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RAVE REVIEWS FOR
MR. CONFIDENTIAL
By Samuel Bernstein “SEX, SCANDAL and sensationalism. Libel suits and humiliations. Idols with feet of clay. Think it’s anything new? Not at all. Slip into the compulsively lurid and exhaustively researched pages of ‘Mr. Confidential’ which tells the tale of publisher Robert Harrison and his magazine, Confidential. That forerunner of celebrity dirt quite literally changed the face of entertainment journalism. Bernstein's book reads like a house afire in a sultry swamp. Nobody did ‘down and dirty’ like Mr. Harrison and today’s beleaguered stars, politicians and others owe him a sock in the jaw. An illuminating, fun read!” — Liz Smith “Robert Harrison was a sub rosa giant of American journalism in the 1950s. The flagship of his fleet of mostly pinup magazines was the celebrity scandal sheet Confidential, a hint-all more than a tell-all, full of delicious dishing and scandal-mongering seasoned with puns and alliteration. During its short, mercurial run, Confidential outed gay and bisexual movie folk and celebrity drug users on a scale that approached that of Kenneth Anger's Hollywood Babylon books. Stars often noisily threatened to sue but nearly always quietly dropped litigation before any oath-bound testimony and other inconveniences to their studios' publicity machines; for example, Lizabeth Scott took umbrage at being called a "baritone babe" but quickly withdrew her knee-jerk lawsuit. When Harrison agent and anti-Communist crusader Howard Rushmore killed himself and his estranged wife in a taxicab, the world caved in on Harrison and his jaunty journal. Though he makes definite statements rather than leering suggestions, Bernstein spills the beans on that story and more in language reminiscent of Confidential's house style. Get a load of it.” — Mike Tribby, Booklist “Lies! Scandal! Intrigue! The story of Robert Harrison is as gossip-worthy as the celebrities he tattled on. Samuel Bernstein chronicles Harrison’s rise and fall with giddy enthusiasm, from Harrison’s family run girlie magazines to Confidential — the granddaddy of today’s celebrity tabloids — to how Hollywood finally pulled the plug and washed the most successful gossip rag in history down the drain. Alongside photos of celebrities, magazine covers and story reprints are accounts of what really happened, making ‘Mr. Confidential’ a riveting, scandalous read about how celebrity reporting began and how close it remains to its seedy roots.” — Teresa Mariano, Encore Atlanta “The familiar phrase “sex sells” provided Confidential Magazine publisher Robert Harrison with plenty of fodder for the celebrity scandal mill. In its heyday during the 1950s, Confidential Magazine changed the very nature of entertainment journalism and easily outsold such publishing stalwarts as Time and The Saturday Evening Post, becoming a spin-zone nightmare. Headlines screamed: ‘Joan Crawford’s back street romance with a bartender,’ ‘Why Liberace’s theme song should be, ‘Mad about the boy!’ ‘Psst! Vic Mature: Remember that cute trick you dated? She was a he!’ Confidential Magazine cast a long shadow over Tinsel Town, targeting numerous celebrities. Author Samuel Bernstein uncovers the rise and fall of Harrison and what was known as the “Trial of 200 Stars,” which forever changed the way the press covered the world of Hollywood: flinging open closet doors, peeking behind drawn bedroom curtains and uncovering the flip side of fame.” — Tim Parks, GLT Review
“TABLOID GOSSIP RULES! Here's the perfect book for anyone who loves gossip or Hollywood history: ‘Mr. Confidential.’ It's a book about the man behind the famous 50s scandal magazine, written by my friend Samuel Bernstein. Robert Harrison, the publisher behind Confidential, adored homosexual exposés and gleefully wrote about those ‘lavender lads’ - Liberace being ‘mad about the boy’ and Tab Hunter's ‘gay pajama party.’ He even outed Van Johnson by declaring his conversion to heterosexuality. The ‘baritone babes’ Lizabeth Scott and Marlene Dietrich got their share of stories too. I asked Sam to tell me about a scoop that Confidential COULDN'T print and he recalled one about Elvis. Back in 1957. A PR guy claimed that Elvis had an ongoing affair with another famous teen idol. (Tab? Troy? Fabian? Bobby?) Supposedly they got together for ‘man-play’ - wrestling and beyond. Confidential couldn't substantiate the story and didn't print it. WE don't think it was true either, and neither does Bernstein - but it’s great fun! (Actually, in Tab Hunter's bio he mentioned that he was miffed when Elvis stole his ‘beard’ Natalie Wood away from him.)” — Janet Charlton’s Hollywood
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