cover image Candy Darling: Dreamer, Icon, Superstar

Candy Darling: Dreamer, Icon, Superstar

Cynthia Carr. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, $30 (432p) ISBN 978-1-250-06635-0

Journalist Carr (Fire in the Belly) provides a vivid biography of trans actor, model, and Warhol “superstar” Candy Darling. Born in 1944, Darling was raised as a boy in suburban Massapequa Park, Long Island, where she was the target of an abusive father and school bullies. She started identifying as female in her late teens and, during frequent trips to Manhattan, became involved in Greenwich Village’s queer and bohemian circles, through which she met other trans artists and landed in the orbit of Andy Warhol. Capturing the contrast between the glamorous and hardscrabble aspects of her subject’s life, Carr notes that even as Darling acted in the Warhol-produced films Flesh and Women in Revolt, modeled for fashion photographer Richard Avedon, and starred in avant-garde theater productions, she was almost always without reliable income or steady housing, “doing sex work when necessary and occasionally sleeping on floors in the worst hotels.” In 1974, Darling died of stomach cancer. Carr provides an evocative look inside the Greenwich Village scene in its 1960s heyday (“The ‘counterculture’ had begun to percolate in the Village’s shabby venues—where artists were showing things no one was supposed to see, saying things no one was supposed to hear”), and the extensive research draws on Darling’s personal papers and interviews with her friends. It’s an unparalleled close-up of a pop culture icon. Agent: Joy Harris, Joy Harris Literary. (Mar.)