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Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: Fun Femmes! Review: All your faves are covered...and maybe a few you forgot about! This book is campy and fun, but also quite informative for movie buffs and anyone old enough to remember the babe-a-licious actresses of the 60's. Would also make a great gift!
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: Entertaining Interviews With Underappreciated Actresses Review: Fantasy Femmes interviews 20 lovely actresses who starred primarily in B-Films in the '60s. The main genres - as stated in the sub-title are Biker, Beach, and Elvis films (particulary the latter - most of these gals made at least one movie with the King) as well as Alienated Youth and Horror films. The author Tom Lisanti knows these genres well and his affection for the ladies that he interviewed is clearly evident. Among my personal favorite '60s superchicks that Lisanti profiled are Deanna Lund (from tv's Land Of The Giants), Irene Tsu (the native girl who duets with Frankie Avalon in How To Stuff A Wild Bikini), and Salli Sachse (a staple of the Frankie & Annette beach movies, she was "the girl with her hair in a bun"). My only complaint is that Lisanti did not interview my very favorite '60s sweetie Mary Hughes, the Bardot-look alike who joined Sachse in the background of the Beach Party films (Hughes was the girlfriend of guitarist Jeff Beck and the subject of the Yardbirds' song "Psycho Daisies"). My main woman Mary does appear in a photo in the Sally Sachse chapter though and you can read more about her in one of Lisanti's other great books, Drive In Dream Girls: A Galaxy Of B-Movie Starlets Of The Sixties. It profiles 50 superbabes of the '60s, none to the extent covered here. The other 17 lovely ladies profiled in this book are: Joan O'Brien (Operation Petticoat, It Happened At The World's Fair); Diane McBain (Spin Out, The Mini Skirt Mob); Joan Staley (Roustabout, The Ghost & Mrs. Chicken); Jill Haworth (It!, Haunted House Of Horror); Pamela Tiffin (For Those Who Think Young, The Pleasure Seekers); Francine York (Tickle Me, Curse Of The Swamp Creature), Joy Harmon (Young Dillinger, Village Of The Giants); Eileen O'Neill (A Man Called Dagger); Julie Parrish (Winter A Go-Go, Paradise Hawaiian Style); Jean Hale (The Oscar, St. Valentine's Day Massacre); Chris Noel (Get Yourself A College Girl, Girl Happy); Lana Wood (Girls On The Beach, Diamonds Are Forever); Celeste Yarnall (Eve, Live A Little Love A Little); Judy Pace (Three In The Attic, Brian's Song - as Gale Sayers' wife); Karen Jensen (Out Of Sight, tv's Bracken's World); Linda Harrison (Planet Of The Apes, Bracken's World); Tisha Sterling (Village Of The Giants, Norwood). Most of these ladies were finished in the business by the age of 30. Society at the time dictated that they marry and have kids, and having a family back then usually meant the end of a woman's career. Too bad for us, as most of these ladies had a lot more to offer the big screen than beauty (fortunately, their luminous performances in these often cheesy movies will live forever). For anyone who is a big fan - like I was - of a few of the ladies interviewed here, I suggest you get this book right away. You'll find yourself becoming an admirer of all of them by the time you finish reading it.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: Entertaining Interviews With Underappreciated Actresses Review: Fantasy Femmes interviews 20 lovely actresses who starred primarily in B-Films in the '60s. The main genres - as stated in the sub-title are Biker, Beach, and Elvis films (particulary the latter - most of these gals made at least one movie with the King) as well as Alienated Youth and Horror films. The author Tom Lisanti knows these genres well and his affection for the ladies that he interviewed is clearly evident. Among my personal favorite '60s superchicks that Lisanti profiled are Deanna Lund (from tv's Land Of The Giants), Irene Tsu (the native girl who duets with Frankie Avalon in How To Stuff A Wild Bikini), and Salli Sachse (a staple of the Frankie & Annette beach movies, she was "the girl with her hair in a bun"). My only complaint is that Lisanti did not interview my very favorite '60s sweetie Mary Hughes, the Bardot-look alike who joined Sachse in the background of the Beach Party films (Hughes was the girlfriend of guitarist Jeff Beck and the subject of the Yardbirds' song "Psycho Daisies"). My main woman Mary does appear in a photo in the Sally Sachse chapter though and you can read more about her in one of Lisanti's other great books, Drive In Dream Girls: A Galaxy Of B-Movie Starlets Of The Sixties. It profiles 50 superbabes of the '60s, none to the extent covered here. The other 17 lovely ladies profiled in this book are: Joan O'Brien (Operation Petticoat, It Happened At The World's Fair); Diane McBain (Spin Out, The Mini Skirt Mob); Joan Staley (Roustabout, The Ghost & Mrs. Chicken); Jill Haworth (It!, Haunted House Of Horror); Pamela Tiffin (For Those Who Think Young, The Pleasure Seekers); Francine York (Tickle Me, Curse Of The Swamp Creature), Joy Harmon (Young Dillinger, Village Of The Giants); Eileen O'Neill (A Man Called Dagger); Julie Parrish (Winter A Go-Go, Paradise Hawaiian Style); Jean Hale (The Oscar, St. Valentine's Day Massacre); Chris Noel (Get Yourself A College Girl, Girl Happy); Lana Wood (Girls On The Beach, Diamonds Are Forever); Celeste Yarnall (Eve, Live A Little Love A Little); Judy Pace (Three In The Attic, Brian's Song - as Gale Sayers' wife); Karen Jensen (Out Of Sight, tv's Bracken's World); Linda Harrison (Planet Of The Apes, Bracken's World); Tisha Sterling (Village Of The Giants, Norwood). Most of these ladies were finished in the business by the age of 30. Society at the time dictated that they marry and have kids, and having a family back then usually meant the end of a woman's career. Too bad for us, as most of these ladies had a lot more to offer the big screen than beauty (fortunately, their luminous performances in these often cheesy movies will live forever). For anyone who is a big fan - like I was - of a few of the ladies interviewed here, I suggest you get this book right away. You'll find yourself becoming an admirer of all of them by the time you finish reading it.
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