Description
Book SynopsisThis book offers readers a concise look at over a century of femmes fatales on both the silver screen and the TV screen, from Theda Bara and Barbara Stanwyck to
Killing Eve’s Jodie Comer and Sandra Oh, considering how this figure embodies Hollywood’s contradictory attitudes toward female ambition, independence, and sexuality.
Trade Review"A fascinating exploration of Hollywood’s most notorious female that goes beyond film noir. With a focus on the performance of gender as subversive and empowered, Grossman illuminates over a century of femme fatales from silent cinema’s 'Vamp' Theda Bara to television’s
Killing Eve." -- Philippa Gates * author of Detecting Women: Gender and the Hollywood Detective Film *
"In this lively and engaging book, Julie Grossman elegantly traces the long tradition of the femme fatale figure in film, television and popular culture. She deftly analyses a diverse range of characters, from Theda Bara’s vamp in early Hollywood, the hard-boiled dames of classic Film Noir, to the complex and vibrant Villanelle in contemporary television’s
Killing Eve. Grossman persuasively illustrates the centrality of role performance to these femme fatale figures, and establishes performance as a key mode by which they resist inequalities in social structures. This book provides both a history of how women have been represented, and a compelling case for the relevance of the femme fatale to contemporary debates on gender politics."
-- Helen Hanson * author of Hollywood Heroines: Women in Film Noir and the Female Gothic Film *
Table of ContentsContents
Introduction
1 “Theda Bara and Barbara Stanwyck’s “Baby Face”: Exoticism and the Street-Smart Vamp”
2 Wartime and Postwar Film Noir, Neo-Noir, and the Femme Fatale
3 Tracy Flick, and Television’s Unruly Women
Acknowledgements
Further Reading
Works Cited
Selected Filmography
Index