Little Girl Blue: The Life of Karen Carpenter
Little Girl Blue: The Life of Karen Carpenter book cover

Little Girl Blue: The Life of Karen Carpenter

Hardcover – May 17, 2010

Price
$48.41
Format
Hardcover
Pages
368
Publisher
Chicago Review Press
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1556529764
Dimensions
6.25 x 1.25 x 9.25 inches
Weight
1.5 pounds

Description

From Publishers Weekly From the beginning, Richard, not Karen, was the talented musician whose parents moved across the country for a better career. Karen dabbled in music and tagged along on gigs, but it would be years before her show-stopping voice commanded the spotlight. And that shift, when the forgotten little sister became star of the act, Schmidt argues, marked the beginning of Karen's deadly, lifelong struggle with weight. Schmidt tracks the anxieties that seem to have driven her eating disorder, including a controlling mother and the lack of a stable love life. After the failure of her first solo effort, Karen made a bid for happiness with the dashing Tom Burris that would prove short-lived; he was only interested in her money. This was one setback too many for the gifted singer, and by 1983 she was dead, at 32. The self-destructive pressures of celebrity make for a familiar narrative, but Schmidt treats Karen's death not as an inevitability, but a tragedy that built slowly. His sympathies for the star border on fawning, but the copious research and quick-moving narration make this a volume that die-hard Carpenters fans and casual listeners alike will find interesting. Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. "[A] heart-rending biography . . . The author relates Karen’s story in writing as fluid and affectless as her singing . . . As Schmidt details Karen’s unstoppable fall, Little Girl Blue becomes one of the saddest tales in pop . . . This compassionate book gives a tortured waif the third dimension she deserved." —New York Times Book Review “Heartbreaking. . . . Schmidt succeeds in bringing a gifted, troubled musician to vivid life.” — People “Told with compassion and understanding, this poignant and richly fascinating story of Karen Carpenter reads more like a novel you can’t put down than the extensively and impeccably researched biography it actually is.” — David Kaufman, author of Doris Day: The Untold Story of the Girl Next Door “A fascinating, and at times harrowing, read. . . . Schmidt adds vital new information to our understanding of this contradictory and conflicted artist. . . . We know how her story ends, but Schmidt has made it as absorbing as it is deeply humane.” — Blurt “[Schmidt’s] fresh perspective reanimates the rise and fall of an American recording icon. . . . [A] dense, fact-filled treatment, which carefully skirts sensationalism while exposing new truths in this haunting tragedy.” — Kirkus Reviews “Very comprehensive . . . heartbreaking.” — Minneapolis Star Tribune "The copious research and quick-moving narration make this a volume that die-hard Carpenters fans and casual listeners alike will find interesting."xa0 — Publishers Weekly “Like most of Karen Carpenter’s songs, this book pulls you in and triggers more emotion than you bargained for. Finally, the story of this angelic voice is told.” — Stephen Cox,xa0author of The Munsters: A Trip Down Mockingbird Lane Randy L. Schmidt compiled and edited Yesterday Once More and served as creative consultant for several television documentaries on the Carpenters, including the E! True Hollywood Story , A&E’s Biography , and VH1’s Behind the Music . Dionne Warwick is a popular American singer, an actress, and activist; a United Nations Global Ambassador for the Food and Agriculture Organization; and the former United States Ambassador of Health. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. LITTLE GIRL BLUE The Life of KAREN CARPENTER By RANDY L. SCHMIDT Chicago Review Press Copyright © 2010 Randy L. SchmidtAll right reserved. ISBN: 978-1-55652-976-4 Contents Foreword by Dionne Warwick....................................xiAuthor's Note.................................................xiiiPROLOGUE: Rainy Days and Rain Man.............................31. California Dreamin'........................................112. Chopsticks on Barstools....................................213. Stand in Line, Try to Climb................................394. Sprinkled Moondust.........................................515. You Put Us on the Road.....................................636. Nothing to Hide Behind.....................................837. America at Its Very Best?..................................998. Moving Out.................................................1119. The Collapse...............................................12710. I Need to Be in Love......................................14911. Just Let Us Know What the Problem Is!.....................16912. The Bird Has Finally Flown the Coop.......................18313. Pockets Full of Good Intentions...........................19714. White Lace and Promises Broken............................21515. Beginning of the End......................................23316. Dancing in the Dark.......................................25117. Too Little, Too Late, Too Soon............................269EPILOGUE: A Song for You......................................289Acknowledgments...............................................301Selected Discography..........................................306Selected Television Appearances...............................313Notes.........................................................317Bibliography..................................................327Suggested Reading.............................................338Index.........................................................340 Chapter One CALIFORNIA DREAMIN' Harold Bertram Carpenter had a rather peripatetic childhood and even more itinerant adolescence. The eldest son of missionaries George and Nellie Carpenter, he was born November 8, 1908, in Wuzhou, a city in southern China where the Gui and Xi rivers meet. Siblings Esther and Richard were born several years later. The Carpenter parents were both fine pianists and often played and sang for guests at their frequent formal dinner parties. Although he greatly enjoyed their performances, Harold was not as interested in making music. Against his will he took piano lessons for a while but loathed practicing. More an appreciator of good music than a musician himself, Harold began listening to records on the family's beautiful Victrola. He especially loved the classics. Harold's mother was greatly concerned about the limited education her children received in China, where they had no formal education, only tutors. In 1917 Nellie took the children and headed for England where the children were enrolled in boarding schools. Their father joined them four years later when granted a leave of absence. Harold's younger sisters Geraldine and Guinevere were born shortly before their mother moved with the children to the United States. There they stayed on Ellis Island for several months before settling with relatives in Wellsville, New York. Waking each morning at 5:00 a.m., Harold delivered newspapers before going to Wellsville High School. After two years he was forced to drop out and go to work when his mother became ill with a lung ailment. His uncle Frank Stoddard, a night superintendent at a paper box company in Middletown, Ohio, offered him a job, and he moved in with his uncle and aunt Gertrude. Harold moved several times with the Stoddards, finally settling in Catonsville, Maryland, a small community just west of Baltimore, where the men found work in a printing firm. Harold's mother and father separated shortly before Nellie succumbed to pleurisy in 1927 at the age of forty-four. * * * Agnes Reuwer Tatum's childhood was somewhat less eventful than that of Harold Carpenter, or perhaps only less documented. She was born on March 5, 1915, in Baltimore, where she spent her youth. Her father, George Arthur Tatum, was part owner in Tatum, Fritz, and Goldsmith, a wholesale undergarment business. He and his wife, Annie May, were the parents of four girls: Jenny, Agnes, Audrey, and Bernice. Agnes was athletic and played several sports, notably basketball, during her years at Baltimore's Western High School, the nation's oldest public all-girls school. She enjoyed sewing and became a fine seamstress. She made many of the Tatum girls' dresses and coats, in addition to the heavy, pleated, velour drapes that hung in the windows of the family home at 1317 Mulberry Street in Baltimore. In 1932 George and Annie moved to nearby Catonsville, seeking a quieter existence for their daughters. Agnes's older sister Jenny was no longer living at home, but the other three girls were present when a neighbor introduced them to twenty-three-year-old Harold Carpenter. Agnes was smitten upon meeting the handsome young man and was surprised to see him again just a few days later driving up the street in his shiny Chevrolet. Noticing Agnes and Audrey waiting for a bus, Harold stopped to say hello and offered them a ride. Agnes and Harold soon began dating, and a four-year courtship ensued. The two were married at Catonsville Methodist Church on April 9, 1935. Times were tough, and there was little pomp and circumstance. There was no wedding cake, and Agnes sewed her own wedding gown. The only gift was a General Electric iron from the bride's aunt Myrtle and uncle Arthur, who happened to work for GE. Instead of a honeymoon, the newlyweds went for a night out at the movies. For the next three weeks the couple lived with Agnes's parents in the Tatum home. Following Harold's uncle Frank to yet another box printing company, the couple relocated to Richmond, Virginia, where their first home together was a five-dollar-a-week furnished efficiency apartment. After a year they moved into a larger furnished apartment on Fendall Avenue in Richmond's Highland Park area. When Agnes's older sister Jenny separated from husband George Tyrell, she felt her sister and brother-in-law would offer a more stable future for the Tyrells' eighteen-month-old baby girl, Joanie. Agnes and Harold became surrogate parents and soon moved to Mechanicsville on the northeast side of Richmond, securing a larger home for the growing family. The Carpenters were Richmond residents for five years before returning to Baltimore for a few months and in 1940 finally settling in an apartment on Sidney Street in New Haven, Connecticut. Jenny reunited with her daughter and moved in with Agnes and Harold, where she remained until 1943. Working for the New Haven Pulp and Board Company, Harold became skilled at running the company's color printing equipment. Agnes began working, too. She worked eight-hour shifts either six or seven days a week, operating a thread mill machine for Mettler Brothers, a subcontractor of Pratt-Whitney Motor Mounts. Agnes stayed with Mettler's until World War II came to an end in 1945. * * * After more than ten years of marriage, Agnes Carpenter became pregnant. With their first child on the way, she and Harold began house hunting and settled on a new construction going up on Hall Street in New Haven's conservative, suburban East Shore Annex neighborhood. Hall Street was cozy and inviting, an almost fairy-tale lane for young families looking to build homes after World War II. Its string of modest, colonial-style homes was just a few miles from Lighthouse Point, a popular beach and amusement park across New Haven Harbor. The Carpenters and their live-in niece, by then ten years old, moved into the new $8,900 home at 55 Hall Street on August 27, 1946. In less than two months they welcomed a son, born October 15 at Grace-New Haven Hospital. He was named Richard Lynn for Harold's only brother. As he grew, Richard became interested in his father's extensive record collection. The selections were varied and eclectic to say the least, encompassing everything from Rachmaninoff, Tchaikovsky, and Bourdin to Lannie McEntire, Red Nichols, and Spike Jones and his City Slickers. Even before he could read, young Richard would go through the records and listen for hours. He was able to distinguish the records by feeling the edges and grooves of each 78. At the age of three Richard asked for his own record of "Mule Train," a popular novelty cowboy song. His first 45 was Theresa Brewer's Dixieland-tinged "Music, Music, Music," and shortly after that he asked for "How Much Is That Doggy in the Window?" by Patti Page. At 11:45 a.m. on Thursday, March 2, 1950, just three days shy of her thirty-fifth birthday, Agnes gave birth to a little girl, Karen Anne. Her first words were "bye-bye" and "stop it," the latter a natural response to the antics of an older brother. Numbering five, the family shared the tidy little 1,500-square-foot, two-story home and its three bedrooms and two bathrooms. "They had nice furniture, everything was neat, everything matched, and everything was clean and shiny," recalls neighbor Debbie Cuticello, daughter of Carl and Teresa Vaiuso. "It had a finished basement, a garage, a beautiful front yard and backyard we all played in. They had a screen porch in the back and neatly manicured lawns and landscaping. Everybody took pride in their neighborhood. There were always shiny cars in the front yards." In a tradition that continues to the present day, the houses on Hall Street came to be identified by the names of the families that lived there in the 1950s and 1960s. Number 55 is the Carpenter house, across the street is the Catalde house, and so on. "The LeVasseurs were on one side, and they're still there," Cuticello explains. "The Catanias were across the street, and they're still there. The Jones family was next door. The Shanahans were a couple of doors down. It was just a wonderful 1950s neighborhood." According to Frank Bonito, whose parents bought 83 Hall Street in 1960, "It was a middle-class neighborhood with a lot of working folks. My father was a butcher and owned a grocery store. The Vaiusos, Debbie's parents, owned a farm. He was a wholesale farmer in Branford, which is one town over. I was at 83. Debbie lived at 77. On the other side were the DeMayos. Mr. DeMayo had worked in the post office. Across the street was a family whose father was a professor at Yale. Millstone was their name. Next to them were the DeVitas. They were an older couple with no children, and the husband was a dentist." The New Haven area was settled by a number of Italian immigrants, providing residents with some remarkable pizza parlors in the area. Nearby Fort Nathan Hale Park was the site of many family picnics and play dates. There the children could swim, fish, and fly kites. In winter the fun turned to sledding and snowballing. The Bonito, Vaiuso, and Carpenter children spent a great deal of time in one another's homes. Debbie and her brother thought of Agnes and Harold more as aunt and uncle figures, an extended family of sorts. "My brother Joey played with Rich, and I played with Karen," she says. "Our parents shared the same values and seemed to enjoy the hardworking American ethics. As children, we watched very little television and were outside as long as we could stay ... playing basketball, baseball, roller-skating, hula-hooping, and playing in the yards. Everybody got along.... We didn't have a lot of money, and they didn't have a lot of money." For extra income, Agnes and Harold started their own car washing business, and the two took great pride in their work. Their pickup and delivery service became popular among the neighborhood families and proved to be a success for the frugal couple, who wanted to give their children a comfortable existence. It was the perfect job for Agnes. She was known to be so persnickety in regard to keeping a clean house that she was often seen standing in the front windows scrubbing the locks with a toothbrush. "Mom was known for having the cleanest garage in Connecticut," Karen recalled in 1971. "My God, if you mopped, the mop didn't get dirty!" According to Frank Bonito, Agnes was "compulsively clean, almost to the point of having some kind of psychiatric issues.... The woman made sure everything was immaculate. I can remember her going next door one time and cleaning the next-door neighbors' windows on her side of the house because they upset her. She was a very nice woman but very uptight. She seemed to be very stressed all the time." Harold Carpenter hung swings from the rafters in the basement of the Carpenters' home, a favorite hang-out spot for neighborhood kids when it was too cold to play outside. It was a music haven for Richard, who even designated the area with a sign that read RICHIE'S MUSIC corner, his version of the family's favorite local record shop. The children would swing in the basement and listen to the music Richard selected from his library, which was categorized, alphabetized, and documented. "Richard had a beautiful sound system," Bonito recalls. "In those days they were called hi-fi's. He would have music on, and Karen and I would be swinging and doing our homework." As she would do for much of her life, Karen took on Richard's interests. Music became their shared passion, and the two would swing to the music for hours. "I did everything that Richard did," she said in a 1981 interview. "If he listened to music, I listened to music. It was unconscious, but because I idolized him so much ... every record that we've ever listened to is embedded in my mind." They enjoyed the sounds of Nat "King" Cole, Guy Mitchell, and Perry Como, and both sat spellbound listening to the overdubbed sounds of Les Paul and Mary Ford, particularly on the duo's masterpiece "How High the Moon." According to Richard, Karen could sing every Les Paul solo. The first record she asked for was "I Need You Now" by Eddie Fisher on RCA-Victor. The two also enjoyed listening to the radio, notably WMGM and Alan Freed's Top 40 show on WINS, "1010 on Your Dial," out of New York. Karen liked to dance and by the age of four was enrolled in ballet and tap classes. Prior to recitals she could be found singing and dancing on the sidewalk in front of the house in a full costume of sequins, satin, tap shoes, and a huge bonnet. Karen was a short, stocky little girl with her dark blond hair cut in a Dutch-boy style. Debbie Cuticello admits to having looked up to Karen, who was two years her senior: "She was my best buddy. I tried to do everything that she did, basically. She was older than I was, and the two years made a big difference back then. Richard was older. You looked up to him, not necessarily a ringleader but the oldest of the group. He and Karen loved each other.... There was sibling rivalry-maybe a little pinching here and there-but it was typical; nothing unusual, nothing different." While Debbie and Joey Vaiuso attended St. Bernadette School, a Catholic school in the area, Karen was a student at Nathan Hale School, just around the corner from Hall Street on Townsend Avenue. "Karen was a year younger than us," says Frank Bonito. "She was the youngest in the class and one of the best students in the class. We were very close through sixth, seventh, and eighth grades, and we always studied together." Karen and Frank walked to school each morning and returned home at lunchtime. "It was an era when women didn't work outside the house, so we'd come home," Bonito says. "There was no cafeteria or anything, so all the kids just went home for lunch. On the way back I'd stop and pick Karen up, and then we'd walk to school together, picking up other friends as we went along." Like most little girls who grew up in the 1950s, Karen had the Ideal Toy Company's Betsy Wetsy doll, but she preferred playing with her dog, Snoopy, or her favorite toy machine gun or participating in various sports. A favorite was Wiffleball, a variation on baseball that used a perforated plastic ball invented just thirty miles away by a man in Fairfield, Connecticut. Karen pitched and sometimes played first base. "I was a tremendous baseball fan," she later said. "I memorized all the batting averages long before I knew the first word to a song. The Yankees were my favorites." She also delivered the New Haven Register on her paper route each day, sometimes adding weekend routes for extra money. (Continues...) Excerpted from LITTLE GIRL BLUE by RANDY L. SCHMIDT Copyright © 2010 by Randy L. Schmidt. Excerpted by permission. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Little Girl Blue
  • is an intimate profile of Karen Carpenter, a girl from a modest Connecticut upbringing who became a Southern California superstar.
  • Karen was the instantly recognizable lead singer of the Carpenters. The top-selling American musical act of the 1970s, they delivered the love songs that defined a generation. Karen’s velvety voice on a string of 16 consecutive Top 20 hits from 1970 to 1976—including “Close to You,” “We’ve Only Just Begun,” “Rainy Days and Mondays,” “Superstar,” and “Hurting Each Other”—propelled the duo to worldwide stardom and record sales of more than 100 million. During their short musical career, the Carpenters released ten studio albums, toured more than 200 days a year, taped five television specials, and won three Grammys and an American Music Award.
  • But that’s only a part of Karen’s story.
  • Little Girl Blue
  • reveals Karen’s heartbreaking struggles with her mother, brother, and husband; the intimate disclosures she made to her closest friends; her love for playing drums and her frustrated quest for solo stardom; and the ups and downs of her treatment for anorexia nervosa. After her shocking death at 32 years of age in 1983, she became the proverbial poster child for that disorder; but the other causes of her decline are laid bare for the first time in this moving account.
  • Little Girl Blue
  • is Karen Carpenter’s definitive biography, based on exclusive interviews with her innermost circle of girlfriends and nearly 100 others, including professional associates, childhood friends, and lovers. It tells a story as touching, warm, and involving as any of Karen’s greatest songs.

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Most Helpful Reviews

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FINALLY - The Whole Heartbreaking Story of A Lost Soul

I've been a Carpenters fan since age eight when I could hear "Close to You" coming through my older cousin's ear piece on her transistor AM radio. Next came drum lessons in grade five. Karen was my idol and my sisters and I devoured her LPs and cassettes like food groups while learning the art of precise harmonies in the process.

So, news of this latest and wonderful biography had me champing at the bit as soon as I heard about its release.

I could not put this book down. And this did not necessarily serve my sleep well (note to self: do not expect to have a good night's sleep if you read such haunting books). It is a heart wrenching tale of heartbreak, control issues, deceit, and the complete misunderstanding of a soul so old and so sensitive that I could not get through this painfully honest biography without a lot of Kleenex.

To literally slowly kill yourself from self-starvation/anorexia nervosa is a tragedy, but when you read about WHY and HOW it happened to this one of a kind talent, you will want to go out and purchase a ouija board to contact and tell off her mother, Agnes, who was such a bitch and so insensitive and controlling that she made Joan Crawford look like Carol Brady.

Karen had no one on her side when it came to her family; all control freaks (except her pacifist father). She was shoved to the back of the line more often than not and was, despite being at the forefront of the Carpenters with that gorgeous voice, placed and kept firmly in the shadow of her older brother, Richard ("The talented one," says Agnes). Mom would see to that.

We find out in her sad story, however, that Karen DID have some very trusted and supportive friends and I am so happy that we are FINALLY hearing their side of the story. One can only imagine how much they miss their friend whom they tried diligently to save from herself and the negativity which surrounded her.

Lots of great information in this book about specific recording sessions, relationships, song writers, musicians, and wonderful details about the most pivotal events in Karen's life and is required reading for any Carpenters fan as well as anyone who grew up and developed their taste for pop music in the 1970s.

The interviews for "Little Girl Blue" were clearly conducted with care and compassion and the bevy of participants is very impressive. Kudos to Randy Schmidt for being a safe place for everyone to share and tell the real story, unlike the sterilized, sugar-coated versions in previous books which were CONTROLLED by Camp Carpenter. We even get the real story about that slag-heap husband, Tom Burris, who is evil incarnate from their first date. When you read this part of the story, your heart will break. And you'll see how Agnes strikes again in the name of "What will people think?"

On another note, I find it very interesting that when there are controlling parents who ostensibly "mean the best for their (dancing monkey-bread winning) children" and expect "perfection" even as they smile and vehemently deny being "controlling stage parents" (Boones, Osmonds, Carpenters) that an eating disorder (or worse) eventually surfaces within the family. These young women honestly feel as if they have no control over any part of their lives and that they'll never be good enough, so they resort to controlling the one thing that truly belongs to them: their bodies. Sad sad sad.

Read this book, but don't expect to feel happier after you do. You'll play your Carpenters albums during and afterward and never hear Karen's songs in quite the same way.

We can only hope that she's finally at peace wherever she is now - which HAS to be Heaven since she already lived through Hell.

Thanks to Randy L. Schmidt for a wonderful book.
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The Pain Behind the Smile

Having previously read Ray Coleman's authorized biography on The Carpenters, [[ASIN:0060925868 The Carpenters: The Untold Story : An Authorized Biography]], I came away with the sense there was much much more to the story of Karen Carpenter that was not being told. Previous to Coleman's book, there was the made for tv movie "The Karen Carpenter Story", which obviously was heavily edited by the Carpenter family. Neither gave conclusive, definitive reasons why America's musical sweetheart, Karen Carpenter, died of complications due to anorexia at the young age of 32 in 1983. This thoroughly detailed book by Randy Schmidt unveils the long-hidden reasons behind Karen Carpenter's untimely death. Schmidt wrote this book without interference from Richard Carpenter, so he has complete journalistic freedom to tell the entire story. Richard Carpenter does not contribute to this book (no comments, no interviews), and made no attempt to thwart Mr. Schmidt or censor him in any way. The painful truth of Karen Carpenter is told here.

In the foreward, Mr. Schmidt explains how previous attempts to tell the Karen Carpenter story were stymied by the Carpenter family, specifically Richard Carpenter, in an attempt to subdue an unfavorable light on Karen's mother, Agnes. Understandibly, Mr. Carpenter was protecting his mother, and he disagrees with the view that Agnes Carpenter was a dominant factor in Karen's anorexia. Richard suggests that Karen's anorexia was perhaps genetic in origin, and it would have surfaced whether Karen was a music superstar or "housewife". Perhaps this is true. Karen's anorexia seems to begin when she was asked to leave her drums and front the group by becoming the lead singer. Karen admits that leaving the "safety" of her drums was an extremely hard transition for her. Being in the spotlight in front of thousands of fans (and critics) obviously brings any inherent personality and body-image insecurities to the forefront. Perhaps this factor above all others triggered Karen's descent into anorexia. Researchers know that anorexia has complex origins, including parental control issues, perfectionism, stress, body-image dysfunction, among other factors. It tends to be a condition exhibited by (mostly) caucasian women who have one or more controlling parents, lack self-esteem, are people-pleasers, and are perfectionists. The theory is that these women "discover" anorexia, as it is the only area in their lives in which they have complete control; therefore and ultimately, anorexia becomes a "silent" form of rebellion against the forces that control the individual. Anorexia becomes a desperate attempt to break away from a highly controlled, "boxed-in", emotionally stiffled life.

Karen Carpenter's life shows her intense struggle to break away from the unsatisfactory life she was living. In 1980, she (bravely) made a solo album with Phil Ramone, against the wishes of Richard and Agnes Carpenter. Perhaps this was an attempt by Karen, whether realized or not, to break away from the Carpenter mould and assert her independence (and self-worth)? Was her ill-conceived marriage to Tom Burris in 1980 an attempt to break away from the Carpenter family too? Perhaps. Ultimately, both avenues proved agonizingly fruitless, with her solo album rejected by Richard and A&M record bosses (the album was shelved), and her marriage essentially over within several months of saying "I do". Mr. Schmidt reveals that Mr. Burris received a monetary settlement to not reveal any details about his marriage to Karen. Most likely, Richard Carpenter bought his silence in an attempt to protect Karen's image. More about Mr. Burris later.

In reading this book, I came to realize Karen's life was essentially controlled by other key people in her life. Her professionaly life was tied to Richard, and the family did not support her attempt at a solo album, as it did not include Richard. Therefore, her voice "belonged" to the Carpenters. Since she absolutely adored Richard, she would do nothing to displease him professionally. Her solo album with Phil Ramone (1980) was shelved when Richard and the brass at A&M records discouraged her from publishing it. Mother Agnes Carpenter is depicted as an overbearingly-opinionated, controlling parent, who demonstrably favored Richard at the expense of Karen. According to Karen's anorexia therapist, Steven Levenkron, Karen needed the affirmation of her mother's love, but none was given. Instead Agnes' message was clear: Richard was the "star", not Karen, and without Richard there would be no Karen. Karen's father, Harold, loved Karen dearly, yet, was apparently too passive to stand up to the tirades and demands of wife Agnes, and lacked the emotional will to help Karen during her therapy for anorexia in New York. Husband Tom Burris apparently was a dead-beat liar who conned Karen into believing he was independently wealthy (a requirement of hers in a husband), and then once married, repeatedly "borrowed" thousands of dollars in hand-outs from Karen, and then rejected her completely when she descended into anorexia - calling her a "bag of bones". He also falsely represented his fertility status to Karen, and did not reveal he had a vasectomy until a few days before their wedding! Since Karen wanted children, this was a tremendous blow, and she considered calling off the marriage. However, Agnes told Karen she would get married, as the relatives were flying over for the wedding from overseas! Agnes told Karen - You made your bed - now sleep in it! In other words: I don't care about your feelings Karen, we are going to keep up appearances, stuff the emotions, and put on a brave smile and go on with the wedding. And that is exactly what Karen did.

Finally, is it fair to suggest that perhaps Karen bears some degree of responsibility for her failed anorexia treatment? I state this as a rhetorical question, as I really do not know the answer, but wonder how much responsibility the anorexic has for their disorder. The anorexic acts out her rebellion (not eating) in a highly secretive and disfunctional manner. Anorexia is not a healthy response to the deep-seated emotional control issues that drive this illness. Getting medical help is necessary, therapy to understand the reasons for anorexia, cooperating and having insight in therapy, confrontation of the controlling people and forces - all of these contribute to the healthy recovery of the anorexic. While Karen attempted therapy, it was on her terms, and as this book clearly shows, she was not a cooperative patient. While in therapy, she abused laxatives, was taking (very dangerous) thyroid medication to increase her metabolism, continued to exercise fanatically (briskly walking two miles every day), and just before the end of her life, used ipecac to induce vomiting (purging). Daily use of ipecac is a poison that damages the heart. Perhaps this is what ultimately resulted in the death of Karen Carpenter - self-induced poisoning.

Karen (and Richard) were perfectionists as well, (amazing how many times the word "perfection" is used in this book) and anything which fell short of Karen's perfectionist standards added more stress to her life. Perfectionists are controllers at heart, and wish to control every aspect of their lives, thereby creating the "perfect" life they desire. Perfectionists often feel they need to be perfect to gain love, affirmation, and the positive acknowledgement of others. People-pleasers often sacrifice their own dreams to please those around them. As this book shows quite clearly, Karen Carpenter had all the unfortunate ingredients for an anorexia eating disorder in her life, and it all came together when she was about 23 years of age. Her life is one continual battle with anorexia from that point on until she died just short of her 33rd birthday.

While she wanted nothing more than to live a life free of the controlling factors that hampered her own emotional expression, ulitmately she was unable to do this. This is the sad, but real story behind the "sterilized" public image of America's sweetheart, Karen Carpenter. I am most grateful to Author Randy Schmidt for bringing the truth to light. Several other reviewers have suggested that Mr. Schmidt's book is just a recitation of Ray Coleman's book. I do not see it that way at all. Randy Schmidt's book adds the pertinent details that Ray Coleman was not allowed to write. Both books have their necessary place, but as mentioned, Mr. Schmidt had the literary freedom to express what what has not allowed expression before (i.e. critical comments about the Carpenter family, for example, the comments made by Carpenter secretary Evelyn Wallace)

Fans of Karen Carpenter now know more details into the painful factors that led the sweetest singer of the 1970's, the girl next door, to a premature death. The truth is not pleasent, but I am grateful the truth has been told.

konedog
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A wonderful musical legacy but a sad life

During their heyday from 1970 - 1976, the Carpenters, or more specifically their image, were often derided as bland, vanilla and uninteresting. Many people who considered themselves hip in the 70s would rarely admit to owning a Carpenters record or even liking them (considering the millions of records sold, many of those who publicly dismissed the group probably had their albums hidden at home.)

But Karen Carpenter's sudden and unexpected death at the age of 32 in 1983 belatedly let the world know that the Carpenters had a much more complicated story than the wholesome images presented by press releases and interviews had let on. As a result, many critics began to revise their opinions about the group's work. Ray Coleman's 1994 authorized biography offered some insights into the Carpenter story as it revealed some criticism of both Richard and mother Agnes, who even through editing came across to readers as difficult. But many complained that the family's participation in Coleman's book hindered the author from telling Karen's full story.

In the new book, Little Girl Blue, Randy Schmidt appears to benefit from Richard's refusal to work with him. That, coupled with the death of Agnes in 1996, seems to have allowed Carpenter associates to speak more freely about their observations of the family. Schmidt also manages to provide perspectives of people missing from Coleman's book. Although she has a relatively small role in the book, I was fascinated that Schmidt interviewed Florine Elie, the family's longtime housekeeper.

As a result of these new interviews, readers get a fuller (and sadder) understanding of Karen. Twenty-seven years after her death, she comes across as a much more complex person than was represented during her lifetime. Part of that complexity appears to derive from being born to older parents who, like many of that generation, placed a premium of emotional investment in their son despite evidence that their daughter had natural talents as a musician that were equal to her brother. Unfortunately, we'll never be sure since those talents didn't receive the same nurturing and encouragement from her mother.

An empty personal life, a short (and what appeared to be a sometimes violent) marriage plus an album that was supposed to represent her quest for artistic and personal independence only to be rejected by both Richard and the record company all seemed to hasten her fatal and sad decline.

Schmidt has an obvious dedication to writing about his subject and does a very good job in relating the desire of Karen's friends to tell what they consider to be her true story. You also feel their anguish and frustration as they relive her decline and mourn what could have become of both the person and the talent.
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Karen's story is finally told

This review is very difficult for me to write. I was 22 when Karen passed away and had been a true fan since the beginning. I was a member of the fan club and saw them at least six times in concert. It is an undeniable fact that the Carpenters were a duo but it is also a fact that the once in a lifetime magic was Karen, her vocal purity and sparkling personality. Fans adored her. Also the last time I saw them live was on their last concert tour before her death and I was awe-struck by her appearance. It troubled me deeply. You could see from the stage how skeletal she was. It is very true that little was known of anorexia at the time but comments from the family that continuously stated they only thought she had a problem dieting is ridiculous. Whatever the reason, if a family member appears as sickly and gaunt as karen did, you force them to see a doctor and get to the bottom of their problem. You do whatever. This is supposed to be someone you love. Instead they let her go through life covereing her frailty with layers of clothing. When forced to meet with a psychiatrist the mother cared more about being blamed and protecting herself than the welfare of her daughter. Abuse comes in many forms and it is so very sad.

Now to the book LITTLE GIRL BLUE. Randy L. Schmidt does a suberb job of in-depth research and perfect presentation. He has done his homework 110% and luckily Richard chose to not be interviewed for this for finally we get the true story and not the one the Carpenters family approves. Most reading this book are true fans and know the story of their career and also how the parents always paid more attention to Richard. But now all the facts we knew throughout Karen's life are given with all those questions we had answered. And what we get is the story of a gifted rare angel who never found any true joy or happiness in her life. One must remember that she was only 32 when she passed. That is 32 years feeling unloved, that she was not enough and trying to earn love, especially from her mother. Schmidt gives the reader two stories here. We get the in-depth look at how their career started and blossomed. We follow the ups and downs of each single, album and tour. But then we get the human story and it is heartwrenching. Luckily he has the full participation of those who were closest to Karen - her best friends Frenda Franklin and Itchie Ramone, wife of record producer Phil Ramone, Olivia Newton John and family confidant Evelyn Wallace. He also interviewd hundreds of friends as well as people in the history. All the facts given are backed fully and we finally get a look at the whole story.

There are a couple of things that strike me. I remember when Karen got married the ceremony was a huge thing and then nothing more was heard about it. It was as if it never happened. To read of the awful reality that it truly was and the abuse that ensued is no surprise upon reflect but certainly fills one with sadness. Also I remember that upon Karen's death till now any public comments by Richard, Agnes or Harold all spoke of the loss of Karen's talent, voice, music but one never got the true feeling of a family who had lost someone they loved deeply. I fully understand grieving in private but some true emotions always shine through. Not here. Actually the opposite seemed true - always a bit of anger. Schmidt does a perfect job of following the progression of Karen's loosing weight and the progression of her disease. To see her ultimately seek help with no family support is heartbreaking. The story told here is a very sad one but I do feel very happy that Karen did have some people who loved her dearly and accepted her for who she was. These are those mentioned above. Frenda and Itchie in particular. To read of all the turmoil behind being placed second always to Richard, the disaster of her solo album and her failed marriage is just oh so sad. And alas there is nothing to be left to the imagination about the mother - Agnes. She was the base of all the insecurities and feelings of low self esteem and started her daughters life of despair at such a young age. When people say back then parents always favored the sons or emotions were not shown I say it is no excuse for emotional cruelty and abuse. Bottom line is they were angry when Karen's voice became the magic of the Carpenters and never gave her any validation.

I sense the same coldness and lack of validation towards his sister from Richard himself. He always had a deep anger at her ever growing popularity. It is very true that at the beginning of their career his choice of song and production was a huge part of their success. They were matched 50/50 with Karen as to the groups success. But if you look at the Carpenters last albums the early pop rock that was so succesful turned into over-produced adult contemporary music. Just look at the difference between the early SUPERSTAR and RAINY DAYS AND MONDAYS to the later TOUCH ME WHEN WE'RE DANCING. Even his attempt at producing DON'T CRY FOR ME ARGENTINA was so over the top. He got lost in his own talent and the quality lessened. The only thing that kept on improving was Karen's vocal purity and maturity. Of course he did not want her to do a solo album. That was his worst fear.

Bottom line, this book will fill you with sadness. The story is tragic and Karen suffered so. And shame on anyone who sees someone they love suffering or sick and does not offer them help. The whole family is guilty. The good news is Karen is in heaven with pefect angels and her mother is definitely in a different place. Karma is a beautiful thing. I end by giving the highest kudos again to author Randy L. Schmidt. He had to work with all this emotion, drama, tragedy and history and he did so to provide a seamless true story that while tragic resonates in the magic that was Karen Carpenter. Yes, she had a beautiful voice but it is the person we pray for and hope she is resting in peace. Thank God the music community has put her in her rightful place among the best singers of all time.

This book is highly recommended to all Karen Carpenter fans but also to anyone suffering from anorexia nervosa. It will help sufferers to identify triggers in their own life that they will relate to. Sadly Karen's life and what she endured could be a text book for the illness. It is an emotional disorder and she was put through it all. It is so tragic that her cry for help and love had to take her life. Hopefully God had better plans for her. At last the true story has been told.
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The Cover Photo Says It All -- a terrific biography

Enormous kudos to Randy Schmidt with this brilliant biography of Karen Carpenter -- beautifully written, meticulously researched, evenhanded throughout (not simply a beat up Richard piece, by any means) but never flinching from the truth. Schmidt, gratefully, didn't have to answer to the Carpenters family in his research and writing; accordingly, this is the definitively honest story of the life of the glorious Karen Carpenter. Schmidt had the generous participation of Karen's closest friends, and while we all know the basic story, there are many revelations to be read here. About the only thing that's not addressed are (i) some direct comments about how Richard has done little over the past two decades other than to fuss and remix with their collaborations, in one unending compilation after another and (ii) what is really left in the vaults that could be released. Those small nit-picks aside, this is a wonderful book -- truthful, detailed, heartbreaking, and direct.

Highest recommendation for anyone who loves Karen and the Carpenters (as well as for anyone else as well). One of the best things I can say about a book is that it doesn't just float out of your mind when you're finished with hits -- LITTLE GIRL BLUE has been resonating with me ever since I finished the last page. A brilliant job.
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A Career Retrospective More Than A Biography

I've been a huge Karen Carpenter fan for years and consider her voice, along with Streisand and Sinatra to be the top three definitive voices of the 20th Century. Feeling as I do, I really wanted to feel like I was inside the mind of one of our greatest singers. That's not what this book is. It starts off terrifically, with an excellent forward, author's note and prologue. Then, it turned into chapter after chapter after chapter of describing how each album was inspired, where the inspiration for certain songs came from, how they met the songwriters, etc. Unfortunately, this book reads much more like album liner notes than an in-depth biography. I found myself skimming very large sections.

In defense of the author, the Carpenter family is famous for being an uptight, conservative clan that never reveals their true feelings or personal business. That's why this book doesn't reveal much. Not much was revealed to him. Because Karen was a product of this emotionally restricted family...she never really confided in anyone or knew how to...to any real degree. That's why all the interviews and sources for the book don't have much to reveal...because Karen didn't reveal anything to them in the first place. Unfortunately, I don't know that we'll ever really know how Karen felt about most things. Like her family, she kept those secrets and took them with her.
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Easy to read, well researched, but...

...unfortunately, due to the big wall around the Carpenters, it was difficult for the author to gain a lot of material.

Randy has come a long way from being the host of the online group "Neville Avenue," an all-too-often Richard Carpenter-bashing gathering of Carpenters fans. He has written what is obviously a well-researched labor of love. There were a few new insights, thanks to the people he had access to that were part of Karen's circle; but the one who knows the story best is no longer with us, and even she had conditioned herself years before her death to saying things that would only defend the rest of the family whether it was the way she truly felt or not. That is all part of the psyche of many anorexics.

I commend Randy in that he tends to present his information as given by others, but having once participated in Newville, and knowing the attitudes there, it was hard for me to imagine before reading this that it was going to point fingers in any other direction but Richard and Agnes. Not that it should or shouldn't - but it was no surprise.

Still, Randy allowed the 'testimony' if you will, of others to do the talking for him, and has presented a nice new souvenir in memoriam of a true legend. The greatest voice of the twentieth century, if not of all time.
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A MASTERFUL BIOGRAPHY

This is the biography that I have waited 27 years for someone to write. With "Little Girl Blue: The Life of Karen Carpenter," author Randy Schmidt has accomplished what I never thought anyone would or could. He has succeeded in giving us a substantive, poignant, candid, and heartbreaking account of the woman whose ethereal voice captured my heart when I was a teenager, and shattered that heart when she died on February 4th, 1983. After nearly three decades since the still hard to believe death of Karen, "Little Girl Blue" answers all the questions that I've had about her life. For the millions of fans who adored The Carpenters' music, and who still grieve Karen's self-destruction, this may be the book that provides closure for them. Thank you Randy L. Schmidt for writing a biography that does not whitewash the causes that led to the disintegration - and death - of my beloved Karen.
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The First Truthful Look At The Carpenters!

I never quite believed the obviously edited and programmed version of the truth behind the issues revolving Karen Carpenter, as perpetrated by her family. Her sudden drastic weight loss was so alarming, and she looked like someone who was going through cancer treatments. As obvious as it was to all that something was definitely wrong, she was determined to dispel any opinion to the contrary, and her last interview with Joan London proved that. Unfortunately, she wasn't fooling anyone.

Anorexia was not as well-researched or as understood as it is today, so I am sure the help she received was lacking. However, after reading the book, it does appear that her trigger was her mother, as anorexia is a result of an underlying issue - and not eating is the only way the person has control. It was heartbreaking to discover what a cold and uncaring mother Agnes Carpenter was - making Richard the focus of all her love and concern. Her stubborn nature and her refusal to take a long hard look at how she treated her daughter was the basis of the illness that overcame her daughter. Showing or stating her love for her daughter was a step she would never take, and after reading the book I wonder if Karen ever thought she had her love. And although idolized by many, Richard was no bargain himself. He was self-absorbed, unkind and had the same lack of concern and love for his sister as his mother. It is unfortunate that Mr. Carpenter, who seemed to be a loving father, was so dominated by his wife that he gave up all his control to her.

The whole story of the Carpenters has been whitewashed for years, and this author should be applauded for being able to bring some of the truth to the surface, Unfortunately, he spent too much time discussing the business side of the family, and if he had delved more into the personal side, I would have enjoyed the book much more.
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A sence of overwhelming sadness for the loss of a friend I will never meet

If I have to give a one word review for "Little Girl Blue:The Life of Karen Carpenter" it would be "draining".

I finished the book with an overwhelming sence of sadness and heartbreak I am finding hard to shake.Over the course of the book I got to meet Karen Carpenter. Not just the sweet,cute,dark haired and brown eyed girl that smiled out from behind album covers posed next to her brother Richard. Not just the incredibly gifted singer who is undoubtedly a legend of popular music.The REAL Karen Carpenter. A beautiful soul who brightened so many lives,yet didn't find that brightness in hers. A person who wanted to be loved,and WAS loved by millions of people and close friends,but never found that same love from some of the closest people in her life. A woman who craved independence and her own life and career,but never quite acheived it,as it was constantly being snatched from her fingers.

She was a mix of contradictions.A tomboy who was the California girl next door. The baseball/softball fanatic who collected Disney memorabilia and stuffed animals. A perfectionist who was driven to succeed and be famous,but would rather watch "I Love Lucy" videotapes in sneakers and do needlepoint than hob nob with the elite. A woman who,by all accounts,never drank anything stronger than Iced Tea and rarely cursed,but was gripped by a self destructive,terrible, addictive disorder that slowly robbed her of the life she so obviously cherished and enjoyed in spite of the heartbreak she endured. The jazz drummer who sang like an angel. The shy woman who was an extrovert .A woman who was always a girl. Little girl blue.

At 30,I am a newcomer in terms of Carpenters fandom.I was definitely aware of their music.My parents had several of their LPs in their collection,I would hear their hits on oldies stations,and I even remember seeing the Karen Carpenter tv movie on CBS in the late 80's.Other than "Goodbye to love","Merry Christmas Darling" and "Close to You" on my Computer,I never gave their music or their story much thought.That changed a couple years ago when bored one late night,I was surfing Youtube and came upon a video of Karen Carpenter drumming.I had no idea! Then I saw a video for "Calling Occupants of Interplanetary Craft" and was blown away...THESE were the Carpenters?!! Then I saw the video of "All you get from Love is a Love Song"...and there she was.A brown eyed,brunette beauty who had a smile that could melt any heart.The next day,I purchased CARPENTERS GOLD,and after raiding flea markets and used record shops,music stores and the internet,I have probably every released recording by them.Simply put,I was in love with Karen Carpenter and the music she made with Richard (yes,even GOOFUS).

However,even after reading all the biographies and accounts of Karen's life,I never quite felt that it was the whole story.I never felt I got a full portrait of the woman beyond what some wanted us to know.The Ray Coleman book got close,but I still felt an invisible barrier of sorts.Something was missing.I found it here.

While reading the book I felt this strange emotional connection to her.It was weird,but it felt like her prescence was around me while reading.I found myself laughing with her,hurting for her,rejoicing for her triumphs,upset at her set backs.As the book neared it's end,I felt dread as her solo album was shelved,as she married the piece of scum that was Tom Burris,as she desparately finally attempted treatment for her anorexia and watch THAT fail...then she dies.I knew the ending well before,but it never affected me as it did here.I felt that I actually lost a friend.I don't cry easily,It takes a LOT for me to cry.I wept uncontrollably for several hours after finishing this book.It was like I had found a new friend whom I grew to love deeply,and had her torn away from me suddenly.Irrational,I know.I never knew Karen,I was only three when she died,yet that's how I was feeling emotionaly.I was shocked about how it struck me.

The author deserves all the credit, I feel. He managed,through the existing info that was out there,and interviews with her friends and people whom she knew to build a thorough picture of a woman who was as amazing as the songs she sung.He was fair and even handed,even when the facts and behaviors of certain people in the narrative could have steared a bias one way or another.He just leaves it there for us to make our own conclusions,allowing Karen's voice and spirit shine through.

I am not sure what lies beyond this life,but I hope there is a heaven. One day,I hope to be able to meet Karen there and put my arms around her and tell her how much she has ment to me and to all of us who didn't intimately know her,yet love her the same.Her story has finally been told. I hope she knows,and is at peace.

Bravo,Randy Schmidt.Bravo.
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