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Chargement... Peaches and Daddy: A Story of the Roaring 20s, the Birth of Tabloid Media, and the Courtship that Captured the Hearts and Imaginations of the American Publicpar Michael Greenburg
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Traces the scandalous marriage between middle-aged Manhattan millionaire Edward Browning and fifteen-year-old Frances "Peaches" Heenan in 1926, and chronicles the courtroom drama of their divorce and their role in sparking tabloid journalism. Aucune description trouvée dans une bibliothèque |
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Google Books — Chargement... GenresClassification décimale de Melvil (CDD)346.730166Social sciences Law Private Law North America United StatesClassification de la Bibliothèque du CongrèsÉvaluationMoyenne:
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After the divorce, Browning and his daughter became lonely. He placed another ad to adopt a daughter as a playmate for Dorothy. His request was for a girl of about 14 years of age, but when he saw Mary Spas among the other prospects waiting in his office, he was smitten at once. She was older than he hoped at 16, but he had to have her. Almost immediately, reporters began to question the adoption and the girl’s age. Mary’s parents were interrogated and admitted that she was really 21. Browning took Mary to court to annul the adoption. Mind you, like everything else concerning Daddy Browning, all of this was highly reported and publicized in the papers. Indeed, the back and forth accusations between Daddy and Mary received much public attention. In fact, Dorothy’s first adoptive mother, upon learning of the Spas affair, made attempts to remove the girl from Browning’s care.
Daddy Browning met Frances Heenan at a dance in 1926 when she was 15. They began dating, and he nicknamed her Peaches. They were in the papers constantly from the start. Soon Vincent Pisarra of the New York Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children caught wind of the relationship and tried to end it by way of the courts. They were married later that year, just after Peaches’ sixteenth birthday, partly in an effort to fend off critics and the law. From the start of their relationship, they were in the limelight constantly. Whether on shopping trips or outings with an African Honking Gander, they were available for photographers.
Peaches began having fits from what she claimed to be distress. She and her mother Carolyn, who was also living with Peaches and Daddy, abandoned the home. Peaches claimed that Daddy desired unnatural acts. Thus began a farcical separation trial that the newspapers couldn’t get enough of. In the end, Peaches did not fare well. The judge was convinced that Peaches’ credibility was questionable at the least. Of course, the aftermath of the trial was widely reported. Peaches later sought a divorce and payment of legal fees while Daddy sought to rehabilitate his image.
There is much more to the story that I fail to mention but all of it includes dramatic happenings and a great reliance on the press. In addition to the Peaches and Daddy story, interspersed throughout are segments describing the history of tabloid journalism. The story of Peaches and Daddy Browning serve as an intimate and explicit illustration of how journalistic ethics were created and why ethics continue to play such a vital role in media. The sensationalism that followed Edward West Browning throughout his life was only a peephole through which we continue to view public figures. Browning’s taste for the limelight was encouragement in the burgeoning field of tabloid journalism, and he knew just what it took to game the media.