Harry Archer (William Hudson) when his jealous wife Nancy   
   Archer (Allison Hayes), who has grown to enormous proportions due to an   
   encounter with an extraterrestrial, rips open the building to pick Harry up   
   like a doll. The next year, she    
   played two-timing wife Liz Walker in the similar Attack of the Giant Leeches.   
   Yvette also displayed her cute and curvy body in several men’s magazines;   
   she was Playboy’s Playmate of the Month in its July 1959 issue.   
   Sadly, this talented and accomplished performer is known to many people   
   primarily for the sad circumstances of her death. In her senior years, she   
   withdrew from family and friends, spending almost all her time in her home.   
   Last seen alive in 2010, a    
   neighbor discovered Yvette’s corpse in her Beverly Hills home in April 2011.   
   She may have been dead for a year. When discovered, her body had mummified.   
   There was no evidence of foul play but the tragic circumstances of her death   
   may have obscured for    
   much of the public the accomplishments of her life.   
   John O’Dowd to the rescue! This author is best known for his work on tragic   
   actress Barbara Payton who once earned thousands opposite Hollywood stars like   
   James Cagney and Gregory Peck but ended her life as an alcoholic prostitute   
   charging as little as    
   $5. His biography, Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye: The Barbara Payton Story and follow   
   up photography volume Barbara Payton: A Life in Pictures, restored humanity   
   and depth to Payton.    
   In the audiobook  My Friend, Yvette Vickers: In Her Own Words as told to John   
   O’Dowd, this author performs a similar service for Yvette. Of course, there   
   is an enormous difference between this work and those on Payton since O’Dowd   
   never met Payton    
   but was actually friends with Yvette.   
   The audiobook consists of O’Dowd’s statements coupled with Yvette’s   
   answers to his interview questions. It also includes relevant voice messages   
   she left on his answering machine. Yvette Vickers was the daughter of jazz   
   musicians who was raised in    
   a safe and loving environment.    
   Yvette speaks with fondness of her life as a young actress. She enjoyed a   
   romance with Ralph Meeker, who was most famous for his role as Mike Hammer in   
   the 1955 film noir Kiss Me Deadly, that was genuinely romantic. “He took me   
   dancing every Friday and    
   to restaurants,” she recalls. “We took a carriage ride in the park.”   
   Yvette recalls being part of the “beat generation. She says, “It was   
   ‘beat,’ not ‘beatnik,” because most of those hanging out, as she often   
   did, in beat clubs disliked    
   that word. Yvette and her compatriots had health interests of which “health   
   food” was one part. She believes she possessed a “joy of life” or, as it   
   is often called, a “joie de vivre.”   
   Coming from a family of jazz musicians, it is hardly surprising that she also   
   had musical talent. She discusses a period when she was “concentrating on   
   music” and a “cabaret show” as well as putting out a CD. “I had   
   discipline,” she asserts.    
   I worked hard and I played hard.”    
   Yvette acknowledges a special flair for male company. “I’m a man’s woman   
   and unashamed of it.”    
   In the voice messages she left for O’Dowd, her upbeat and optimistic   
   attitude comes through strongly as she encourages him on putting the book   
   together. O’Dowd comments that the voice messages are “bittersweet” for   
   him because they are evidence    
   of the “love, kindness, and support” of a “true friend.”   
   O’Dowd tells us that Yvette loved animals throughout her life and had many   
   pets. She had a special love for a dog she named Greta Garbo but usually   
   called Garbo. “She thought of Garbo as her soulmate,” O’Dowd explains.   
   There is a special    
   poignancy in the voice messages we hear Yvette leave about Garbo: “There’s   
   a crisis . . . growths on her underbelly. She isn’t active like she used to   
   be.” Then, finally, she says, “Garbo didn’t make it.”    
   It is often believed that Yvette turned “paranoid” in her final years. She   
   talked of suspicious characters hanging around and hang-up calls. However, her   
   fears may not entirely have been in her imagination. O’Dowd tells us he   
   heard a strange and    
   threatening type of voice message left on her answering machine. Perhaps her   
   withdrawal from society was not just because of paranoia but genuine menaces.   
   Regardless of the precise reasons leading to her death, it is Yvette Vickers   
   active and accomplished life for which she should be remembered. This   
   audiobook is a powerful tribute to that life.   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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