As far as self-defining populations, most readers of CARY GRANT: A BIOGRAPHY are going to be fans of the late film star. Insofar as decades have passed since his death, much that had been written about him during his lifetime now has been forgotten and, therefore, some of the information in this biography will strike many readers as new.
Accordingly, author Marc Eliot has done a workman-like job of assembling existing facts, and of discovering other facts heretofore unknown. The mass of original material he has sorted through, as stated in the bibliography and notes, is huge and impressive.
He goes into detail not before seen about Grant's earliest history, particularly Grant's first years after arriving in the United States from England. The author comes to some conclusions that are not firmly supported in fact, but which do seem reasonable as he presents them.
Eliot comes out firmly in support of the long-standing theory that Grant was a homosexual--or, more likely, bisexual. The author also presents evidence that, in his early and hungry days in New York, Grant had worked as a male escort. Eliot also claims that the actress Mae West, in her day, had run an escort service there, and he conjectures that Grant may have worked for her.
Some of Eliot's conclusions seems flimsy and unsupported, while others are plausible.
On page 72 of the hardcover version, Eliot offers a description of Grant's famous cleft chin that is one of the funniest things ever printed; almost certainly, unintentionally as funny as the passage ends up reading. Yet, on reflection, there is a certain truth and sense to Eliot's thesis.
Other issues are a bit sloppy, including some of the prose, which would have benefited by good editing. Particularly puzzling was the anecdote about how much Frank Sinatra and Grant had hated each other on the first movie they did together, in light of the strong friendship Eliot later credits these men with establishing. As an author, Eliot owes it to his readers to connect these two stages of their relationship, from hatred to friendship, and this discrepancy never is acknowledged.
What makes CARY GRANT: A BIOGRAPHY especially good reading is the story of the creation of the motion picture industry, which Grant entered at an early stage of that industry's development. In consequence, the story of Cary Grant and his emergence as a movie star inescapably becomes the history of the modern entertainment business. As a result, this biography is peppered with names long forgotten, and these inclusions clearly enrich the book as a whole.
CARY GRANT: A BIOGRAPHY is a must-read for all fans of this actor, as well as for anyone with a keen curiosity about Hollywood in its heyday.