cover image Obsession: The Lives and Times of Calvin Klein

Obsession: The Lives and Times of Calvin Klein

Steven S. Gaines. Carol Publishing Corporation, $22.5 (414pp) ISBN 978-1-55972-235-3

This expose is little more than a re-hash of material that has appeared in supermarket tabloids over the years. Born in 1942 in the Bronx, Klein, who from an early age accompanied his mother whenever she shopped for her clothes, by the age of five knew he wanted to be a fashion designer. After attending Manhattan's Fashion Institute of Technology, he apprenticed at several fashion houses. Barely taking time out to marry Jayne Centre and have a daughter, Marci, Klein doggedly pursued success, finally opening his own company in 1968. As his business prospered, his sexual interest in men, which began discreetly, ran out of control. The authors also address Klein's alcohol and drug abuse; his hypochondria and dread of AIDS; the kidnapping of his 11-year-old daughter in 1978; his alleged ``borrowing'' of ideas from other designers; his divorce and marriage to Kelly Rector (they live in separate apartments); his addiction to the famous nightspot Studio 54 and to its owner, Steve Rubell; and his rehabilitation for alcohol and drug abuse. Gaines ( Simply Halston ) and Churcher ( New York Confidential ) have written a soap opera-ish biography that will be of interest only to fashion mavens. Photos. Author tour. (Apr.)