Photo de l'auteur

Cliff Goodwin (1) (1950–)

Auteur de Evil Spirits: The Life of Oliver Reed

Pour les autres auteurs qui s'appellent Cliff Goodwin, voyez la page de désambigüisation.

7 oeuvres 160 utilisateurs 3 critiques

Œuvres de Cliff Goodwin

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Partage des connaissances

Date de naissance
1950
Sexe
male
Nationalité
UK
Lieu de naissance
London, England, UK

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Critiques

Interesting read about someone I grew up seeing on TV but never knowing much about the man behind the TV persona.

Well researched, particularly about the period Sid was vague/shady about - his early life in South Africa. Written in an easy style, I came away knowing the subject a lot better - and probably liking him a bit less in some ways. A man of many faults but many of those talking to the author profess to still think well of him despite him fleecing them of money to feed his gambling and the inevitable shenanigans with other women throughout his several marriages...I never quite got WHY they still thought of him so fondly, but there must have been a lot of good in him too; alongside the apparent lack of ego, the fact that he was very professional and took the time to make others feel welcome.

Probably a bit brief in some areas - it was only revealed in passing while talking about his infatuation with Barbara Windsor that his own marriage had been loveless for years (no real sense of whether that was true or not - it was just what Sid claimed at the time). In fact there wasn't a lot about his 3rd marriage other than his wife tried to keep control of the money to stop him gambling it all away.

Its a good book, I enjoyed reading. You want a biography to tell you things you didn't know - and this does that. But its not so in depth that you get to understand Sid - its noted that he kept people from his past at arm's length or just ignored them altogether. Bearing in mind he probably knew some shady people in his youth, you can understand that. But no real explanation is given, leaving you to form the impression he was just heartless, cold and selfish - but that seems at odds with what most that are interviewed actually say about him.
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Signalé
Flip_Martian | Jan 19, 2016 |
I became interested in this book after reading a review here on librarything. (Thank you mstrust). I found the story slow going at first as Goodwin laid the groundwork of Reed's childhood. Although interesting, a bit textbooky and tedious. Dyslexic and labeled as dumb, Oliver found what he was good at--drinking, picking up beautiful women, hanging out with the guys, being a thug and rapscallion. The story started getting interesting when we see the man and the actor combine to form a blurred image. Sometimes playing a part, even in public as certain behavior is what people expected of him.

Always a bit on the edge of acceptable--more often than not, clear off the edge, Reed was almost a caricature of himself. One of his favorite things to do was exposing his frank and beans. Mostly the frank. It was not unheard of for Oliver to whip his penis out to proudly show is talon-ed tattooed tallywhacker. His legendary boozing was definitely impressive in a sad sort of way; destroying pubs, restaurants and friendships in his wake, yet accepting responsibility 100%. His attitude towards women was more disappointing. Always known for his womanizing, he had a hate there for a strong woman who would challenge his masculinity or his opinions. He felt a woman was there for him to use and abuse, cook, clean, sex him up and shut up. He had 2 long term relationships; a marriage and longtime live-in girlfriend, before he found his last love well into his 40's in a 16-year-old girl. Oliver was smitten and would make sure he was out on the streets so he could wave at her as her school bus went by. I think he felt very safe with this child/woman in that she didn't challenge him in anyway. He molded her into what he wanted a woman to be. He had to be in control.

I did find his sensitivity to animals and people in need quite endearing. He was the first to help and I think he felt the most normal with his animals. It wasn't above him to socialize with the hotel staff, often helping in the kitchen or behind the bar. He was a hard worker when focused and made sure to never treat someone different because of class position. Everyone was equal in his eyes. (except women.) A very odd and interesting guy to the very end. Oliver was his own worst enemy and I'm not sure he ever really enjoyed his life. I think all the crazy shenanigans were done so he could feel something besides normal which, in his mind, equaled boredom.
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½
1 voter
Signalé
DanaJean | 1 autre critique | Apr 17, 2009 |
Hard to put down. Goodwin is obviously a fan of Reed's and writes an entertaining and thorough biography of "Mr. England" from interviews with Ollie's friends, co-workers, drinking buddies, children and his widow. While Reed's reputation as a drunken womanizer is well-documented here, his empathy towards animals is surprising, as is the fact that Reed was actually a descendant of Peter the Great.
Goodwin gives equal time to the good and the bad in Reed's personality. Reed could cheat on his wife, attack police officers, expose himself in public- but also come to the aid of strangers who's baby needed medical help.
Reed used his celebrity to every advantage, and one has to wonder why, as a 42 year-old man, he wasn't arrested for carrying on an open affair with a 16 year-old girl. It seems that all of England was so enchanted by him that Reed could do no wrong.
I do recommend this book. Love him or hate him, Reed was full of life and always interesting.
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1 voter
Signalé
mstrust | 1 autre critique | Feb 25, 2009 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
7
Membres
160
Popularité
#131,702
Évaluation
½ 3.5
Critiques
3
ISBN
24

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