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Marsha Hunt

    This American-born artist possesses a multifaceted creative spirit, excelling as a singer, actress, and writer. Her formative experiences during the tumultuous 1960s paved the way for an international journey that significantly shaped her artistic development. Establishing herself in London's vibrant theatre scene, she went on to forge a distinguished career spanning fifteen years in rock music, alongside extensive work in radio, stage, and screen. Her commitment to the performing arts is further evidenced by her significant tenures with renowned theatre companies, honing her interpretive and dramatic prowess.

    Like Venus Fading
    Repossessing Ernestine
    Joy
    • 1998

      Like Venus Fading

      • 291 pages
      • 11 hours of reading

      A great rollercoaster rags-to-riches-to-rags tale about the first black Hollywood sex goddess.Like Elvis, like Marilyn, the first black film superstar didn’t die tragically, but lives among us still, changed out of all recognition...Propelled out of Depression-era poverty by the ambition of her mother and her own talents, young Irene O’Brien finds she attracts attention easily – both welcome (she is talent-spotted from Mississippi to Harlem to Hollywood) and unwelcome (at six, a fat, over-friendly storekeeper gets altogether too excited when she sits on his lap...)She blazes a trail no other black performer has taken before and becomes an international sex symbol in the 1950s – ‘the black Monroe’. Fame and fortune come running: she is the first black woman to be nominated for an Oscar for Best Actress. But happiness eludes her: her celebrity marriage never works; her daughter is autistic; and the studios soon tire of her as she ages.Her descent into drunkenness and derangement ends with her very mysterious ‘death’ in the mid-1960s at the age of forty-three. But, beaten but not bowed, Venus Johnson rises from the ashes of Irene O’Brien to tell her tale and live out her days in tranquillity...

      Like Venus Fading
    • 1997

      Repossessing Ernestine

      The Search for a Lost Soul

      • 320 pages
      • 12 hours of reading

      Ernestine Hunt was to spend 50 years in mental institutions before her granddaughter Marsha Hunt discovered she was still alive. In an effort to find answers to the mysteries of her grandmother's past Marsha turned over secrets and inconsistencies that others might have prefered to remain hidden.

      Repossessing Ernestine
    • 1995

      Joy

      • 352 pages
      • 13 hours of reading

      This first novel draws on Marsha Hunt's experience of growing up black in America, of the music business and of finding fame in a white-dominated world.

      Joy