American presidents and Hollywood have interacted since the 1920s. This relationship has made our entertainment more political and our political leadership more aligned with the world of movies and movie stars. In The Leading Man, Burton W. Peretti explores the development of the cinematic presidential image. He sets the scene in chapter 1 to show us how the chief executive, beginning with George Washington, was positioned to assume the mantle of cultural leading man. As an early star figure in the young republic, the president served as a symbol of national survival and wish fulfillment. The president, as head of government and head of state, had the potential to portray a powerful and charismatic role. At the center of the story are the fourteen presidents of the cinematic era, from Herbert Hoover to Barack Obama. Since the 1920s, the president, like the lead actor in a movie, has been given the central place on the political stage under the intense glare of the spotlight. Like other American men, future presidents were taught by lead movie actors how to look and behave, what to say, and how to say it. Some, like John F. Kennedy and Richard M. Nixon, took particular care to learn from the grooming, gestures, movements, and vocal inflections of film actors and applied these lessons to their political careers. Ronald Reagan was a professional actor. Bill Clinton, a child of the post–World War II Baby Boom, may have been the biggest movie fan of all presidents. Others, including Lyndon Johnson, showed little interest in movies and their lessons for politicians. Presidents and other politicians have been criticized for cheapening their offices by hiring image and advertising consultants and staging their public events. Peretti analyzes the evolution and the significance of this interaction to trace the convoluted history of the presidential cinematic image. He demonstrates how movies have been the main force in promoting appearance and drama over the substance of governing, and how Americans’ lives today may be dominated by entertainment at the expense of their engagement as citizens.
Can we save someone else if we can't save ourselves? With emotional clarity and grace, Leading Men seamlessly weaves fact and fiction to navigate the tensions between public figures and their private lives.
Shattered when his high-school sweetheart dumps him to pursue a relationship with a celebrity, Maxwell Lerner resolves to infiltrate his ex's glamorous world, where an unexpected turn imparts astonishing lessons about life and love.
A "how-to" guide for gay men seeking committed, quality relationships explores twelve basic personalities employed by men to hide fears and desires while explaining how to overcome intimacy blockers. Original.
This behind-the-scenes glimpse into the lives and accomplishments of fifty extraordinary actors of the silver screen, including Buster Keaton, Rudolph Valentino, Cary Grant, and Steve McQueen, features filmographies, fascinating facts, ...
In this war, renowned men's author Steve Farrar emphasizes, Jesus Christ is looking for men who will not die, but live for their families.
What does it take to be a “real” man? You don’t have to be perfect to be a man of God. As Dr. Charles Stanley writes, a man of God is a maturing man, a striving man, a knowledgeable man.
Caldwell enjoys writing, music, history, reading, and spending time with his Jack Russell Terrier, Chip. This is his second book and first novel. His first book, Days and Nights in Parisienne Heights, came out several years ago.
Enter Sherry Thomas, the mysterious Managing Director of Cyclops, a surveillance shop, and the catalyst for Alex Seymour's descent into a world ruled by cameras, tapes, lies and deceit, with devastating consequences.
Dune's Leading Man Elizabeth Andrews. CHAPTER 4 REACHINGREACHING THETHE STARSSTARS BEYONDBEYOND Timothée made a name for himself as an actor without being cast in a blockbuster movie. That's practically unheard of even for the most ...
In the first full biography of actor Sidney Poitier, Aram Goudsouzian analyzes the life and career of a Hollywood legend, from his childhood in the Bahamas to his 2002 Oscar for lifetime achievement.