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Paperback Smart Blonde: Dolly Parton Book

ISBN: 1846097606

ISBN13: 9781846097607

Smart Blonde: Dolly Parton

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Book Overview

In the first entirely new major biography of Dolly Parton for over 15 years, Stephen Miller goes behind the larger-than-life image to find out what makes Dolly Parton tick.


A self-made woman in every sense, Dolly arrived on the Nashville scene as a solo performer bedecked with lurid outfits and exaggerated accessories designed to get her noticed. Later she would bring the same approach to rebuilding her face and figure, but behind...

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Looking at An American Original!

Think what you will of Dolly Parton but she is definitely an American original. Born into abject poverty in Tennessee, she had the soul of a poet and vocal cords to match. Her driving ambition and saavy helped her climb the entertainment ladder and become a major figure not just in country music but in American life. Stephen Miller details the life and career of this smart, talented and altogether unique woman in this 2008 Omnibus Press release. In some 380-odd pages, author Miller examines all aspects of the Dolly phenomenon. He does a fine job of relating her early life, her marriage to Carl Dean, her country music breakthrough with Porter Wagoner, her solo career and subsequent success in music, movies and other venues. Like certain other celebrities - Johnny Carson comes to mind - Parton has created a bubble of privacy over certain parts of her life. This means, among other things, that close friends and business asssociates would not talk to Miller nor the lady herself. For a 'Tennessee hillbilly,' Parton really has done an amazing job of manipulating the media machine over the past 40 years and continues to do so. And, because of that, Miller's portrait of Dolly Rebecca Parton, while insightful and fascinating, is incomplete. In the end, the reader feels admiration for Parton who has created so many beautiful songs, touched so many hearts and been so successful in the music business yer has endeared herself to legions of fans. She's easily one of the most successful self-made women in America. Yet, you wonder about the price of that success. She offers no apologies about feeling the need for and having various plastic surgery procedures. Viewing photographs of her over the years however leaves a feeling of sadness. In her early days Parton was a lovely woman, a natural beauty. Now her face is an advertisement of the dangers of plastic surgery. Was all that pain worth it? In any case, SMART BLONDE is an informed and insightful look at an American musical treasure. Long after people stop talking about her wigs or breasts, they'll remember the touching songs sung by that one-in-a-million voice. Recommended.

A dissection of what drives Mrs. Parton through her life

Blonde has rarely ever equaled smarts. "Smart Blonde" is a brand-new biography of the legendary singer and business woman. The Nashville belle made her fortune and fame all by herself, despite looking like her IQ was about the same as her shoe size. A remarkable story of a woman who has it all, brains, beauty, and fortune, and how she made it to the point solely by her own merits and no place else. Touching on the singer's personal life, relationships, "Smart Blonde" is a dissection of what drives Mrs. Parton through her life.

Dolly's dreams started when she woke up ...

Little girls often dream of fame and glory at night, but Dolly had bigger dreams than most. It must have been difficult to dream when life itself was almost crowded out by eleven siblings, a father who enjoyed taking a nip now and then and a mother who certainly had little time to nurture the fantasy life of a precocious youngster. Sevierville County, Tennessee wasn't exactly a thriving metropolis and no one was going to come knocking at the Parton's door to listen to a little whippersnapper sing her heart out, but there were people who did believe in her and one of them was her uncle, Bill Owens. Dolly's dreams would take her far beyond the Smoky Mountains and, as she later maintained, "her dreams started when she woke up." Stephen Miller, author of the mesmerizing new biography of Dolly, Smart Blonde: Dolly Parton, struggled to look beyond the glitz and the gaudy to discover an intelligent and extremely talented woman. As a young girl many children shunned her and their parents, naturally, didn't want their children hanging around with someone with such loose morals. Childhood wasn't easy for her. As she later claimed, "I was the most popular girl in the school for all the wrong reasons . . . I had a foxy personality." She neglected to add the word "brains," but the combination of all her assets later dropped her into the world of country music like a ten-ton atom bomb. After meeting her future husband Carl Dean and the Wishy-Washy Laundromat her life started moving faster than the spin cycle on a Maytag. Her talent began to blossom and Dolly began to leave them all in the dust, including the talented Porter Wagoner. Not all that glitters is gold and this intensely private woman began to experience some problems associated with fame. Why did Porter want to sue her? Was there anything to the rumor that her pal Judy Ogle was more than just an assistant? Did her purported abandonment of her family lead to animosity later on? The infamous sister Stella had a few things to say about her sister . . . According to Steve Buckingham, "If you like Dolly you have to take the deep thinking Dolly, the great musician Dolly, the incredible songwriting Dolly, along with the glitzy Dolly, the corny Dolly, the showgirl; I mean it's all her." As a Dolly Parton neophyte, I found this book extremely fascinating, well written and found myself thinking if this book were an authorized biography it would be an excellent choice. Miller was able to glean tidbits from Dolly's sister Stella that would interest even the most skeptical know-it-all. The star stalkers of the world may find little in this book they don't already claim to know, but the average reader will come away with a sense of awe, wonder and respect for one of the century's most talented musical icons. My own journey through the book was complimented and enjoyed by several trips to youtube to watch numerous clips of Dolly throughout the years. I used to race quickly between

It's out there

I bought it at Borders two days ago. So far, it's quite interesting although I think some people have a beef with poor little Dolly. Like her sister, Stella! LOL Dolly's autobiography was very funny. I don't know if this one will be as humorous. So far, the author is basically just referencing things she said in her book. But in this tome, we do get to hear what others think about her rather than simply what she thinks about herself. Bad thing is we won't really know if their comments are fair. Oh, well! That's show biz! It shouldn't hurt Dolly's bank account too much. She is, after all, not a dummy. I'll come back with my final comments when I'm done. I know you can't wait for that.
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