Audition
Audition book cover

Audition

Hardcover

Price
$15.96
ISBN-10
030726646X
Dimensions
6.65 x 1.7 x 9.7 inches
Weight
2.3 pounds

Description

From Booklist *Starred Review* Audition might seem an odd title for this long-awaited autobiography. After all, who is more established in the public’s mind than the iconic Walters? Butxa0xa0that’s what is so terrific about this book. Walters really does let readers see what’s behind her TV persona, and in many ways,xa0what she reveals isxa0an insecure womanxa0whose life has been one audtion after another.xa0The daughter of a night-club impresario and a mother who wanted a more stable life, Walters moved a lot, ever the new kid. But the greatest influence on her young life was her mildly retarded sister, who evoked in Waltersxa0both love and guilt. Her family’s ups and downs led her to believe that one day she wouldxa0be financially responsible for them, and that eventually happened. But as Walters makes clear, this insecurity is also what propelled her forward; her strong work ethic and some good timing also helped to shape herxa0amazing career.xa0However, all thatxa0success came at a price. It affected her marriages andxa0her daughter, and it engendered amazing hostility from male colleaguesxa0unwilling to give this pioneer a break. For readers of a certain age, much of the pleasure of the book comes in remembering along with Walters: her star interviews, her trip to the Bay of Pigs with Castro, her talks with kings, queens, and presidents. Then there’sxa0dish on what really happened behind the scenes at The View.xa0A smart, funny,xa0fascinating book in whichxa0Walters captures possibly her most elusive subject: herself. --Ilene Cooper “ Audition is brutally honest, both about Walters and those she's worked with. Readers won't be left wondering what she thinks of anything, or anyone, for that matter. . . . It's a fascinating look at a woman who has lived a fascinating life.”–Laura L. Hutchison, The Free Lance-Star “[Walters’] heartfelt candor lifts this book above mere titillation. . . . blended with this personal drama is a delightful tale of the golden age of television . . . Through 50-plus chapters, you feel as though you’ve enjoyed a year of weekly lunches with Walters . . . She regales you with the juicy behind-the-scenes details of the celebrities she’s interviewed, mixed in with stories of her own trials and tribulations. In the end, you envy her a little less and admire her more.”–Kathleen Matthews, Washington Post “…the book is a triumph!”—Caitlin Flanagan, The Atlantic “…the grande dame of TV news has written a blockbuster. . . . Readers will gobble up the excerpts from scores of interviews with world leaders, politicians, celebrities and murderers.”–Kathleen Daley, New York Sun “an indispensable book along with a surefire monster best seller…intensely readable…She’s TV’s original monarch and superstar where power, show business and journalism converge. It’s Barbara Walters’ world, and the rest of us just live in it. [Her] mammoth memoir, doesn’t just touch chords, it’s a 600-plus page oratorio.”–Jeff Simon, The Buffalo News “…compulsively entertaining…”–Rebecca Traister, Salon.com “Ms. Walters’s story is greatly humanized by the family memoir that colors her long litany of professional successes.”–Janet Maslin, The New York Times “an unusually ambitious and successful book. …suffused with an emotional intensity…it belongs to a part of American culture that Walters helped invent.”–Nicholas Lemann, The New Yorker “She doesn’t shy from the tough stuff… Nor does Walters, an entertainer as much as a ground-breaking journalist, skimp on the fun bits.”–Allison Adato, People “…the crowning glory of a remarkable career…”–Liz Smith, New York Post “…sizzling…”–Jo Piazza, New York Daily News “…compulsively readable… [Walters] gives us an entertaining panorama of a full life lived and recounted with humor and bracing honesty. Alternating between tales of her personal struggles, professional achievements and insider anecdotes about the celebrities and world leaders she's interviewed, this mammoth memoir's energy never flags.” – Publishers Weekly (starred)xa0“A smart, funny, fascinating book in which Walters captures possibly her most elusive subject: herself.”xa0 –Ilene Cooper, Booklist (starred) From the Hardcover edition. From The Washington Post Reviewed by Kathleen Matthews Breaking news: Barbara Walters wears fake eyelashes, is afraid to drive, gave up her black married lover to save her career (while his went down the tubes). These and other true confessions provide the tabloid interest through 600 pages of the network diva's new memoir, Audition. But it's her heartfelt candor that lifts this book above mere titillation. Finally we learn why Walters is so relentless. It's a question I've often pondered watching her on television after beginning my own TV news career 30 years ago. In this engaging and chatty look back at a life largely lived in public view, Walters provides the answer. As Walters explains it, relentlessness is what comes from a nomadic youth spent following her father's roller-coaster show business career from Boston to New York and Miami. Lou Walters's night club, the Latin Quarter, made him a Broadway legend, but he died in a Florida nursing home, leaving his wife and developmentally disabled adult daughter to be supported by Barbara, who was a single mom. Seeing her own career through the lens of show business, living "just one bad review from closing," Walters admits she always feared her hard-fought success would be taken away. Hence, for all her stellar achievements, we understand her compulsion to prove herself in a never-ending audition. But blended with this personal drama is a delightful tale of the golden age of television, including the stomach-churning contract negotiations and network rivalries. Through 50-plus chapters, you feel as though you've enjoyed a year of weekly lunches with Walters at Café des Artistes, the famed New York hangout for ABC stars. She regales you with juicy behind-the-scenes details of the celebrities she's interviewed, mixed in with stories of her own trials and tribulations. In the end, you envy her a little less and admire her more. There are moments when you're tempted to groan -- she has a sycophantic weakness for royalty and at times writes about herself as she would about the Hollywood celebs she relentlessly profiles -- but she quickly corrects course with unexpected candor that is completely disarming. When I opened the chapter "Special Men in My Life," I was tempted to say, "Spare me, please." But, honestly, who can resist hearing what it was like to have "a long and rocky affair" with the elegant, married African American senator Edward Brooke or date the future Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan ("a very nice dancer") and John Warner, the Southern senator once married to Elizabeth Taylor? By the time you finish reading Audition, Walters has won you over, and you suspect she might be pleasantly surprised, like Sally Field winning her Oscar: "You like me. . . . You like me!" What you don't expect, after watching Walters's sometimes cloying interview style and well-crafted TV personality for so many years, is her self-reflection and self-effacement. You also don't expect such breezy and clear writing. If Walters really wrote this memoir -- and I suspect she did -- I'm impressed. Her career began in the 1950s, when she worked behind the scenes at the NBC TV affiliate in New York. She met other people who eventually became media legends: ABC News chief Roone Arledge, CBS's Andy Rooney and New York Times columnist Bill Safire. We watch Walters's ascent from glorified tea pourer to "Today Show" co-host. Recalling relentless public criticism from the critics and her male colleagues, she notes with a chuckle an early Newsweek review of her interviewing style as "dumdum bullets swaddled in angora." More hurtful was the critique from legendary "60 Minutes" producer Don Hewitt, who once told her, "You don't have the right looks. And besides, you don't pronounce your r's right." Walters's speech impediment was immortalized in 1976 on "Saturday Night Live" when Gilda Radner proclaimed, "Hewwo! This is Baba Wawa." What really stung was not Radner's caricature, but Time magazine noting that Walters was being paid $100 for each minute of her "weadily wecognizable delivewy" as the million-dollar co-anchor of ABC News. (She admits to trouble with her r's but not her l's and says she went to a speech specialist early in her career but couldn't shed the remnants of what she describes as a Boston accent.) As for Radner's impersonation, Walters admits it was dead-on and she was glad to have a chance to compliment the comedian later. Her years on the "Today Show" with Hugh Downs and Joe Garagiola were among her best in television. But what followed was perhaps her worst. NBC management paired her with Frank McGee and dictated that she jump in only on the fourth question for big news interviews after he'd asked the first three. Soured, she left to become the first woman network news co-anchor for ABC, but this provided little relief as she faced the big chill from co-anchor Harry Reasoner. She eventually found her oasis in the "Barbara Walters Specials" and later "20/20" where her tenacity to score the big interview was rewarded. Always the overachiever, she created her own TV show, "The View," and, now in her 70s, she continues her Academy Award and "10 Most Fascinating People" specials. The best part of Audition is that Walters takes us with her on all the big interviews. It's a bit like walking through her office or New York apartment and hearing the stories behind the photos (many included here) that showcase her with the biggest names from the past 50 years of politics and entertainment: Judy Garland, Princess Grace, the Shah of Iran, Golda Meir, Richard Nixon, Fidel Castro, Anwar Sadat, Menachem Begin, the Dalai Lama, Cher. She shares the struggle of getting a good interview with Warren Beatty and Mel Gibson. She admits her regret that she never interviewed Jackie Kennedy, Princess Di, Queen Elizabeth or the current and past popes. Perhaps so many years of prying into the personal lives of others and probing for vulnerabilities compel Walters to pull away the scabs of the insults and injuries she's endured. Quite matter-of-factly, she re-lives the heartbreak of three unsuccessful marriages. More poignantly, she recalls the disappointments of several failed pregnancies and the ecstasy of adopting Jackie, whom she named after her disabled sister. "The Hardest Chapter to Write" describes her daughter's rebellious teen years, when Jackie was derailed by drug use and ran away from home. Walters shares these confidences with the blessing of her now happy adult daughter to "give hope to other parents who are struggling with their own adolescents' hard-to-understand emotions and rebellion." For someone who lived her life on television, sharing these most painful years, "which, in truth," she says, "I would rather not remember," is perhaps the best therapy. This, we now understand, is what Walters means when she tells aspiring young people that if they want to pursue a career like hers, "Then you have to take the whole package." I must admit, I was one of those young women who cheekily wrote Walters a letter asking for advice after college. I also rejected her well-known admonition that women "can't have it all -- a great marriage, successful career, and well-adjusted children -- at least not at the same time." In Audition, Walters shows us the challenges she faced as a trailblazing, mostly single, working mom. But she also inspires and entertains us with a life of accomplishment. Rose Kennedy once told her in an interview, "I know not age or weariness of defeat," which aptly captures Walters's own sentiments as she faces retirement. And that leads me to my last question: After writing this book, has Walters done her last audition? Somehow, I think not. Copyright 2008, The Washington Post. All Rights Reserved. From AudioFile Listeners who've been following Barbara Walters's interviews about her new book will notice something missing: Walters's account of her extramarital affair didn't make it into this abridgment. As Walters reads the stories of her life, it often feels like too much has been cut in order to fit in mentions of her life milestones--becoming a "Today" co-host, the Begin-Sadat interview, and her million-dollar contract to become the first female evening news anchor. Walters's heartfelt reading comes through most emphatically as she discusses her troubled relationship with her daughter, Jackie. With a gap made obvious by the TV interviews and cuts that dilute the impact of her accomplishments, this abridged edition of Walters's much-talked-about autobiography will disappoint many listeners. J.A.S. © AudioFile 2008, Portland, Maine-- Copyright © AudioFile, Portland, Maine Barbara Walters is the first woman ever to cohost a network news program. She is the recipient of numerous awards, including a Lifetime Achievement Award from the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences. An ABC News correspondent, she is also host of The Barbara Walters Specials and the creator, cohost, and co—executive producer of ABC Daytime’s The View. She lives in New York City. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Excerpt from the Prologue Back in the sixties, when I was appearing daily on NBC’s Today show, I was living on Seventh Avenue and Fifty-seventh Street. My apartment was across from Carnegie Hall and on the corner of a very busy street. It was also near several large hotels that catered to businessmen. Perhaps because of this, the corner was the gathering place for some of the most attractive “ladies of the evening.” Each morning at five o’clock I would emerge from my building wearing dark glasses, as I hadn’t yet had my makeup done, and I was usually carrying a garment bag. It seemed obvious to the “ladies” that there was some big “number” I had just left. Now, bear in mind that, even then, I wasn’t exactly a spring chicken. But I would emerge and look at the young ladies, some of whom were still teenagers. “Good morning,” I would say. “Good morning,” they would answer. And then I would get into this long black limousine with its uniformed driver, and we would glide off into the early morning light. And you know what effect all this had on the ladies?xa0xa0xa0I gave them hope.xa0Perhaps this book may do that for you.xa0So here it is, the whole package, from the beginning. From the Hardcover edition. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Young people starting out in television sometimes say to me: “I want to be you.” My stock reply is always: “Then you have to take the whole package.”And now, at last, the most important woman in the history of television journalism gives us that “whole package,” in her inspiring and riveting memoir. After more than forty years of interviewing heads of state, world leaders, movie stars, criminals, murderers, inspirational figures, and celebrities of all kinds, Barbara Walters has turned her gift for examination onto herself to reveal the forces that shaped her extraordinary life.Barbara Walters’s perception of the world was formed at a very early age. Her father, Lou Walters, was the owner and creative mind behind the legendary Latin Quarter nightclub, and it was his risk-taking lifestyle that made Barbara aware of the ups and downs that can occur when someone is willing to take great risks.The financial responsibility for her family, the fear, the love all played a large part in the choices she made as she grew up: the friendships she developed, the relationships she had, the marriages she tried to make work. Ultimately, thanks to her drive, combined with a decent amount of luck, she began a career in television. And what a career it has been! Against great odds, Barbara has made it to the top of a male-dominated industry. She has spent a lifetime auditioning, and this book, in some ways, is her final audition, as she fully opens up both her private and public lives. In doing so, she has given us a story that is heartbreaking and honest, surprising and fun, sometimes startling, and always fascinating.

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Most Helpful Reviews

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Goodness Had Nothing to Do With It

I have watched her over the years from her early days on the Today morning show. Barbara was movie star gorgeous & created some of the most original stories that weren't the usual cooking recipe types that the other "girls" gave. She broke the glass ceiling for women in the news televison business & when she got a million a year everyone was "shocked". You have come a long way baby. But to expect that she got to that point by being "nice" or putting motherhood first is not realistic.
Barbara blames her daughter, Jackie's, emotional problems on being very tall for a girl. Michelle Obama, Princess Diana etc. didn't seem to find it a handicap. Not too much insight there.
Barbara is a real "player" as they say & very confident & driven. Nothing else mattered to her but her career. Of course, she had to have that non stop drive to be where she is. She was judged by a higher standard than her male counterparts.
I remember well how when Meredith Viera said that when she was depressed, her dog would lie down with her for comfort. Barbara jumped right in & said (rather stupidly) that was because her husband wasn't there to comfort her. "Well, at least I have a husband \" was Meredith's reply.
Meredith Viera gave it right back to her because not only was it such a nasty remark but more so because Meredith's husbanad has fought cancer & progressive MS & their love & commitment to each other & their 3 children are well known. Meredith is a woman who has it all (difficult as it has been for her).
Perhaps ex-senator Ed Brooks may have been secretly thrilled when at the age of 88 her revealing a long ago affair lifted him briefly out of total obscurity. But I don't want to be cynical like Barbara. Don't forget Barbara was first woman anchor on the nightly news.

The lady deserves praise for being a trail blazer for women in her career but not as a very nice human being!
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How old?

I think it's funny that Ms. Walters avoids telling us when she was born. although we can certainly look it up on the internet (September 1929) and also sort of figure it out from what she says in the memoir. In the second chapter entitled "My Childhood", she says "By the time I was born in Boston (I am now in my seventies and that is as specific as I will get), ... ." When I read a statement such as this, I wonder what else she has left out or altered to suit her purposes. All in all, I enjoyed the book, but throughout kept wondering about her candidness.
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Well written and easy to follow

I learned some interesting things about Barbara that I did not know. Well written and easy to follow.
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Well written and easy to follow

I learned some interesting things about Barbara that I did not know. Well written and easy to follow.
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Personable and engaging

Barbara Walters plowed the way for all the females in television today. You don't have to "like" her, but you should respect her role in US history. I felt almost as if she was talking directly to me throughout this book. I would love to meet her.
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Just do it

Most aspiring young women journalists go up to Barbara Walters and proclaim that they envy and want her life.
How could this not be the perfect existences? Walters's continual globe trotting around the world while interviewing the world's most fascinating people of our day. Yes, Walters admits to have an interesting life, however, if you want the good, you must also take the bad. This is the tone of her memoir, Audition. The autobiography beautifully captures the holistic journey of the famed journalist.
Walters's candor was apparent in her talk before a eight hundred and fifty audience packed auditorium on the campus of Agnes Scott College.
Walters's joy in the book tour is to see the faces and interact with the many folks who have made her career possible. Asked to why write a book now? Walterss cites two reasons. One is that she is on the top of her game and can share her insights and two she is personally in a place where she can be open to the down turns in her career. As to the title, Walters cites how at a party in California, she was asked when did she know she had made it? Upon reflecting, she said, "When she stopped having to audition." All her life she had to audition and prove herself worthy.
Walters's accomplishments are many, first female anchorwoman, highest rated interviews, and a tenuous television career.
Walters openly talked about her many failings. Her failure as a mother balancing a career while tending to an adopted daughter. On her failed marriages and relationships. The most controversial tidbit was her noted affair with Ohio Senator.
She explained how these four pages became the center point of her book tour. The book was embargoed before the publishing date, and Oprah was given an advance copy. Before the interview, this information was leaked. Walters was amazed of the controversy, sarcastically she said, "as if I had been the only woman ever to have an affair". She mentioned the affair because of the significance of how times have changed. Thirty one years ago, the notion that a white woman was involved with a black man would have destroyed their career. Today, our society is considering electing the first African American President. The acceptance of race has changed in the US.
Walters also faced other challenges; she had a sister that was mentally retarded. At one point, she was supporting her parents, and family.
When she was picked as the first co-anchor as a woman, she tanked. She really felt her career was over. Then she received a note that simply said, "don't let the bastards get you down", signed John Wayne.
It lifted her spirits and she took advantage of a small part of her contract that gave her four specials a year. She used them as a spring board to get the "hard to get interviews." She did the first interview on President-elect Carter, the joint interview with Began and Sadat. Walters biggest get was Monica. Monica Lewinski is the young intern who almost brought down the Clinton presidency. This interview has the highest viewer ship on record to date.
As to Walters's secrets to a conducting a good face to face interview. Walters strives to open up the human side of her subjects. Asking questions about their youth, what was their first job? Walters is naturally curious and wants her audience to come away from the interview knowing something new about her subject. Truman Capote told her once that even if he is bored with someone, he asked himself, "What is it about this person that bores me?"
Walters has interviewed every president since Nixon. Asked to how things have changed with American Presidents, Walters said about the interest in what they personally think. She did the first non paid interview with Richard Nixon after he resigned as president. Robert Frost did the first, but they paid Nixon. Walters asked the former president a tough foreign policy question and Nixon answered it beautifully. She then followed up on he has dealt with resigning. Nixon looked at her and said, "Come on, get real Barbara." How things have changed, now we can get the presidents and presidential candidates to stop talking about how they feel.
Finally on advice to future journalist, the key to succeeding is to simply get involved in the business. Walters exclaimed, "Intern, volunteer, start at the bottom. Do everything well and do what ever you are asked to do, even as mundane as getting coffee. Everyone has to start somewhere".
Audition is a beautifully written book about a fabulous life.
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Good book

Good book and a good life story of barbara walters. I couldnt believe all she has done in her life.
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Lessons for young professional women

I don't believe I've ever watched a Barbara Walters interview--I'm not a TV watcher. I bought the book because I like to read about successful women, from Cleopatra to Eleanor of Aquitaine to Elizabeth I to Catherine the Great. I like this book, even if it's not about a political leader. The writing isn't fancy, so it's an easy read, with lots of good names to learn about from a personal perspective. The author benefited from a rich combination of connections, ability, determination, and hard work, as well as the rising tide boosting the relatively new industry of television. It is a good book for college age women of the current generation, both to show them what it takes to be successful and to remind them what women had to tolerate in the 50s and 60s.
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Extraordinary

Barbara Walter's trailblazing career is chronicled here in this memoir. No one can say that her life is dull. From humble beginnings she went on to become one of the most influential and credible television journalists. She made historic interviews with world leaders and broke blockbuster stories before anyone else, but she didn't breeze through success. Her achievement is built on hard work, made harder yet by the sexist assumptions of what a female journalist can accomplish. Turns out, she accomplished a lot.
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I don't know where to start

Barbara Walters is my kind of lady. She's intelligent, supple and a cut above the rest.

When you get to the level of a Barbara Walters you don't have to answer for things that most normal people do. Barbara has everything going for her and I'd like to be with her at some point. The good thing is that women of BW's age still have strong urges for primal needs and there's no way someone like me is going to judge her for that.

When the sun goes down and the daylight fades I wonder if I ever will get to meet Barbara. Sometimes I don't know. She does things that I only dream about. And when I dream, she poses in many magnificent ways. Ways that might shock her viewing public, but I can assure you only delight me to the largest extent I can get.

Barbara has touched me in so many places. I won't be jealous at all if you let her touch you too.
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