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The Golden Hour: A Story of Family and Power in Hollywood

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

The Golden Hour: A Story of Family and Power in Hollywood

Contributors:

By (Author) Matthew Specktor

ISBN:

9780063008335

Publisher:

HarperCollins Publishers Inc

Imprint:

ECCO Press

Publication Date:

26th August 2025

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Biography: arts and entertainment
Media, entertainment, information and communication industries

Dewey:

B

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

384

Dimensions:

Width 152mm, Height 229mm, Spine 28mm

Weight:

531g

Description


A personal and cultural exploration of the struggles between art and business at the heart of modern Hollywood, through the eyes of the talent that shaped it

Matthew Specktor grew up in the film industry: the son of legendary CAA superagent Fred Specktor, his childhood was one where Beau Bridges came over for dinner, Martin Sheens daughter was his close friend, and Marlon Brando left long messages on the family answering machine. He would eventually spend time working in Hollywood himself, first as a reluctant studio executive and later as a screenwriter.

Now, with The Golden Hour, Specktor blends memoir, cultural criticism, and narrative history to tell the story of the modern motion picture industryilluminating the conflict between art and business that has played out over the last seventy-five years in Hollywood. Braiding his own story with that of his father, mother (a talented screenwriter whose career was cut short), and figures ranging from Jack Nicholson to CAAs Michael Ovitz, Specktor reveals how Hollywood became a laboratory for the eternal struggle between art, labor, and capital.

Beginning with the rise of Music Corporation of America in the 1950s,The Golden Hourlays out a series of clashes between fathers and sons, talent agents and studio heads, artists, activists, unions, and corporations. With vivid prose and immersive scenes, Specktor shows how Hollywood grew from the epicenter of American cultural life to a full-fledged multinational concernand what this shift has meant for the nations place in the world. At once a book about the movie business and an intimate family drama, The Golden Hour is a sweeping portrait of the American Century.

Reviews

[Specktor] certainly can write: This memoir is a sterling account of how Hollywood, the company town, works and of the strange people who inhabit a world very different from ordinary reality. . . Literate and liberal with huge scoops of dish, Specktors memoir is a sometimes shocking pleasure from start to finish. . . [joining] Peter Biskind, Joan Didion, William Goldman, and other top-shelf chroniclers of the L.A. film scene. Kirkus Reviews(starred review) This affecting memoir . . . offers a tender elegy for mid-century Hollywood. . . . Specktor enriches his family portrait with a meticulous history of Hollywood and sharp musings on the film industrys uneasy mix of art and commerce. . . . [A] potent blend of personal history and cultural critique. Publishers Weekly (starred review) Matthew Specktor's biography of a Hollywood talent agent is ambitious, tough, and as heartfelt as his subject, who also happens to be his father. Specktor skillfully alternates roles as detached reporter covering the turbulent life of Fred Specktor, and as his loving son who bears witness to his fathers losses and triumphs. In his telling, The Golden Hourdelivers both an ingenious perspective of Los Angeles, and the history of movie business from the birth of television to the age of streaming. Griffin Dunne, author of the New York Times bestseller The Friday Afternoon Club The Golden Hour is sheerly a marvel: blink, and this study of the sunset of the cinema century turns into a memoir, or a non-fiction novel, or a lyric fugue on memory and loss and all with a breath-held suspense that confirms Matthew Specktor as a narrative wizard. Jonathan Lethem The Golden Hour is a multi-generational Hollywood bildungsroman that opens up into an ecstatic epic. The sweep and scope and scale of it is thrilling. Matthew Specktor is a pop Saul Bellow. Lili Anolik, author of Didion and Babitz This is a book for anyone who loves the movies; for anyone who is fascinated by family dynamics; and for anyone who wonders about the machinery that propels our culture forward. Matthew Specktor brings insight and grace to this story of his familys presence in Hollywood, pulling back the curtain on that mystifying, magic-making world. It is at once tender and clear-eyed, and a joy to read. Susan Orlean, author of The Library Book InThe Golden Hour, Matthew Specktor is our perfect envoy, the sly sharer of Hollywoods inside story, which is, of course, a story of art and money and America.But most of all, this is a story of a son, and the unstinting, tender, and heartbreaking way he imagines and inhabits his mother and father. All of it is elegantly rendered through Specktors always beautiful and seductive prose. Dana Spiotta, author of Wayward

Author Bio

Matthew Specktoris the author of the novels American Dream MachineandThat Summertime Sound,and the nonfiction booksThe StingandAlways Crashing in the Same Car. His writing has appeared intheNew York Times,theParis Review,TheBeliever,Tin House,Vogue,GQ,Black Clock, andOpen City. He has been a MacDowell Fellow and is a founding editor of theLos Angeles Review of Books. He resides in Los Angeles.

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