Bill Marx is the last living person to have worked with the Marx Brothers: his uncles Chico and Groucho and his father, Harpo. In addition to offering a unique perspective of a very special man, this book is also about a "too-Hollywood-to-believe," life-altering quirk of fate that ultimately brought him together with his parents. The background for this remarkable revelation unfolded casually over a glass of wine in a 1960s nightclub on Hollywood's Sunset Strip. It would lead the author to explore the complex life task of ...
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Bill Marx is the last living person to have worked with the Marx Brothers: his uncles Chico and Groucho and his father, Harpo. In addition to offering a unique perspective of a very special man, this book is also about a "too-Hollywood-to-believe," life-altering quirk of fate that ultimately brought him together with his parents. The background for this remarkable revelation unfolded casually over a glass of wine in a 1960s nightclub on Hollywood's Sunset Strip. It would lead the author to explore the complex life task of dealing with both his rejection and his acceptance, the latter due to his good fortune in having been adopted by two loving parents.
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