Waldorf-Astoria
by
Book Details
About the Book
This is a celebrity biography about a great hotel -- in fact, for millions of people across the land and countless more around the world, it is America's most famous hotel. Now approaching its seventy-fifth anniversary in 2006 on its Park Avenue site, The Waldorf-Astoria has been home to kings, magnates, presidents and many of the greatest cultural talents of the Twentieth Century. General Douglas MacArthur chose to retire in the Waldorf Towers; Cole Porter lived in suite 33A for many years, which Frank Sinatra paid one million dollars a year to live in after Porter died. "The grand cities of the world have their grand hotels, the bed-and-breakfasts for the mighty and the moneyed. Ward Morehouse III explores one of New York City's grandest in The Waldorf-Asrtoria: America's Gilded Dream ... Morehouse writes of pleasures and scandals, of the hard facts of running a hotel and of its romance. The hotel comes off well in the hands of its appreciative Boswell and one will find "The Waldorf-Astoria" to be a pleasant buffet." - The New York Times, Sunday Book Review Section
About the Author
Famed columnist, author and playwright Ward Morehouse III was a staff correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor for 10 years and a Broadway columnist for the New York Post for five years. His "Broadway After Dark" column appeared in the New York Sun for two years, and now in AM New York. He is the author of Inside the Plaza: An Intimate Portrait of the Ultimate Hotel and two other books.