Showing posts with label Jackie Collins. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jackie Collins. Show all posts

Sunday, December 26, 2021

Sisterly Struggles of Jackie Collins

 

Jackie Collins

Sisterly Struggles of Jackie Collins

Filmmaker Laura Fairrie and the author’s daughter, Rory Green, on Lady Boss, which chronicles Jackie Collins’s remarkable rise—and her complicated relationship with her glamorous sister, Joan Collins.

Jackie Collins was capital-F fabulous—arriving to Beverly Hills lunches in stretch limousines looking as glamorous as the characters in her romance novels.

“You think of her with that big, powerful image: the leopard print, the shoulder pads, the big hair,” says filmmaker Laura Fairrie, who profiles Collins in the documentary Lady Boss (premiering at the Tribeca Film Festival on Thursday). But Fairrie’s filmmaking quest was to crack that larger-than-life facade. “My immediate instinct was to try and look behind that, and find out what it was that made her write the books that she wrote. To look for that untold, private story. I had no idea that what I would find would stand in such brilliant contrast to the public persona.”

Thursday, October 21, 2021

Lady Boss / 10 Facts About Jackie Collins

Jackie Collins at her home in Beverly Hills, California in 1995.
PAUL HARRIS

Lady Boss: 10 Facts 
About Jackie Collins

BY KRISTY PUCHKO
JUNE 25, 2021

Before there was Sex and the City or Fifty Shades of Grey, Jackie Collins was delivering unapologetically raunchy tales of glamour and seduction with a treasure trove of semi-erotic romance novels. To the world, she had it all: fame, fortune, love, and an unshakeable inner strength. However, the CNN documentary Lady BossThe Jackie Collins Story reveals a softer side to the bold Brit who made her mark with sex and self-confidence.

Lady Boss / The Jackie Collins Story review / A formulaic but entertaining documentary

Jackie Collins


Lady Boss: The Jackie Collins Story review – a formulaic but entertaining documentary

The bestselling novelist’s home movies reveal a strong and charismatic figure behind the titillating storyteller

WENDY IDE
Sunday 4 July 2021

The novelist Jackie Collins sprinkled a dusting of glitz and titillation on some very direct and workmanlike storytelling, and made a fortune. And this formulaic but undeniably entertaining documentary takes a similar approach. It’s not the most revealing portrait – Collins was adept at playing “Jackie Collins”, a role every bit as memorable as anything her sister, Joan, was known for. But the public persona acted as a protective carapace around the private woman.

Jackie Collins / The bonkbuster author with a strong moral code

Jackie Collins, 1955

Jackie Collins, the bonkbuster author with a strong moral code

The Thunder Girls author Melanie Blake on her hero, who made her a reader and a writer


Melanie Blake
Monday, May 11, 2020

To look at me now, not many people would assume that my early life was one of benefits, food bank donations, charity shop clothes and queuing up for free school dinners. It’s fair to say I’ve come a long way from my humble upbringing. With a violent father and an unhappy mother I didn’t have a role model to look up too, that was until the age of nine on a trip to the local library to enjoy the warmth (our house was always freezing.)

Tuesday, October 19, 2021

Jackie Collins / 'My mafia godfather made the best pasta sauce'

 

Jackie Collins at her home in Beverly Hills
Photo by Patrick Fraser

LIFE ON A PLATE
Interview

Jackie Collins: 'My mafia godfather made the best pasta sauce'


The novelist recalls childhood squabbles with her sister Joan, hanging out in Soho jazz clubs and running away to LA. She also has a cocktail named after her
John Hind
Saturday 12 April 2014

My earliest food memory, in London during the war, is of the shortage of canned peaches. When mum occasionally got hold of a can, we'd be allocated one slice each and I'd fight with my sister [Joan] over a second – "You had two already", "No, I had one", "You cannot have two just because you're older than me!" I say this because, nowadays, in my house in California, I'll sometimes have a full can of Del Monte peaches for lunch, with a whole bunch of cream.

Monday, October 18, 2021

Queen of Flash and Trash Jackie Collins was a True Lady Boss

Jackie Collins


Queen of Flash and Trash Jackie Collins was a True Lady Boss

Xavier Hollander, Danielle Stele, Colette, Daphne DuMarier, Erica Jong, Ingeborg Day, Anne Rice, Jacqueline Susann and Judith Krantz are just a few names that come to mind when one recalls women authors whose books examine sexuality with fiction and/or  non-ficton.  However, the “Queen of Flash and Trash” will forever by synonymous with the name of Jackie Collins.

Jackie Collins remembered by her sister, Joan

‘Hollywood’s own Marcel Proust’: Jackie Collins in New York in 2008. 
Photograph: Lucas Jackson

 

Jackie Collins remembered by her sister, Joan

4 October 1937 - 19 September 2015
The bestselling novelist was a generous champion of equality, whose raunchy, page-turning books gave readers access to life in Hollywood

Joan Collins
Sunday 27 December 2015

She was more than a sister to me. I considered her a true and wonderful friend (whose advice I didn’t always listen to, unfortunately, and to my disadvantage). She and I understood and empathised with each other more than practically anyone I know and I felt her loyalty to me was unbounded and her love was unconditional. We shared so many of the same memories and confided in each other without fear. We gossiped and giggled when we were together and loved to go see the latest movies at weekend morning showings at our favourite Los Angeles shopping centre.

Top five Jackie Collins novels

 

Jackie Collins


Top five Jackie Collins novels

From The Stud to The Bitch, the queen of the bonk-buster revelled in a world of sex, scandal and glamour. Here are a few of my guilty pleasures. What are yours?


Alison Flood

Monday 21 September  2015

As a teenager, I knew that other people were reading Jackie Collins. After all, her books screamed “No 1 bestseller” on the front. But I didn’t shout about my choices, perhaps because in my early teens I was hiding my raunchy reading material from my parents, and in my late teens the books were a guilty pleasure for someone who was meant to be getting to grips with The Merchant’s Tale for her A-levels. Well, I should have done: “sex-filled, escapist, utterly unpretentious”, as the New York Times puts it, Collins’ novels are an over-the-top, steamy delight. Clearly she had as much fun writing them as we do reading them. Looking back through her writing to compile the list below, I can’t help imagining the wicked grin spreading across her face as she whipped up her patented mix of sex, scandal and glamour. Here are my five favourites – though I’m willing to be persuaded otherwise.



Hollywood Wives (1983)
This was my first Jackie Collins, and it contains a scene I will never forget: the film director who has a heart attack while having sex with a film star, after getting his privates stuck inside her. I was astonished, slightly traumatised and very thankful that these kinds of activities were a long way off for me. I was also hooked by Collins’ glitzy, glamorous, steamy world of beauties and sculpted bodies and sex and murder.



The World Is Full of Married Men (1968)
Jackie Collins’ first novel was given the ultimate tagline by Barbara Cartland: “nasty, filthy and disgusting”. (Cartland added: “Miss Collins, you are responsible for all the perverts in England.” Hurrah for Jackie. ) David’s wife, Linda, leaves him after he has an affair with Claudia: “She had long, shiny ash-blond hair, which fell thickly around her face, and deep bangs down to her eyebrows, which accentuated her enormous, slanty green eyes. The face was perfect, with a small straight nose and luscious full lips. She wore no makeup and no clothes, and was covered by only a thin silk sheet.”) Things don’t turn out well for David.


The Stud (1969)

Married Fontaine Khaled is “very haughty upper-class English. Beautiful of course, with chiselled bones (whether by nature or cosmetic surgery no one knows”. She hires a man to run her night club and also keep her happy sexually. “I suppose you’re wondering how this all came about, how a guy like me, Tony Schwartzburg from somewhere near the Elephant and Castle, turned into Tony Blake, man about town, friend of the stars, host at the most ‘in’ discotheque, Hobo.” Collins’ sister Joan starred in the film adaptation.





The Bitch (1979)

The story of Fontaine, now the ex-wife of billionire businessman Benjamin Khaled, continues in this novel as she enjoys an expensive party lifestyle and meets ladies’ man Nico Constantine. It was also adapted as a film, with Joan Collins reprising her role as Fontaine. Collins self-published an updated, rewritten version of the novel in the US in 2012.

Lucky (1985)
It’s tricky to choose one favourite Santangelo novel, but I think Lucky is my pick (or is it Lady Boss?). Beautiful, wild, tough and street-smart, Lucky Santangelo is the daughter of gangster Gino (family motto: “Never fuck with a Santangelo”), who here is running a casino in Las Vegas. In weighing in on the novel, the NY Daily News said: “So hot it will have to be printed on asbestos.” The ninth Lucky story, The Santangelos, was published earlier this month.

THE GUARDIAN


Joan Collins


Sex sells and no one knew this fact better than Jackie Collins, a master storyteller who built an empire from the sexual exploits and political scandals of the rich and famous. Collins - who wrote more than 25 novels, all of which landed on The New York Times bestsellers list - ultimately sold more than 400 million copies worldwide. With her devout following lapping up one racy novel after another, Collins provided readers with an unapologetic and intimate look at the glamorous yet sordid lives of Hollywood powerbrokers, their spouses, and mistresses in tell-alls like Hollywood Wives (1983) - her most successful novel and one of the highest ranking miniseries of the 1980s - and its sequels like Hollywood Kids (1994) and Hollywood Divorces (2003). Like her heroines who bed-hopped their way to fame and fortune, Collins herself was linked to high-profile celebrities like Marlon Brando, whom she dated when she was only 15, Warren Beatty, and many others who likely provided source material for her books. The younger sister to actress/diva Joan Collins, the author released another saucy read titled Poor Little Bitch Girl, a nod to Hollywood tarts who were "famous for being famous." Throughout her long career, Collins earned her share of critics who admonished her work - calling it trashy, immoral and depraved - yet the millions of readers she kept up at night provided concrete proof that she remained one of the literary world's most successful novelists. Her death on September 19, 2015 at the age of 77 was mourned by fans and friends across the world.

Jackie Collins / Mistress of sex

Jackie Collins


Jackie Collins: 

Mistress of sex



She sold over 500 million raunchy books and invented the Eighties bonkbuster. In her final interview before her death Jackie Collins told Annabel Rivkin what she wanted to be remembered for...


2 December 2015

If you are a woman between 30 and 45, then it is probable that your sex education happened, not in a school biology lab, but between the red-hot pages of a Jackie Collins blockbuster. Yes, there was Shirley Conran's frankly faultless Lace, with what might be the best line in the history of literature - 'Which one of you bitches is my mother?' True, there were Jilly Cooper's punningly genius and warm-hearted horse-centric bonkbusters. But Jackie? Well, Jackie took the genre by the balls. Jackie, with her raunchily moralistic take on the bad guys getting it (and the good guys getting even more of it), built a one-woman empire on ball-breaking, ball-licking and just good old-fashioned balling.

Jackie an Joan Collins / Queens of the Road

 

QUEENS OF THE ROAD

Hollywood sisters Jackie and Joan Collins are the ultimate triumph of the immigrant. They landed from London and carved out separate kingdoms of glitz. Jackie was the Queen of Dish and Joan was the Queen of Soap. Then Soap dished. DOMINICK DUNNE reports

MARCH 1988 DOMINICK DUNNEANNIE LEIBOVITZMARINA SCHIANO

Just when you thought you knew all there was to know about the highly publicized Collins sisters, Joan and Jackie, or Jackie and Joan, comes the news that big sister Joan, the soap-opera superstar, whose divorces and romantic exploits have been making tabloid headlines for thirty years, has turned literary in her fifty-fifth year and is moving in on the printed-page turf of her little sister Jackie, the superstar novelist, whose eleven-volume oeuvre has sold 65 million copies in thirty languages throughout the world over the last two decades. Yes, friends, Joan Collins, between takes as the beloved bitch Alexis Carrington Colby on Dynasty, has written her own novel, called Prime Time, about a top-rated soap opera on American television, with eight or ten characters, all of them actors and actresses, and a leading lady who has overcome obstacles, both personal and financial, to regain her stardom.

Book Review / Rock Star by Jackie Collins


 

Book Review: Rock Star by Jackie Collins

LEIGH-ANN BRODBER
APRIL 1, 2014

I love reading Jackie Collins’ books because they always are an eye opener for the type of lifestyle rock stars and the famous live. And also the kind of lifestyle of the people who are fame-obsessed. In Rock Star, one of her earlier books, Jackie Collins focuses on three particular individuals who all strive to make a mark in the world of entertainment at a time when stars like The Who and Stevie Wonder were dominating the global stage. They persevere through perilous and downright shameful activities and come out on top with battle scars. However, they seem to forget the people by the sidelines that eagerly plan their own climb to the top.

Jackie Collins / The reality of life in Joan’s shadow

Jackie Collins in 2008. The younger sister of film star Joan sold 500 million copies of her 32 novels. 
Photograph: Lucas Jackson

 

Jackie Collins: the reality of life in Joan’s shadow


Vanessa Thorpe
Sunday 13 June 2021


The bestselling author cultivated a confident image. But it belied a personal life dogged by self-doubt, as a new documentary reveals

Obituaries / Jackie Collins

Vanessa Thorpe

Vanessa Thorpe
Sun 13 Jun 2021 12.59 BST




Three sisters suddenly inherit a lucrative international business that trades in dreams of power, sex and glamour. So how will they all handle their extraordinary legacy?

It sounds like the plot of a Jackie Collins pool-side bestseller. But the truth is better than that, for this is the real inheritance of Collins’s three daughters, who are now planning the future of their late mother’s racy fictional characters while they prepare to celebrate her life and career with the release of a new documentary. Called Lady Boss: The Jackie Collins Story, it has unexpectedly delighted critics at the Tribeca film festival in New York this weekend.

Wednesday, October 25, 2017

Twitter fiction / 21 authors try their hand at 140-character novels




Twitter fiction: 21 authors try their hand at 140-character novels



We challenged well-known writers – from Ian Rankin and Helen Fielding to Jeffrey Archer and Jilly Cooper – to come up with a story of up to 140 characters. This is their stab at Twitter fiction

Geoff Dyer

I know I said that if I lived to 100 I'd not regret what happened last night. But I woke up this morning and a century had passed. Sorry.

James Meek

He said he was leaving her. "But I love you," she said. "I know," he said. "Thanks. It's what gave me the strength to love somebody else."

Jackie Collins

She smiled, he smiled back, it was lust at first sight, but then she discovered he was married, too bad it couldn't go anywhere.

Ian Rankin

I opened the door to our flat and you were standing there, cleaver raised. Somehow you'd found out about the photos. My jaw hit the floor.

Blake Morrison

Blonde, GSOH, 28. Great! Ideal mate! Fix date. Tate. Nervous wait. She's late. Doh, just my fate. Wrong candidate. Blond – and I'm straight.

David Lodge

"Your money or your life!" "I'm sorry, my dear, but you know it would kill me to lose my money," said the partially deaf miser to his wife.

AM Homes

Sometimes we wonder why sorrow so heavy when happiness is like helium.

Sophie Hannah

I had land, money. For each rejected novel I built one house. Ben had to drown because he bought Plot 15. My 15th book? The victim drowned.

Andrew O'Hagan

Clyde stole a lychee and ate it in the shower. Then his brother took a bottle of pills believing character is just a luxury. God. The twins.

AL Kennedy

It's good that you're busy. Not great. Good, though. But the silence, that's hard. I don't know what it means: whether you're OK, if I'm OK.

Jeffrey Archer

"It's a miracle he survived," said the doctor. "It was God's will," said Mrs Schicklgruber. "What will you call him?" "Adolf," she replied.

Anne Enright

The internet ate my novel, but this is much more fun #careerchange #nolookingback oh but #worldsosilentnow Hey!

Patrick Neate

ur profile pic: happy – smiling & smoking. ur last post: "home!" ur hrt gave out @35. ur profile undeleted 6 months on. ur epitaph: "home!"

Hari Kunzru

I'm here w/ disk. Where ru? Mall too crowded to see. I don't feel safe. What do you mean you didn't send any text? Those aren't your guys?

SJ Watson
She thanks me for the drink, but says we're not suited. I'm a little "intense". So what? I followed her home. She hasn't seen anything yet.

Helen Fielding

OK. Should not have logged on to your email but suggest if going on marriedaffair.com don't use our children's names as password.

Simon Armitage

Blaise Pascal didn't tweet and neither did Mark Twain. When it came to writing something short & sweet neither Blaise nor Mark had the time.

Charlie Higson

Jack was sad in the orphanage til he befriended a talking rat who showed him a hoard of gold under the floor. Then the rat bit him & he died.

India Knight
Soften, my arse. I'm a geezer. I'm a rock-hard little bastard. Until I go mushy overnight for you, babe. #pears

Jilly Cooper

Tom sent his wife's valentine to his mistress and vice versa. Poor Tom's a-cold and double dumped.

Rachel Johnson

Rose went to Eve's house but she wasn't there. But Eve's father was. Alone. One thing led to another. He got 10 years.
THE GUARDIAN



Sunday, September 20, 2015

Jackie Collins's final British interview / 'I'm still here, I love what I do'

Jackie Collins
Photo by Trevor Leighton

 

Interview

Jackie Collins's final British interview: 'I'm still here, I love what I do'


Less than two weeks before her death, the author gave no inkling of her illness but talked eagerly about her memoir, as yet unpublished



Ruth Huntman
Sunday 20 September 2015


L

ess than two weeks ago, as she contemplated her looming 78th birthday,Jackie Collins was in a firmly optimistic mood. “I couldn’t care less about my age,” she said. “I’m still here, I love what I do, and I have a passion for it … it’s better than the alternative.”

They did not seem like the words of a woman facing a terminal illness. And yet in Los Angeles on Saturday, the British-born author whose 32 books on glamour, sex and affairs in Hollywood were international best-sellers, died of breast cancer after being first diagnosed more than six years ago. She had kept the illness secret from all but her closest family and friends.

Even her sister, Joan, had only been informed in the last fortnight. After the news broke on Sunday, Joan posted a picture of herself and Jackie, writing: “Farewell to my beautiful brave baby sister. I will love you and miss you forever. Rest in peace.”

Sitting in a London hotel suite to discuss her latest book, The Santangelos, with the Observer, Jackie had been equally effusive about their bond. “Joan and I are the best of friends,” she said. “We had tea a few days ago and she sent me beautiful flowers when I arrived in London. We’re very close. People are always trying to pitch us against each other … Because we’re both successful. But we’re very different. Joan is incredibly social and flamboyant and she loves to dress up. I’m much more low key and much less likely to go out for lunches and dinners. She loves being out and about, and I love being home, writing.

Jackie and Joan in 2009.
Jackie and Joan in 2009.


If Collins was aware that her time was so limited, you wouldn’t have known it. Power-suited in a black jacket and trouser ensemble (plus trainers, which she explained with an apology about her bad ankle), she was immaculately made up and on great form. If her face looked a little thinner, that could be put down to her work ethic and schedule. And her conversation was as confidential and scandalous as ever. She described a ménage à trois between three female models at a recent Hollywood party and said, with a wink and her trademark dirty laugh “of course that’s going in the next book!”.

Jackie Collins and Oscar Lerman at the party in Belvedere hotel, London 1990.
Jackie Collins and Oscar Lerman at the party in Belvedere hotel, London 1990. Photograph: Richard Young/Rex Shutterstock

Though Collins always gave journalists superb quotes, she nonetheless remained an enigma, giving away little about her private life. But this time she was in a surprisingly reflective and candid mood. And in retrospect, it’s easy to wonder if she was looking back on her life from a new perspective.

She was, she said, working on her autobiography, Reform School or Hollywood. “Yes, I am a private person,” she said. “But I have so much in my memoir I can talk about.” She was ready, she said, to talk for the first time about the death of her beloved second husband, Oscar Lerman, who died from prostate cancer in 1992, and about her fiancé, Frank Calcagnini, who she lost to a brain tumour six years later – and of what it means to care for a sickly loved one. “I want to talk about losing my husband and nursing two men through terminal illness because I think it will help people. And I want to help people. In the past all I’ve said about Oscar and Frank’s deaths is that I wanted to celebrate their lives, not mourn their deaths.


“But I wanted to write about the experience of caring. Caregivers who look after someone have a lot on their plate, and I know there’s people out there who would appreciate hearing how I coped with it. It’s very stressful and you are worried about them all the time and have to make sure they take their meds.

“My fiancé, Frank, was amazing. He was this handsome Italian who looked like a hero from one of my books. I remember taking him to the doctor because he didn’t feel well and had flu and so they took a chest X-ray. I’ll never forget that day. Frank came out of the doctor’s office to where I was sitting in the ante room and just said: ‘I’m fucked, I’ve got three months to live.’ Three months later he was gone. When he lost his black, thick curly hair, he didn’t want to go on. I lost my mum to cancer, too.”

But the memoir, Collins said, would also include plenty of the kind of salacious detail used to such riotous effect in the “bonkbuster” genre with which she is so indelibly associated.

Jackie Collins And Frank Calcagnini in 1994.
Jackie Collins And Frank Calcagnini in 1994. Photograph: ANL/Rex Shutterstock

“I might get to the end of my memoir and decide I don’t want to publish it but I don’t think I will,” she said. “I think I want it out there.” Smiling mischievously as she spoke, she explained: “I’ll talk about a couple of secret affairs I’ve had – one with a very famous man – which I think will shock people. We were destined to be together but when he was free I was attached and vice versa.” Still, she said, “I’m not going to write anything to wholly embarrass my children … But there’ll be some interesting things in there.”

Those secret affairs may now remain secret. For their part, her daughters expressed nothing but the deepest affection for their mother when they announced her death. In a statement they said: “She lived a wonderfully full life and was adored by her family, friends and the millions of readers who she has been entertaining over four decades. She was a true inspiration, a trail-blazer for women in fiction and a creative force. She will live on through her characters but we already miss her beyond words.”

Perhaps that affection was part of what made Collins able to take a philosophical view of her mortality. “As you get older you get wiser,” she said. “I can do whatever I want – I don’t give a shit about anything any more. As long as I have my family and my friends I’m happy.”

THE GUARDIAN