To be blunt, this book isn’t very good...even if I did end up mostly enjoying it. It was a fairly breezy read, after all, and it did provide a basic survey of Diana Rigg’s life.
If you decide to read this, then it will help to know what you’re getting. Expect a standard PEOPLE magazine type of biography. It’s fairly well written but not challenging. Naturally, there are some photographs, although they are black and white, and there aren’t as many as you might expect. The reverse title page tells me that author Kathleen Tracy has also written books about Ellen DeGeneres, Jerry Seinfeld, Drew Carey and the Dixie Chicks, and without having seen them, I’m going to guess that none took her very long to write.
I say this, because DIANA RIGG: THE BIOGRAPHY could be termed a “lazy” book. There are no footnotes, endnotes or bibliography, but Tracy doesn’t appear to have done much research. She also doesn’t appear to have interviewed anyone for the book, and there’s no evidence that she’s ever met Rigg (not that an author needs to know her subject, but it is a means of gaining insight). What we get, mainly, are copious quotes from old interviews, mostly with Rigg herself. At times, it seemed that I was just reading one quote after another. It would have helped if Tracy had at least included more quotes from Rigg’s family, friends or co-stars, but we find no such variety.
Mind you, the quotes aren’t without value. They do provide insight into Rigg’s personality and reveal her views on subjects such as the acting profession, entertainment journalists, feminism, motherhood and her personal relationships. I’ll give Tracy some points for usually using contemporary quotes, rather than ones in which Rigg looks back in hindsight. As an historian myself, I appreciate that.
It’s perhaps worth noting, too, that those seeking a biography of Rigg will likely face limited choices. An Amazon search reveals only one other book, a 166 page volume by an identified “fictional erotica” author known as Harry Lime. Lime’s Rigg biography does not appear to be a work of erotica, but regardless, the sole Amazon review of it isn’t positive. Reading Tracy’s book did, at least, provide a respectable telling of Rigg’s life story. One caveat: DIANA RIGG: THE BIOGRAPHY was published in 2003, and Rigg lived another 17 years. Thus, her latter years - which include her time on the popular GAME OF THRONES TV show - are not covered.
Ultimately, I don’t regret reading DIANA RIGG: THE BIOGRAPHY, and at 277 pages (with some photos) it didn’t take long to read, anyway. At the same time, I can’t recommend it, and for most people, it likely won’t be worth the time invested.