Split Image: The Life of Anthony Perkins

$28.30
by Charles Winecoff

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A biography of the actor famous for his portrayal of Norman Bates in Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho , looking at his career, his homosexuality, his obsession with psychoanalysis, his marriage, and his death from AIDS in 1992. Includes many b&w photos. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or. Though Anthony Perkins played roles as diverse as a lawman of the old West in The Tin Star and Eugene Grant in the play Look Homeward Angel , he is best remembered for his performance as the maniacal son of a monstrous mother in Psycho . In Split Image , Charles Winecoff explains how Psycho pigeon-holed Perkins into similar roles and stagnated his professional life. His private life was equally vexatious--his father died when he was 5 and his mother controlled his finances until she died. He was married for 19 years but remained an active homosexual, engaging in a lifestyle that ultimately led to his death from AIDS in 1992. "Why Tony Perkins?" Winecoff says he was asked "ad nauseam" while writing this life of an actor renowned for a single role, the psychopath Norman Bates in Hitchcock's Psycho . Winecoff gradually answers the question as he reveals a man who, like his greatest character, had things to hide. Perkins was homosexual at a time and in a profession that wanted homosexuality stifled. Both in college and early in his career, he saw the heavy hand of the powers that were descend on open homosexuality: first when a classmate was beaten to the point of hospitalization and then when Tab Hunter, assumed to be involved with Perkins, was barred from the set of Fear Strikes Out (1957). (Hunter denies the barring.) Perkins drove his sexuality underground and also, perhaps, into a taste for danger that may have eventuated in the AIDS from which he died. But he also finally married and had two sons. He makes a fascinating subject, fascinating enough to compensate for Winecoff's often plodding treatment. Ray Olson This is the first book by Winecoff, a graduate of the film program at UCLA, who ``grew up around the corner'' from his subject, Psycho star Anthony Perkins. Unfortunately for his career and his emotional balance, Perkins was quickly condemned to be thought of as just that, the star of Alfred Hitchcock's epochal 1960 film. Although he had a not undistinguished career on stage and actually made few horror films until relatively late in his career, Perkins would be forever identified with the knife-wielding Norman Bates. However, as Winecoff's book amply documents, that was one of his lesser problems. Perkins was the son of the famous stage actor Osgood Perkins, who died when the boy was only five. Perkins's mother, Jane, was a cold and dominating woman. The boy was sent to boarding schools, where he was generally miserable. His life was made all the more difficult by his realization that he was gay. Winecoff assiduously traces Perkins's career path--from summer stock to a premature Hollywood debut in Cukor's The Actress, to Broadway success in Look Homeward, Angel, then back to Hollywood for Friendly Persuasion and stardom. Perkins had a somewhat ambiguous marriage to Berry Berenson, which produced two children, whom he doted on. His life and work after Psycho seem to constitute a nearly unbroken downward spiral, including an escalating drug problem and culminating with his death in 1992 from AIDS. The book is the product of a tremendous amount of homework; Winecoff seems to have interviewed everyone living who ever worked with Perkins. Unfortunately, the prose is gratingly melodramatic and filled with mixed metaphors and solecisms (a play ``had flopped without a trace''). Winecoff shows little affection for most of Perkins's work, which leads the reader to wonder why why he has produced this long and tedious book. (16 pages b&w photos, not seen) (Book-of-the-Month Club and Quality Paperback Book Club selections) -- Copyright ©1996, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved. [Winecoff] has industry ... but his presentation consists of serving slabs of indirect quotes (much of it lascivious gossip). -- The New York Times Book Review, Michael Anderson Used Book in Good Condition

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