Gold Digger
The Outrageous Life and Times of Peggy Hopkins Joyce
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- $11.99
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
A sparkling biography of the original blonde whom gentlemen preferred, a woman who made a career of marrying millionaires and became the first tabloid celebrity.
One of America's most talked about personalities during the Jazz Age, Peggy Hopkins Joyce was the quintessential gold digger, the real-life Lorelei Lee. Married six times, to several millionaires and even a count, Joyce had no discernible talent except self-promotion. A barber's daughter from Norfolk, Virginia, who rose to become a Ziegfeld Girl and, briefly, a movie star, Joyce was the precursor of the modern celebrity-a person famous for being famous. Her scandalous exploits-spending a million dollars in a week, conducting torrid love affairs with the likes of Charlie Chaplin and Walter Chrysler-were irresistible to the new breed of tabloid journalists in search of sensation and to audiences hungry for the possibilities her life seemed to promise.
Joyce's march across Broadway, Hollywood, and the nation's front pages was only slowed by the true nemesis of the glamour girl: old age. She died in 1957, alone and forgotten-until now. In prose as vibrant as its subject, Constance Rosenblum's Gold Digger brings to life the woman who singularly epitomized this confident and hedonistic era.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Madonna's Material Girl had nothing on Peggy Hopkins Joyce, the 1920s blonde showgirl and celebrity who became world famous for marrying millionaires. Born Marguerite Upton to a smalltown barber and his wife in North Carolina in 1893, Peggy fled town at age 16 with a vaudeville troupe. After one disastrous, short marriage, she wed the youngest son of a wealthy Washington, D.C., family. When boredom set in, she moved to New York and became a Ziegfeld Girl and a noted society personality. Another short-lived marriage to millionaire James Stanley Joyce ended in a highly publicized, scandalous divorce trial that focused on her numerous indiscretions. By now, Peggy Hopkins Joyce was a household name--an occasional film actress who was famous for being a witty adventuress with a sense of humor and style, whom Cole Porter and Lorenz Hart memorialized in song lyrics and who counted Charlie Chaplin and Irving Thalberg among her lovers. In 1922, Joyce was so notorious that the Motion Picture Theater Owners of America banned her films. By the late 1930s her celebrity faded and, at 60, she entered her last marriage (to a bank clerk 20 years her junior), which may have been the happiest of her six. Rosenblum, the editor of the city section of the New York Times, has assembled a lively and entertaining biography from interviews, press clippings, theater histories and Joyce's own (highly unreliable) memoirs. Filling the book with fascinating details of 1920s social life, Rosenblum not only brings her subject to vibrant life, but also reveals how the cult of media celebrity grew in this century. Photos not seen by PW.