I picked this bio to read because I'm a fan of Welles's acting and directing. I remember him also as a TV talk-show personality in the '60s. Sometimes he performed magic on those shows, which was something he started doing as a child.
The Wunderkind truly showed talent early on, directing a version of Richard III, at his prep school when he was 15 years old. His bohemian mother and her lover (they at one point formed a ménage a trois with Orson's biological father) encouraged him in his pursuits, telling him he was a genius. Dadda, an orthopedist, was his mom's lover and often Orson's patron. He gave money to the young man frequently.
After graduating from Todd Prep, in Illinois, Wells traveled to Ireland and Scotland. At first it was only a walking and painting tour, but when the ambitious young man hit Dublin, he got on at the Gate Theater and became a professional actor. He returned to the States, landing in New York and began directing Macbeth in Harlem, at the age of 20. He acted on CBS Radio, and gave his famous 1938 Halloween eve broadcast of H.G. Wells' The War of the Worlds, about Mars invading New Jersey. This caused much hysteria and both CBS and Orson were sued thousands of dollars. Judges dropped most of them. Welles decided to invade Hollywood in hopes of directing and acting. One studio wanted him to make Heart of Darkness, and Orson asked if Lucille Ball could star in it. The movie was dropped. Then Welles directed and acted in the highly acclaimed Citizen Kane, about a newspaper tycoon. He directed The Magnificent Ambersons, which some critics who saw the uncut version thought was even better than Kane. But it was long and complex, and the studio cut key parts of it.
Leaming describes the disaster of It's All True that Welles spent time filming in Latin America. It never got finished due to the director's womanizing and drinking. She describes his marriages and divorces, most notably to Rita Heyworth. She cites his acting in The Stranger, The Third Man, and his direction of Lady from Shanghai and the eccentric noir Touch of Evil.
Ms. Leaming's research and writing on Welles's massive early talent impressed me, as if she leaves nothing out. For the most part, she portrays him as an energetic, charming man, who on occasion could turn belligerent as when he spat on a producer in New York. She does not show this side of Welles much, nor does she tell you in depth why so many of the LA movie crowd disliked him so much. Later on in his career he gained weight, moved to Europe and tried to make experimental films. Leaming does not go into most of this period. I still consider this a great biography. A man of Welles stature, lust for the arts and talent probably couldn't be covered in one book.