cover image Bob Hope: The Road Well-Traveled: Hardcover

Bob Hope: The Road Well-Traveled: Hardcover

Lawrence J. Quirk. Applause Books, $26.95 (340pp) ISBN 978-1-55783-353-2

Premature tabloid accounts of his death notwithstanding, Bob Hope remains a beloved American icon. But as Quirk (Bette Davis), a celebrity biographer who has known Hope since 1950, makes clear in this sharply written biography, it has been a long road to the top. Rising from poverty in England and Cleveland, Ohio, Hope clawed his way to the apex of five entertainment fields successively: vaudeville, the Broadway theater, Hollywood movies, radio and television. Along the way he accumulated not only millions of fans but also friends and enemies among show business professionals, probably more of the latter, according to Quirk. Indeed, Quirk is at pains on every page to present a balanced portrait of Hope, whom he deems ruthlessly self-involved but nonetheless worthy of some admiration. Little is known about Hope's private life beyond his having been married to the same woman for 64 years and their having adopted four children. But on the basis of sources close to Hope, some unnamed, Quirk declares that the performer committed ""countless"" infidelities and neglected his children. At the same time, he was making sacrifices to entertain U.S. servicemen, whom he called ""my boys,"" all over the world. The government always paid for these trips, Quirk contends, and by Vietnam, Hope's routines had grown thin and become synonymous with the ""war machine."" In the final chapter, one is left with an image of Hope, at 95, clinging pathetically to his old shtick as his body and marriage collapse, but whose vast sums of money and great popular success were the fulfillment of his own highest aspirations. Includes filmography, bibliography and more than 30 photos. (Oct.)