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Eloise books
Eloise books





eloise books

Hollywood wouldn't quite see it that way. But she had this idea that she wanted to be a movie star. "She wasn't a traditionally beautiful woman she was kind of masculine. "When she went to MGM, she had already been a star in radio, and people always joke about, you know, she had a face for radio," Irvin says of Thompson's early life in movie musicals. It was a farce of childhood meant for adults and youth alike, and it all came from Thompson's often-warped mind (rumor has it she often spoke in a child's voice). She was such a big personality, in fact, that she had to diffuse it into an alter ego, the impish 6-year-old she called Eloise.Įloise lived in New York's Plaza Hotel and had adventures in glamorous locations like Moscow and Paris, dragging her nanny around while she drank champagne, wore fur and tended to her pet pigeon. Thompson was a true eccentric, the kind of woman who could waltz through ballrooms and turn every head. She was of her time, and before her time - a woman, as they say, of great substance and character. But she was also the woman who gave voice to MGM's musicals a legendary vocal coach for the likes of Frank Sinatra, Lena Horn, Marlene Dietrich and Lucille Ball a fabled friend and mentor to Judy Garland and Liza Minnelli the actress who stole a film from under the feet of Fred Astaire and Audrey Hepburn and the most popular and highest-paid cabaret performer of all time.Īnd if that wasn't enough, she made women's slacks into a high-fashion item. She was, most famously, the creator of the Eloise book series. Kay Thompson is a difficult woman to describe.







Eloise books