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Kitty Kelley to write Oprah biography
Showbiz Desk
NEW YORK—Kitty Kelley, the best-selling biographer known for dishing
dirt on her subjects, is taking on one of America’s most loved
celebrities —Oprah Winfrey. Crown Publishers, an imprint of Random
House, said on Wednesday it will publish the upcoming biography of
Winfrey by Kelley, who has already tackled the Bush family, the British
royals, Nancy Reagan and Frank Sinatra and has been credited with
inventing the unauthorized, unflattering biography.
“Oprah Winfrey has fascinated me for many years,” Kelley said in a
statement. “As a woman, she has wielded an unprecedented amount of
influence over the American culture and psyche. There has been no other
person in the 20th century whose convictions and values have impacted
the American public in such a significant way.” Kelley made her name
with the 1978 publication of “Jackie Oh!,” which detailed womanizing by
President John F. Kennedy and the former first lady’s battle with
depression.
In her biography of Nancy Reagan, she famously wrote that the first lady
had long private “lunches” with Sinatra in her private quarters, using
the quotation marks around the word lunches to emphasize her innuendo.
In her book on Sinatra, she portrayed the beloved actor and singer as a
violent misogynist who fraternized with mobsters. In 2004’s “The Family:
The Real Story of the Bush Dynasty,” she wrote that President George W.
Bush had snorted cocaine at Camp David while his father was president.
That assertion was credited to Sharon Bush — the former wife of the
president’s brother Neil — who subsequently denied sharing those juicy
details with Kelley. Critics have accused her of stretching the truth
and engaging in tabloid journalism. Online magazine Slate called her the
“colonoscopist to the stars.” Still, many critics see value in her work
even as many question her methods and sourcing.
“Although Kitty Kelley has the reputation, as does The National
Enquirer, of trash-mongering — and profiting handsomely from it — both
can also be seen as moralists,” the Washington Post wrote in its review
of “The Family.” “They ‘out’ our leaders and celebrities with the zeal
of evangelists because they want them to be better. And they want us to
see these people as they really are, so that in our outrage we will
demand reform or repentance.”
Crown said Kelley’s book will include interviews with hundreds of
sources, many of whom have never before spoken on the record about
Oprah. It noted there has never been a serious biography written about
Winfrey. Random House is owned by Bertelsmann AG. |