Synopses & Reviews
At one gilded moment, his fame was so great that he was recognized all over the world simply by his nickname: Rubi. Pop songs were written about him. Women whom he had never met offered to leave their husbands for him. The gigantic peppermills brandished in Parisian restaurants became known, for reasons people at the time could only hint at, as "Rubirosas."
Porfirio Rubirosa was the last great playboy: the roué par excellence, a symbol of powerful masculinity, ubiquity, and easy-come-easy-go money.
"Work?" he shot back at an interviewer, scandalized at being asked what he did with his days. "It's impossible for me to work. I just don't have the time."
His natural habitat was the polo field, the nightclub, the Formula One racecourse, the bedroom.
He had an eye for beautiful women, particularly when they came with great wealth: He managed to marry in turn two of the richest women on the planet. Rumor had him bedding hundreds of famous and infamous women, including Christina Onassis, Eva Perón, and Zsa Zsa Gabor, who gleefully posed for paparazzi after he had blacked her eye in a fit of jealousy on the eve of his marriage to another woman.
But he was a man's man, too, a notable polo player and race-car driver with a gift for friendship, chumming around with the likes of Joe Kennedy, Frank Sinatra, Oleg Cassini, Aly Khan, and King Farouk.
When above-board, heiress-type income was scarce, he diverted himself with jewel-thievery, shadowy diplomatic errands, and any other illicit scam that came his way.
Whatever legitimate power he wielded came to him from the hands of Rafael Trujillo, one of the most bloodthirstily power-mad dictators the New World has ever seen. A nation quivered at Trujillo's name for decades, yet Rubi flouted his strictures without concern, as if Trujillo's iron grip could never crush him. And he was right.
When Rubi died at the age of fifty-six, wrapping his sports car around a tree in the Bois de Boulogne, an era went with him of white dinner jackets at El Morocco; of celebrity for its own sake when this was still a novelty; of glamour before it was available to the masses.
Review
"Engrossing profile of unrelenting excess." Kirkus Reviews
Review
"A terrific story about a fascinating character." John Malkovich
Review
"Fascinating....A compulsive read. Shawn Levy is one of our best popular culture journalist-historians." Lewis MacAdams, author of Birth of the Cool: Beat, Bebop and the American Avant Garde
Review
"Shawn Levy has written more than a good book this is an irresistible read. Hollywood will soon come knocking." Douglas Brinkley, Professor of History and Director of the Roosevelt Center at Rulane University
Review
"Bubbly, breathless and appropriately inconsequential biography...[Levy] makes a fairly convincing case that the Rubi magic came down to a combination of charm, mystique and, quite possibly, physical attributes." New York Times
Review
"Though Levy's prose leaves a lot to be desired....[I]t's an entertaining, informative book about a man who, for all his shortcomings, really doesn't deserve to have fallen into one of history's many black holes." Washington Post
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"Written in a breezy style perfectly suitable for conjuring Rubirosa's seductive personality and the steamy atmospheres that he created and in which he flourished." Booklist
Review
"Levy's account of this fascinating, albeit largely forgotten, man makes for accessible and interesting reading, rating right up there with his best work." Library Journal
Synopsis
A sparkling biography of the Ultimate Latin Lover and King of the Gigolos, Porfirio Rubirosa, who married four of the wealthiest women in the world, Doris Duke and Barbara Hutton among them, and had affairs with some of the world's most desirable women: Marilyn Monroe, Zsa Zsa Gabor, Eva Perron, Tina Onassis.
About the Author
Shawn Levy is the author of King of Comedy: The Life and Art of Jerry Lewis, the bestseller Rat Pack Confidential, and Ready, Steady, Go! He is a film critic for the Portland Oregonian and former senior editor of American Film.