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Guillaume: A Life by ROBERT GUILLAUME — book cover

Guillaume: A Life

by ROBERT GUILLAUME, David Ritz
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Overview

 

Guillaume: A Life is the autobiography of esteemed Broadway, Hollywood, and television star Robert Guillaume. Ten months after suffering a stroke, Guillaume—perhaps best known as television’s Benson—began this autobiography with award-winning author and collaborator David Ritz. The book goes beyond the recounting of a long and successful career to examine the forces that shaped the man: family, religion, race, and class. Startlingly candid and disarmingly self-aware, Guillaume seeks to know and understand himself, his treatment of the women in his life, and the choices he made along the way. He pursues the truth, however painful it may be, says Ritz, guided by two questions, “Who the hell am I?” and “What made me do what I did?” Born in St. Louis in 1927 to a young, abused, unstable mother, and reared by a strong, hardworking grandmother, Robert Guillaume managed to move from the poverty and adversity of his youth to a rich, full career as an actor and a singer. Fierce determination and sharp focus enabled this man born to hardship and racial discrimination to study, learn, cultivate his natural talents, and succeed at the performance career he pursued with a vengeance. Guillaume first performed in the strict Catholic schools and churches to which his grandmother, who understood that education would be the key to any success he might achieve, sent him. There his love of classical music was nurtured, and he was encouraged to perform. From a child longing for his mother’s love to a man unsure of the meaning of love for many of the women in his life, from a young performer struggling to succeed on Broadway and in Hollywood to a grief-stricken father watching his son die of AIDS, Robert Guillaume tells what it was like to realize celebrity and what he sacrificed in the process. Readers will savor the success story of this artist who achieved great recognition and fame, but who never lost sight of his beginnings. Appealing to all audiences, Guillaume is a revealing and poignant autobiography of an extraordinary and distinguished American thespian.

Synopsis

 

Guillaume: A Life is the autobiography of esteemed Broadway, Hollywood, and television star Robert Guillaume. Ten months after suffering a stroke, Guillaume—perhaps best known as television’s Benson—began this autobiography with award-winning author and collaborator David Ritz.

The book goes beyond the recounting of a long and successful career to examine the forces that shaped the man: family, religion, race, and class. Startlingly candid and disarmingly self-aware, Guillaume seeks to know and understand himself, his treatment of the women in his life, and the choices he made along the way. He pursues the truth, however painful it may be, says Ritz, guided by two questions, “Who the hell am I?” and “What made me do what I did?”

Born in St. Louis in 1927 to a young, abused, unstable mother, and reared by a strong, hardworking grandmother, Robert Guillaume managed to move from the poverty and adversity of his youth to a rich, full career as an actor and a singer. Fierce determination and sharp focus enabled this man born to hardship and racial discrimination to study, learn, cultivate his natural talents, and succeed at the performance career he pursued with a vengeance. Guillaume first performed in the strict Catholic schools and churches to which his grandmother, who understood that education would be the key to any success he might achieve, sent him. There his love of classical music was nurtured, and he was encouraged to perform.

From a child longing for his mother’s love to a man unsure of the meaning of love for many of the women in his life, from a young performer struggling to succeed on Broadway and in Hollywood to a grief-stricken father watching his son die of AIDS, Robert Guillaume tells what it was like to realize celebrity and what he sacrificed in the process. Readers will savor the success story of this artist who achieved great recognition and fame, but who never lost sight of his beginnings. Appealing to all audiences, Guillaume is a revealing and poignant autobiography of an extraordinary and distinguished American thespian.

Library Journal

Actor and singer Guillaume, best known for his starring role on Benson, presents a candid memoir that reads like a conversation with a close friend. In fact, collaborator Ritz, who helped Aretha Franklin, Ray Charles, and Marvin Gaye with their memoirs, acknowledges in his preface that Guillaume is the frankest person he has ever worked with. Prompted in part by a recent stroke, Guillaume honestly tries to answer the questions "Who the hell am I?" and "Why did I do the things I did?" He begins with his early years with the strong grandmother who raised him and the tutelage of the Catholic Church. Both of those forces, he insists, saved him from a life on the streets. Rejected by his mother and longing for her love, he struggled with his relationships with women and endured the pain of watching his son die of AIDS. This is a story of fierce determination and triumph over poverty, pain, and discrimination, much like Sidney Poitier's recent The Measure of a Man, and will appeal to all biography lovers. Highly recommended.-Rosellen Brewer, Monterey Cty. Free Libs., Salinas, CA

About the Author, ROBERT GUILLAUME

 

 Coauthor David Ritz has collaborated with Ray Charles, Aretha Franklin, Marvin Gaye, B. B. King, Smokey Robinson, Etta James, and the Neville Brothers on their life stories. He is a four-time winner of the Ralph J. Gleason Music Book Award. His lyrics include “Sexual Healing.”

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Editorials

From the Publisher

"The magic that has always characterized the life and work of Robert Guillaume vibrates on the pages of this book. His talent and his values mark him as a man for all seasons."—Sidney Poitier

"It has been said, 'A Person's talent can never be more or less than they are as a human being.' Having worked with and watched Robert Guillaume since 1959, I am proud and deeply touched to see that the rich life he lives is captured on the pages of this book."—Quincy Jones

"Robert Guillaume is an enlightened being. His eloquence of thought and elegance of being dignify the man, giving me enormous pride in our long friendship. When you read this book about an extraordinary talent, Emerson's words will come to mind. 'What a new face courage puts on everything.'"—Vidal Sassoon

Library Journal

Actor and singer Guillaume, best known for his starring role on Benson, presents a candid memoir that reads like a conversation with a close friend. In fact, collaborator Ritz, who helped Aretha Franklin, Ray Charles, and Marvin Gaye with their memoirs, acknowledges in his preface that Guillaume is the frankest person he has ever worked with. Prompted in part by a recent stroke, Guillaume honestly tries to answer the questions "Who the hell am I?" and "Why did I do the things I did?" He begins with his early years with the strong grandmother who raised him and the tutelage of the Catholic Church. Both of those forces, he insists, saved him from a life on the streets. Rejected by his mother and longing for her love, he struggled with his relationships with women and endured the pain of watching his son die of AIDS. This is a story of fierce determination and triumph over poverty, pain, and discrimination, much like Sidney Poitier's recent The Measure of a Man, and will appeal to all biography lovers. Highly recommended.-Rosellen Brewer, Monterey Cty. Free Libs., Salinas, CA

Kirkus Reviews

The life of the actor, best known for his starring role in the long-running sitcom Benson. The illegitimate son of an abused and emotionally unstable mother, Robert Guillaume was born in 1927 in St. Louis, where he grew up in poverty, raised mostly by his grandmother, a cleaning woman, and got his first taste of performing by singing in the church choir. He'd had a successful career as a stage actor, singer, and comedian, most notably in the revue Jacques Brel Is Alive and Living in Paris, before being offered the part of Benson, the sharp-tongued butler on the comedy Soap, for which he won an Emmy in 1979. The character was later spun off into his own series, which ran for seven seasons on ABC, from 1979 to 1986. When Benson went off the air, Guillaume continued to work steadily, appearing in several short-lived television series and starring in the title role of the Los Angeles production of The Phantom of the Opera. His career almost came to a halt in 1999 when he suffered a minor stroke on the set of the critically acclaimed "dramedy" Sports Night (on which he played producer Isaac Jaffee), an incident that was put into the show's plotline to avoid writing out the character. Since then the actor has been slowly recovering-hence the reflective mood this autobiography finds him in. Although he's endured more than his share of hardship-the poverty and racial discrimination of his youth, his stroke, the death of his son Jacques from AIDS-he doesn't succumb to hand-wringing, and while the prose is often stilted, and the pacing somewhat uneven, he comes across as serious about his craft and candid about the mistakes he's made along the way. Not a great read, then, but fans may beinterested.

Book Details

Published
November 1, 2002
Publisher
University of Missouri Press
Pages
240
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780826214263

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