![]() Put the two books together and they'd make a first class TV four-parter, more fascinating than most of the fiction churned out. You don't have to be a fan to find this a remarkable story. The final part is a job-by-job CV, in the form of brief descriptions of her film/tv work and anecdotes which make it equally readable. Giving too much away? I think not when you read the details of how again, she battled through. A3, Harve Presnell And Debbie Reynolds, Ill Never Say No, 4:16. ![]() A2, Debbie Reynolds, I Aint Down Yet, 3:51. One can only shake the head in wonderment on reading how this remarkable and admirably resilient woman was, once again bankrupted by a husband - only this time ruthlessly, by a man who finlaly admitted that he'd only married her for her money. A1, MGM Studio Orchestra, Overture, 3:37. ![]() In fact the first 180 pages take over from her previous autobiography, Debbie, which I still have - and I read them in one sitting, as it's a REAL PAGE-TURNER, with only the odd reference to her earlier life, in order to put the later events in context. It may ( as this person suggests) have been written for money, but what writer doesn't? And I've no problem with that or the contents. I really cannot understand the one reviewer who maintained that there is nothing new in this book. Debbie Reynolds, often referred to as ''Americas sweetheart,'' is an actress, comedienne, singer, dancer, and author best known for her leading roles in the films Singin in the Rain and The Unsinkable Molly Brown, and on television as Bobbi Adler in Will & Grace. ![]()
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