The life of Busby Berkeley was often as frenzied as his dynamic dance designs, which revolutionized the movie musical in the 1930s. This very well researched biography documents his mercurial career and personal life before and after his Hollywood fame.
What the reader learns is that many of the most memorable film sequences associated with his work (Broadway Baby and the storylines of 42nd Street and For Me and My Gal, for example) began in a proscenium on Broadway or stock company stages and that the backstage stories were rooted in Berkeley's own life and family history.
Utilizing diaries, letters, interviews and his own passion for the sometimes inexplicable character of Buzz, Spivak's book is essential for anyone wishing to fully appreciate musicals and films of the studio era.