Party Animals: A Hollywood Tale of Sex, Drugs, and Rock ‘n’ Roll Starring the Fabulous Allan Carr by Robert Hofler
c.2010, DaCapo Press; $15.95
308 pages, includes index
White suits with shiny polyester shirts.
Remember those? Remember handkerchief-hemmed, floaty dresses and platform shoes on a blinking dance floor? The thumpa-thumpa-thumpa of the beat and the hazy feeling of strobe light on mirror ball?
If you’re Of A Certain Age, those are either good memories or disco sucked. Either way, in the new book Party Animals: A Hollywood Tale of Sex, Drugs, and Rock ‘n’ Roll Starring the Fabulous Allan Carr by Robert Hofler, you’ll read about one man who never wanted to stop the music.
As an only child in Highland Park, Illinois, Alan Solomon always got what he wanted. And why not? His parents, divorced by the time Alan was a teenager, had plenty to spend on their son and happily funded several large theatre productions before overweight, bespectacled Alan was even eighteen years old.
Later, though he had minor success with theatre production in Chicago, fate apparently wanted Allan (who’d hired a lawyer to change his name) elsewhere: failing college, he landed in Hollywood to work as talent director for Hugh Hefner. This fortuitous connection introduced Allan to “the world” of talent booking.
After Hefner’s project ended, Allan Carr became manager to the stars, a job that fully utilized his skills. Calmly negotiating, he could soothe feuding celebs’ anger and jealousy (though anyone who angered Carr himself received a blistering tirade). He could charm anybody, often sweet-talking “sponsors” into funding his lavish, legendary parties so he didn’t have to pay for food or drinks for his guests. More than one person knew him as a first-class schmoozer who never failed to get his way.
But Allan Carr had a dream: he wanted to be a movie producer. So when he fell in love with a lesser-known Broadway production called Grease, he knew he could “reinvent” it for the big screen. He got the rights, tweaked the show, the rest is history, and Carr’s career took off…for awhile.
Though blessed with golden powers of persuasion, Carr’s sense of timing was ultimately poor and his visions, bloated. Following the mega-success of Grease, planned projects flopped or never went anywhere, and when Carr finally got his Oscar chance, the entire world witnessed the mess. His last production, sadly, was a party that he never lived to attend.
Filled with big names and little scandals (Allan Carr was gay when gay was taboo to talk about), Party Animals is exhaustively researched, over-the-top snarky, sarcastically funny, and teetering on the very edge of boring.
For the most part, I enjoyed this biography of tenacity, flamboyancy, and debauchery, but—maybe because the stories are relentless and often similar—I sometimes found myself drifting while reading. Yes, author Robert Hofler tells the tale like a true insider, but there were times when the details became so insider-ish that I realized that I was lost and I didn’t care.
I think, if you’re an over-40something, behind-the-scenes Hollywood die-hard, you’ll get much more out of this book than not. For the rest of us, these Party Animals fail to roar.
Email Terri at bookwormsez@yahoo.com