Shirley Temple (1928–2014)
Author of Child Star: An Autobiography
About the Author
Shirley Temple was born in Santa Monica, California on April 23, 1928. In 1932, she appeared in Baby Burlesks, a series of one-reel shorts in which children played all the roles. She went on to appear in more than 40 movies including Little Miss Marker, Bright Eyes, Captain January, Wee Willie show more Winkie, Susannah of the Mounties, Kiss and Tell, The Bachelor and the Bobby Soxer, and That Hagen Girl. She retired from the screen in 1950 at the age of 22. From 1958 to 1961 she was the host and an occasional performer on the television series Shirley Temple's Storybook, an anthology of fairy-tale adaptations. After marrying Charles Alden Black in 1950, she became a prominent Republican fund-raiser. She was appointed a delegate to the United Nations General Assembly by President Richard M. Nixon in 1969. She was the United States ambassador to Ghana from 1974 to 1976, was President Gerald R. Ford's chief of protocol in 1976 and 1977, and was President George H.?W. Bush's ambassador to Czechoslovakia in 1989. She wrote an autobiography entitled Child Star in 1988. She died on February 10, 2014 at the age of 85. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Image credit: Image © ÖNB/Wien
Works by Shirley Temple
Shirley Temple: America's Sweetheart Collection, Vol. 2: Baby Take a Bow / Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm / Bright Eyes (2006) 6 copies
Shirley Temple: America's Sweetheart Collection, Vol. 1: Heidi / Curly Top/ Little Miss Broadway (2005) — Actor — 6 copies
Shirley Temple: America's Sweetheart Collection, Vol. 4: Captain January / Just Around the Corner / Susannah of the Mounties (2006) 5 copies
Shirley Temple America's Sweetheart 4 copies
Shirley Temple: America’s Sweetheart Collection, Vol. 6: Stowaway / Wee Willie Winkie / Young People (2008) 3 copies
Shirley Temple: America's Sweetheart Collection, Vol. 5: The Blue Bird / The Little Princess / Stand Up and Cheer! (2007) 3 copies
on the good ship lollipop LP 2 copies
Shorts 1 copy
Double Feature: Shirley Temple: The Little Colonel [and] The Little Princess — Director; Actor — 1 copy
The Pie Covered Wagon 1 copy
Now I Am Eight 1 copy
Associated Works
Susannah of the Mounties [1939 film] — Actor — 17 copies
Shirley Temple: America's Sweetheart Collection, Vol. 3: Dimples / The Little Colonel / The Littlest Rebel (2015) — Actor; Actor — 9 copies
The Shirley Temple Collection, Volume One: Heidi / Curly Top / Little Miss Broadway / Captain January / Just Around the Corner / Susannah of the Mounties (2015) — Actor — 8 copies
Shirley Temple Shorts — Cast — 6 copies
Shirley Temple Storybook Collection: Winnie the Pooh / Babes in Toyland — Actor — 5 copies
Dora's Dunkin' Donuts [1933 film] 5 copies
Shirley Temple Storybook Collection: The Princess and the Goblins / Madeline (2008) — Actor — 4 copies, 1 review
The Shirley Temple Collection, Volume Two: Wee Willie Winkie, Stowaway, Baby Take a Bow, Bright Eyes, Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm, Young People (2015) — Performer — 4 copies
Shirley Temple: Smiles and Curls Collection — Actor — 4 copies
Our Little Girl [1935 film] — Actor — 3 copies
Shirley Temple Sing & Dance Along [1998 video] — Actor — 3 copies
A Kiss for Corliss [1949 film] — Actor — 3 copies
Shirley Temple Storybook Collection: The Terrible Clockman / The House of the Seven Gables (2008) — Actor — 2 copies
Shirley Temple - Classic Pack — Actor — 2 copies
Pardon My Pups [1934 film] 2 copies
The Shirley Temple Collection: Baby Take a Bow, The Little Coronel, The Little Princess, The Biggest Lil' Star in Hollywood — Actor — 1 copy
Hollywood Legends: Elizabeth Taylor and Shirley Temple [2001 film] — Performer — 1 copy
War Babies [1933 film] 1 copy
Shirley Temple 1 copy
That Hagen Girl [1947 film] 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Temple, Shirley
- Legal name
- Temple, Shirley Jane
- Other names
- Black, Shirley Temple (married name)
- Birthdate
- 1928-04-23
- Date of death
- 2014-02-10
- Gender
- female
- Occupations
- actor
diplomat
ambassador (USA to Czechoslovakia)
ambassador (USA to Ghana) - Organizations
- Screen Actors Guild
Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
Republican Party
U.S. State Department - Awards and honors
- Academy Juvenile Award (1934)
Kennedy Center Honors (1998)
Screen Actors Guild Life Achievement Award (2005) - Relationships
- Black, Charles (husband)
Agar, John (husband) - Nationality
- USA (birth)
- Birthplace
- Santa Monica, California, USA
- Place of death
- Woodside, California, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- California, USA
Members
Reviews
Despite her many associations, Ms Temple does not fall into the trap of a story told in the guess who I know and you don’t format. Too classy for that. Yet, a life so interesting, I argue, someone else should have written this book. It would have been more revealing and honest. She is both protected and self protective. The constant risks to her person suggest why.
It is in our nature to look at life’s tragedies and brighten them to the point of saying how one wasn’t affected. I feel, show more though, a neutral author wouldn’t have glossed over her rape as an adult actor in a train car on the way to a shoot. She excuses her father for bad fortunes and her mother for bad scripts. She hints at color blindness but I doubt she made friends among the brown and gay actors of the times. She led a culturally sheltered life, at times acknowledging how she was overprotected, so maybe that is in part the cause. But kudos to her for her foreign service, at best a thankless for role, at worst an inconsequential one.
Between the lines, beneath the surface lies an injured soul who made the best of the happiness available to her. And not too late, a la Brittany Spears, staking her claim on her own fortune, a happy marriage, a stable household. That is as much a life lesson as stardom. A career mother/woman ahead of her time.
As an aside, a trained writer would have avoided her penchant for SAT words. They stick out like sore thumbs amidst her text, add little to the store other than to suggest she was a tad bit self conscious about her educational attainment. A life well loved offers as much merit as a life book-spent. A good editor would have won that argument.
I enjoyed learning more about life behind the scenes of this fantastically experienced talented actor. She is an American treasure, after all, and time has been kind to her accomplishments. I can no more imagine a child’s life without Shirley Temple Black’s films as I can without the books a Beatrix Potter. She validated the lives, experiences, and emotions of small children for us all, sensitizing us to the relevance of kindness in childhood. show less
I wanted and expected to give this five stars, but it only just made it to four. Reasons for this include too much time devoted to Shirley’s teenage years and beyond; too much focus on financial matters; too many political asides.
Shirley’s 1930s’ films are like anti-depressants to me. I always feel better whilst watching one. Shirley was a remarkable little actress, and it’s her life during the 1930s that interested me most. I would’ve liked more anecdotes relating to her films show more from this period.
I know numerous people she worked with were dead by the time “Child Star” was written, but it would’ve enhanced the narrative if Shirley could’ve interviewed some people who knew her as a girl to give more insights regarding what went on during the films and backstage. For example, June Lang – a stunning actress who co-starred with Shirley in two films – lived until 2005, so it’s a shame Shirley didn’t approach her to contribute some memories.
Also, with a title like “Child Star”, and with Shirley's fame being it its peak in the mid-to-late 1930s, I hoped the majority of the book would focus on these years, followed by only the most noteworthy events from the 1940s, and perhaps concluding with a summary of starting her own family in the ’50s. Instead, we only get about half the book focusing on her early life, followed by a lot of material from 1940 through to the mid-1950s.
I appreciate that she wanted to write about her second husband, and that it seemed fitting to end with the birth of her final child, but this isn’t the life of the child star that her fans want to read about. Touching on her post-acting career is fine, but to sacrifice material from the ’30s to leave space for what follows is – for an early Shirley fan – disappointing.
On the plus side, much of the info on the 1930s' period is mostly good, and of passages from the early ’40s, Shirley enrolling at an all-girls’ school makes an engaging read. I expected the other girls to treat her like a little princess, but they all but shunned her. It's amazing and sad that they behaved that way towards her. This section almost reads like one of her films.
Overall, I found the book entertaining in parts, but on the whole, not as good as hoped for. The material from around 1945 onwards dilutes what should’ve been a classic autobiography. Most importantly, however, I remain an early Shirley fan, and respect the grown-up Shirley. Her loss in 2014 saw the passing of a screen legend. show less
Shirley’s 1930s’ films are like anti-depressants to me. I always feel better whilst watching one. Shirley was a remarkable little actress, and it’s her life during the 1930s that interested me most. I would’ve liked more anecdotes relating to her films show more from this period.
I know numerous people she worked with were dead by the time “Child Star” was written, but it would’ve enhanced the narrative if Shirley could’ve interviewed some people who knew her as a girl to give more insights regarding what went on during the films and backstage. For example, June Lang – a stunning actress who co-starred with Shirley in two films – lived until 2005, so it’s a shame Shirley didn’t approach her to contribute some memories.
Also, with a title like “Child Star”, and with Shirley's fame being it its peak in the mid-to-late 1930s, I hoped the majority of the book would focus on these years, followed by only the most noteworthy events from the 1940s, and perhaps concluding with a summary of starting her own family in the ’50s. Instead, we only get about half the book focusing on her early life, followed by a lot of material from 1940 through to the mid-1950s.
I appreciate that she wanted to write about her second husband, and that it seemed fitting to end with the birth of her final child, but this isn’t the life of the child star that her fans want to read about. Touching on her post-acting career is fine, but to sacrifice material from the ’30s to leave space for what follows is – for an early Shirley fan – disappointing.
On the plus side, much of the info on the 1930s' period is mostly good, and of passages from the early ’40s, Shirley enrolling at an all-girls’ school makes an engaging read. I expected the other girls to treat her like a little princess, but they all but shunned her. It's amazing and sad that they behaved that way towards her. This section almost reads like one of her films.
Overall, I found the book entertaining in parts, but on the whole, not as good as hoped for. The material from around 1945 onwards dilutes what should’ve been a classic autobiography. Most importantly, however, I remain an early Shirley fan, and respect the grown-up Shirley. Her loss in 2014 saw the passing of a screen legend. show less
I read this a few years back and found it to be an incredibly fascinating look into the life of Shirley Temple. It showed me some of the realities of life in movies during the early years of Hollywood and how child actors and actresses were treated.
Also, from the time I was a little girl, I loved watched the Shirley Temple movies. So it was kind of nice to grow up and see how her life really was and why she stepped away from the big screen. From cute little Shirley Temple, to super admirable show more Shirley Temple-Black. This was one of the best autobiographies that I have ever read, and I liked the honesty of her "voice." show less
Also, from the time I was a little girl, I loved watched the Shirley Temple movies. So it was kind of nice to grow up and see how her life really was and why she stepped away from the big screen. From cute little Shirley Temple, to super admirable show more Shirley Temple-Black. This was one of the best autobiographies that I have ever read, and I liked the honesty of her "voice." show less
An autobiography from one of the premier child stars of the motion picture industry. She has a remarkable memory, clearly augmented by written sources most people don't have of their own childhoods. But more than merely facts, she conjures up the feelings and reactions of herself as a child to some pretty famous people. She wasn't perfect, and her natural joy, verve, and ebullient personality was clearly an asset most of the time, but she is honest about its pitfalls, as well. She draws show more interesting portraits of the famous people of her youth, such as the studio heads, actors and actresses she co-starred with, and even political figures.
As an author, she has an engaging turn of phrase, and the occasional indelicate reference, such as to a producer and his (incorrect) assumptions, is presented so diplomatically that I had to read it twice to be sure I really understood.
She refers to places that are right around the corner from where I currently live, such as her early years at Fox studios, and the area of Fox Hills, where some of her movies were filmed. The character of those sites has changed, but the setting still feels familiar.
I found the book to be interesting, detailed, and worth reading. show less
As an author, she has an engaging turn of phrase, and the occasional indelicate reference, such as to a producer and his (incorrect) assumptions, is presented so diplomatically that I had to read it twice to be sure I really understood.
She refers to places that are right around the corner from where I currently live, such as her early years at Fox studios, and the area of Fox Hills, where some of her movies were filmed. The character of those sites has changed, but the setting still feels familiar.
I found the book to be interesting, detailed, and worth reading. show less
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