Few women in the history of cinema have taken on as many creative roles as Ida Lupino. Her forty eight year career spanned five decades and a variety of genres, mediums and creative roles. This book delves into who Ida Lupino was on both sides of the camera, both as a constructed screen persona and a creative individual working in the industry. Born in London in 1918 into a prestigious and long-established theatrical family, a teenage Lupino relocated to Hollywood to pursue a career in acting, signed first to Paramount Pictures and then Warner Brothers. By the 1950s she was acting for leading Hollywood studios and directing, producing and writing social realism films for her own independent film company, The Filmakers. This book examines Ida Lupino's impressive cinematic and televisual career by exploring key themes that regularly occurred throughout her work and life. Concerned specifically with gender relations, alienation and isolation and disability, the study argues both for Lupino's importance within cinematic history and the position of women within the industry more generally. The volume aims to better remember Lupino, shining light on her overlooked and under researched acting skills and star persona, as well as her established position as a serious filmmaker.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.