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The Killing of the Unicorn: Dorothy Stratten 1960 1980

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3.5/5
AbeBooks

Language
  
English

Publication date
  
1984

Author
  
Peter Bogdanovich

3.5/5
Goodreads

Country
  
United States

Publisher
  
William Morrow

Originally published
  
1984

The Killing of the Unicorn: Dorothy Stratten 1960-1980 httpssmediacacheak0pinimgcom736x65e538

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Killing of the Unicorn: Dorothy Stratten 1960-1980 is a book by Peter Bogdanovich detailing the relationship between Bogdanovich and Dorothy Stratten, the making of They All Laughed and Stratten's murder. There is also criticism of Hugh Hefner and Playboy and its treatment of women.

Contents

Bogdanovich says he wrote the book "for himself. I wanted to understand what happened to her. I felt I couldn't move forward with my life, creative or otherwise until I did. I also wanted other young women, including my teenage daughters, to know about this web, this trap Dorothy had fallen into." Bogdanovich says the book was meant to be delivered to William Morrow in August 1982 "but new facts kept coming to light and so it was delayed. I did more and more rewriting. In all, I suppose, I wrote the book five times."

While he was writing the book two films about the Stratten murder came out, Star 80 and Death of a Centerfold: The Dorothy Stratten Story.

Reception

A review in People magazine called the book:

[A] sometimes provocative but relentlessly self-serving version of Stratten's life and death... blames Hefner's hedonistic philosophy for Dorothy's death and just about all of society's ills except the size of the federal deficit... Hefner is portrayed as an insensitive, petty sexmonger and egomaniac. Bogdanovich insists that a postmidnight interlude in a hot tub between Hef and a reluctant Dorothy irreparably damaged her psyche. Bogdanovich portrays himself as Mr. Sensitive and a goody-goody.

The New York Times wrote "Bogdanovich says perhaps more than he should... [the book is] part-tribute, part self justification, part accusation." The Chicago Tribune called it "a shabby little shocker".

Fall Out

Private eye Marc Goldstein later sued Bogdanovich for $10 million for being libeled in the book.

The book led to a court case in Britain when the Sun printed extracts from the book despite exclusive publication rights being granted to another newspaper.

In 1985 Hugh Hefner suffered a stroke and blamed it on part on stress caused by Bogdanovich's allegations against him in the book.

The same year Bogdanovich declared bankruptcy, claiming he owed $6.6 million in debts against assets of $1.5 million. He blamed this mostly on costs of distributing They All Laughed. His interest in the book was assigned to his principal creditor, the First Los Angeles Bank.

Bogdanovich later married Stratten's sister Louise.

References

The Killing of the Unicorn: Dorothy Stratten 1960-1980 Wikipedia