Reviews
Frank Langella's DROPPED NAMES is a different kind of memoir. . . . Not many of his peers could write such an eloquently dishy book., "Splendid. . . . As much a memoir as a primer on the vicissitudes of an actor's life, the book is a collage based on real-life situations that offer touching insights into stars like Rita Hayworth, and into the practical magic that informs Langella's signature sensibility." -- The New Yorker "With his first book, Dropped Names, the theater and film veteran. . . reveals a first-rate gift for gab that translates wonderfully onto the page." -- USA Today "Rarely have I read a book about celebrities that is as insightful, candid, revealing, and as well-written as this one. Frank Langella's memoir is not the usual author's ego trip, but rather his remembrances of the many accomplished men and women that he has come to know." -- Gay Talese, author of A Writer's Life "A delightfully unabashed page-turner about people we wish we had known in the throes of work, love, and growing old." -- A.R. Gurney, award-winning playwright "Engaging. . . .Not just Langella's "famous people I have known," but a heartfelt love letter to the theater and to the days when stars were stars, not merely celebrities." -- Kirkus Reviews "Dropped Names is a sizzling platter of stellar vignettes--pungent, for sure, but poignant too. . . . Mr. Langella is surgically precise, and eloquent. . . . The human condition in most of its vagaries is beautifully rendered between these pages." -- Liz Smith " If Frank Langella's memoir simply did what its title promises, it would be deep-dish gossip. But his memories of the stars he's encountered during a lengthy career on Broadway and in film shed perceptive light on the costs of pursuing and maintaining fame." -- Detroit Free Press "Langella's uncommonly eloquent book is enjoyable for the panoply of great names who turn up. . . . A natural raconteur, he seems to fit precisely Henry James's famous description of the novelist as one 'on whom nothing is lost.'" -- New York Times "Frank Langella's DROPPED NAMES is a different kind of memoir. . . . Not many of his peers could write such an eloquently dishy book." -- Los Angeles Times "The 65 chapters in this satisfyingly scandalous memoir paint Broadway and Hollywood as teeming with vulgar, neurotic and irresistible company, and Langella as relentlessly affable in the face of nonstop groping by celebrities in far-flung locations." -- New York Times, 'Langella's uncommonly eloquent book is enjoyable for the panoply of great names who turn up. . . . A natural raconteur, he seems to fit precisely Henry James's famous description of the novelist as one ?on whom nothing is lost.'? (New York Times), Dropped Names is a sizzling platter of stellar vignettes--pungent, for sure, but poignant too. . . . Mr. Langella is surgically precise, and eloquent. . . . The human condition in most of its vagaries is beautifully rendered between these pages., A delightfully unabashed page-turner about people we wish we had known in the throes of work, love, and growing old., 'A delightfully unabashed page-turner about people we wish we had known in the throes of work, love, and growing old.' (A.R. Gurney, award-winning playwright), If Frank Langella's memoir simply did what its title promises, it would be deep-dish gossip. But his memories of the stars he's encountered during a lengthy career on Broadway and in film shed perceptive light on the costs of pursuing and maintaining fame., Langella's uncommonly eloquent book is enjoyable for the panoply of great names who turn up. . . . A natural raconteur, he seems to fit precisely Henry James's famous description of the novelist as one 'on whom nothing is lost.', Rarely have I read a book about celebrities that is as insightful, candid, revealing, and as well-written as this one. Frank Langella's memoir is not the usual author's ego trip, but rather his remembrances of the many accomplished men and women that he has come to know., 'Rarely have I read a book about celebrities that is as insightful, candid, revealing, and as well-written as this one. Frank Langella's memoir is not the usual author's ego trip, but rather his remembrances of the many accomplished men and women that he has come to know.' (Gay Talese, author of A Writer's Life), Dropped Names is a sizzling platter of stellar vignettes-pungent, for sure, but poignant too. . . . Mr. Langella is surgically precise, and eloquent. . . . The human condition in most of its vagaries is beautifully rendered between these pages., Splendid. . . . As much a memoir as a primer on the vicissitudes of an actor's life, the book is a collage based on real-life situations that offer touching insights into stars like Rita Hayworth, and into the practical magic that informs Langella's signature sensibility., DROPPED NAMES is a sizzling platter of stellar vignettes - pungent, for sure, but poignant too. . . . Mr. Langella is surgically precise, and eloquent. . . . The human condition in most of its vagaries is beautifully rendered between these pages., With his first book, Dropped Names, the theater and film veteran. . . reveals a first-rate gift for gab that translates wonderfully onto the page., The 65 chapters in this satisfyingly scandalous memoir paint Broadway and Hollywood as teeming with vulgar, neurotic and irresistible company, and Langella as relentlessly affable in the face of nonstop groping by celebrities in far-flung locations., "Engaging. . . .Not just Langella's "famous people I have known," but a heartfelt love letter to the theater and to the days when stars were stars, not merely celebrities.", ' If Frank Langella's memoir simply did what its title promises, it would be deep-dish gossip. But his memories of the stars he's encountered during a lengthy career on Broadway and in film shed perceptive light on the costs of pursuing and maintaining fame.' (Detroit Free Press)