signed first edition
2024 · Austin
by Seros, Alexandra
Austin: University of Texas Press, 2024. First Edition. Fine/fine. First printing. Fine in a fine dust jacket. Signed by Seros on the title page. The book features over 150 photographs and archival documents providing vital historical context. As Seros notes, "Seeing the documents is as important as reading about them... through them, Lupino's voice will become clearer." In screenwriter Alexandra Seros' meticulous analysis of Ida Lupino's career, we see a compelling portrait of a filmmaker who transcended the gendered constraints of post-World War II Hollywood through strategic self-fashioning and sheer professional determination. Seros, whose PhD in cinema and media studies informs her scholarly approach, reveals how Lupino's multifaceted identity—as actress, director, producer, writer, mother, and wife—created what she aptly terms a "pixelated legacy," but one that deserves recognition for its groundbreaking achievements in both film and television. Through exhaustive archival research and close textual analysis, Seros demonstrates how Lupino's directorial approach, characterized by restraint, empathy, and ambiguous endings, challenged conventional representations of women during a period of significant social transition.
Lupino's remarkable career trajectory, as Seros convincingly argues, positions her as a collaborative auteur whose working method anticipated contemporary understandings of authorship in film and television. Moving seamlessly between directing independent films and television episodes, Lupino maintained creative control while nurturing collaborative relationships with her artistic partners. As Seros notes, Lupino was "mother to the guerrilla alliance of directors, writers, cameramen, editors, and musicians who worked in film and television," embracing a collaborative approach that allowed her to tackle controversial subjects through her distinctive documentary-influenced aesthetic.
Seros' scholarship makes a significant contribution to film history by recovering Lupino's voice from the "silences that affected the reception of her work." By examining both Lupino's independent films and her extensive television output, Seros illuminates how Lupino balanced motherhood and a demanding career during a period when women were expected to remain in the domestic sphere. Lupino's pragmatic approach represents what Seros frames as an early feminist strategy for professional survival. As Seros concludes, although Lupino "would not have recognized her career as unparalleled or revolutionary, it was," presenting "a woman's point of view to millions of film and television viewers during a period when women's issues were usually defined by the men in power," making her "the face of a new, collaborative auteurism. (Inventory #: 1148)
Lupino's remarkable career trajectory, as Seros convincingly argues, positions her as a collaborative auteur whose working method anticipated contemporary understandings of authorship in film and television. Moving seamlessly between directing independent films and television episodes, Lupino maintained creative control while nurturing collaborative relationships with her artistic partners. As Seros notes, Lupino was "mother to the guerrilla alliance of directors, writers, cameramen, editors, and musicians who worked in film and television," embracing a collaborative approach that allowed her to tackle controversial subjects through her distinctive documentary-influenced aesthetic.
Seros' scholarship makes a significant contribution to film history by recovering Lupino's voice from the "silences that affected the reception of her work." By examining both Lupino's independent films and her extensive television output, Seros illuminates how Lupino balanced motherhood and a demanding career during a period when women were expected to remain in the domestic sphere. Lupino's pragmatic approach represents what Seros frames as an early feminist strategy for professional survival. As Seros concludes, although Lupino "would not have recognized her career as unparalleled or revolutionary, it was," presenting "a woman's point of view to millions of film and television viewers during a period when women's issues were usually defined by the men in power," making her "the face of a new, collaborative auteurism. (Inventory #: 1148)