A Clean Breast

A Clean Breast is film director Russ Meyer's self-published three volume autobiography.[1][2]

A Clean Breast
AuthorRuss Meyer
PublisherSelf-published
Publication date
2000
Media typePrint
ISBN0-9621797-2-8
PN1998.3.M49

Written under the pen name "Adolph Schwartz" and published by a company named "Hauck", for Meyer's late mother's maiden name, it was published in August 2000 after fifteen years of delays and rewrites. Many Meyer fans had pre-paid for the book as early as 1990. It is an immense 18-pound, 3-volume set of luxurious 100-lb paper stock, with sewn signatures and thousands of photos.

Volumes

Volumes 1 and 2 provide the core of Russ Meyer's autobiography, beginning with his childhood and progressing to lengthy and fascinating recollections of his time during World War II as a combat cameraman for the 166th Signal Photo Company. He writes of risking his life and making lifelong friends as his unit traveled across Europe with George S. Patton. Meyer's World War II buddies are invoked often along with the world of independent filmmaking and his ribald life of women and sex.

Volume 3 is composed mainly of detailed retellings of Meyer's films, richly illustrated with countless sequential images presented in film frames. Volume 3 also brings the reader up to date on Meyer's latter-day video (and other) activities with Pandora Peaks.

References

  1. Strausbaugh, John (July 9, 2005). "Books of the Times; A Director Fixated on More Than Film". The New York Times.
  2. Schwartz, Adolph A. (January 10, 2000). Meyer, Russ (ed.). Russ Meyer – A Clean Breast: The Life and Loves of Russ Meyer. El Rio, Texas: Hauck Pub. Co. ISBN 0-9621797-2-8.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.