P. T. Barnum: America's Greatest Showman

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$14.25 - $40.79
UPC:
9780679435747
Maximum Purchase:
2 units
Binding:
Hardcover
Publication Date:
1995-09-26
Release Date:
1995-09-26
Author:
Philip B. Kunhardt Jr.;Philip B. Kunhardt III;Peter W. Kunhardt
Language:
english
Edition:
1st

Product Overview

If Abraham Lincoln was the great moral force of his age, Phineas Taylor Barnum was its great provider of joy. As one of the earliest practitioners of the show business, Barnum dedicated his long career to alleviating the severe and drudging practicalness he considered the chief defect of American civilization. His remedy? A prodigious swarm of divas, minstrels, circuses, museums of curiosities, beauty pageants, sideshows, fat-baby and poultry contests whatever it took to entertain his fellow citizens while making him one of his countrys first millionaires.

With P.T. Barnum: Americas Greatest Showman, the Messrs Kunhardt rediscover the genius and vision of an unmatched impresario and entrepreneur. In vivid words and spellbinding pictures (more than 500 photographs, engravings, and color lithographs from 41 different archives), we meet a man of complex motives, a master of merchandise, an inveterate self-promoter often reviled for his opportunism. We meet the man who did NOT say Theres a sucker born every minute ; whose best friends were clergymen; whose autobiography sold more than a million copies; who took a public leap through a flaming hoop to prove to the ASPCA that his performing horses were in no danger; who (allegedly) plotted with Samuel Clemens to lease a comets tail to take a million passengers on a guided tour of outer space. We meet the man who built his reputation and his fortune largely on the exoticism of others, but whose crowning moment as a member of the Connecticut state legislature came in a speech in favor of the constitutional amendment to abolish slavery: A human soul is not to be trifled with. It may inhabit the body of a Chinaman, a Turk, an Arab or a Hotentot it is still an immortal spirit!

There is no denying Barnums abiding influence, more than a century after his death, on our popular culture. For better AND for worse, we owe Americas irrepressible infatuation with show biz largely to him.

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