Tag Archives: memoir

Prince Harry doesn’t need Queen Elizabeth’s approval to write his memoir, had private talks with royal family

It wasn’t necessary for Prince Harry to ask Queen Elizabeth II permission to write his upcoming tell-all.

On Wednesday, a spokesperson for the Duke of Sussex told Fox News the royal recently engaged in a private discussion with his family about the planned book. Getting approval from his grandmother wasn’t necessary, the spokesperson added.

It’s unclear whether the senior royals, including the reigning monarch, will get to see the book before it’s released next year.

On Tuesday, a spokesperson for the Duke of Sussex confirmed to Fox News that the 36-year-old is writing what his publisher is calling an “intimate and heartfelt memoir.”

BEFORE PRINCE HARRY, EDWARD VIII WROTE HIS OWN TELL-ALL AFTER MARRYING AMERICAN DIVORCÉE WALLIS SIMPSON

It wasn’t necessary for Prince Harry to ask his grandmother, Queen Elizabeth II, approval to write his upcoming memoir, said a spokesperson for the Duke of Sussex.
(Photo by Julian Simmonds – WPA Pool / Getty Images)

Random House expects to release the book, currently untitled, late in 2022. While the publisher did not disclose financial terms, it has been reported Harry will earn an advance of at least $20 million for his work and will donate proceeds to charity.

In response to the book’s announcement, a spokesperson from Buckingham Palace told Fox News “this is not something we would comment on.”

In his announcement, Harry said his book aims to tell “my story.”

“I’m writing this not as the prince I was born but as the man I have become,” Harry said in a statement. “I’ve worn many hats over the years, both literally and figuratively, and my hope is that in telling my story – the highs and lows, the mistakes, the lessons learned – I can help show that no matter where we come from, we have more in common than we think.”

WHAT PRINCE HARRY HAS SAID ABOUT THE ROYAL FAMILY SINCE STEPPING BACK AS A SENIOR MEMBER

Prince Harry’s memoir will be released in late 2022.
(Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for Global Citizen VAX LIVE)

“I’m deeply grateful for the opportunity to share what I’ve learned over the course of my life so far and excited for people to read a firsthand account of my life that’s accurate and wholly truthful,” Harry added.

According to Random House, Harry’s book will serve as “the definitive account.”

“Prince Harry will share, for the very first time, the definitive account of the experiences, adventures, losses and life lessons that have helped shape him,” Random House announced.

“Covering his lifetime in the public eye from childhood to the present day, including his dedication to service, the military duty that twice took him to the frontlines of Afghanistan, and the joy he has found in being a husband and father, Prince Harry will offer an honest and captivating personal portrait, one that shows readers that behind everything they think they know lies an inspiring, courageous, and uplifting human story,” their statement shared.

PRINCE HARRY TO PUBLISH MEMOIR IN 2022

This image provided by Harpo Productions shows Prince Harry, from left, and Meghan, The Duchess of Sussex, in conversation with Oprah Winfrey. 
(AP)

Monday’s announcement came four months after Harry and his wife, Meghan Markle, gave a televised interview to Oprah Winfrey that was viewed by nearly 50 million people globally.

The Duchess of Sussex spoke of feeling lonely and nearly suicidal before they left England last year. Harry also acknowledged tension with his father Prince Charles over his decision to step back from royal duties and his marriage to the biracial American actress.

“There is a lot to work through there,” said Harry about his relationship with the patriarch. “I feel really let down. He’s been through something similar. He knows what pain feels like. And [my son] Archie is his grandson. I will always love him, but there is a lot of hurt that has happened.”

Harry also told Winfrey, 67, that he felt trapped by royal life and that his family cut him off financially, taking away his security. He also acknowledged that his relationship with his older brother Prince William is strained.

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Prince Harry (right) told Oprah Winfrey that his relationship with older brother Prince William is ‘space at the moment.’
(Getty Images)

“I was trapped, but I didn’t know I was trapped,” said Harry. “My father and my brother, they are trapped.”

During the interview, the couple described painful comments someone made about how dark their son Archie’s skin might be before his birth in 2019. Harry later confirmed that the royal in question who made the heartbreaking statement about his son wasn’t the queen or Prince Philip, his grandparents.

Buckingham Palace said the allegations of racism made by the couple were “concerning” and would be addressed privately. William also assured reporters that “we are very much not a racist family.”

Last month, Markle published the picture book “The Bench” through Random House Books for Young Readers.

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The Duke and Duchess of Sussex currently reside in Montecito, Calif. with their two children.
(AP)

Markle, a former American actress, became the Duchess of Sussex when she married Harry in May 2018 at Windsor Castle. The couple welcomed a son named Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor in 2019.

The Duke and Duchess of Sussex’s departures from royal duties began in 2020 over what they described as the British media’s intrusions and racist attitudes towards the former “Suits” star, 39. The family now resides in the coastal city of Montecito, Calif.

On June 4, the couple welcomed their second child, a daughter named Lilibet “Lili” Diana Mountbatten-Windsor. The child is eighth in line to the British throne.

The name pays tribute to both Harry’s grandmother, 95, whose family nickname is Lilibet, and his late mother Princess Diana. 

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Actor Danny Trejo explores ‘redemption’ in new memoir

At age 7, Danny Trejo did his first drug deal. At 12, he was using heroin. In tenth grade, he stabbed a boy in the face with a broken wine bottle. He was kicked out of at least five high schools before he entered the California penal system. He spent most of the 1960s doing time at some of the state’s most notorious prisons, including Folsom, Soledad and San Quentin.

Then Trejo got sober, got out of prison and went on to appear in hundreds of movies and TV shows, including “Spy Kids,” “Machete,” and “Breaking Bad.” He became an entrepreneur as well, with a string of successful restaurants. How Trejo transformed his life is the subject of his new memoir, written with fellow actor Donal Logue,“Trejo: My Life of Crime, Redemption, and Hollywood.”  

“Trejo” has been well received, with Publishers Weekly calling it “powerful and expertly crafted,” and Kirkus Reviews terming it “a raw and deeply engrossing salvation story.” Currently on a virtual book tour, Trejo has survived everything from childhood abuse to cancer to a prison encounter with Charles Manson. 

For Trejo, 77, revisiting the dark chapters of his life was an emotional experience. “Those memories are very, very painful,” Trejo told NBC News. “Thinking and talking about some of them brought tears to my eyes, but the purging of them and seeing them on paper was really redeeming.”

Trejo was born into a Mexican American family that he said was defined by its “toxic masculinity” and “destructive machismo.” Several of his uncles, nephews and cousins did time behind bars. “This was what it meant to be a Trejo man,” he writes. “What it was to live up to the Trejo name.” 

From cellblock to Hollywood lot

For Trejo, the turning point came in 1968, when he was in solitary confinement at Soledad and potentially facing the death penalty. “I made a deal with God. I asked Him to let me die with dignity,” Trejo said. “Then I promised to always say His name and help my fellow inmates.” He didn’t even use the term “my fellow man,” Trejo recalled, because he assumed that he would be spending the rest of his life behind bars. 

At that moment, Trejo writes, “In that cell God killed the old me, made a new Danny Trejo, and said, ‘Now let’s see what you do with him.’”

In a twist of fate, the charges against Trejo were dropped and he was released from prison. Newly sober, he began working as a recovery counselor and rebuilding his life. Yet it wasn’t easy. Trejo was so accustomed to prison that life inside felt more normal than life as a free man. “Every type of lockup was home for me.”

In 1985, while seeking out an acquaintance who needed help with sobriety, Trejo visited the set of the movie, “Runaway Train.”  There he was spotted by a director and given a role in the film. This was the beginning of Trejo’s new career, which often consisted of playing “Inmate 1” on TV and in films. 

Over time, Trejo became one of the world’s most recognizable character actors, in movies like “Desperado,” “Heat” and “Blood In, Blood Out.” In the latter film, a crime drama, Trejo returned to San Quentin as an actor — and actually filmed scenes inside his old cell.  

Trejo said that, at one point in his career, he wondered if he was being hired for his acting ability or because of his background as a convict. But he realized that he had always been acting, especially in prison, when he had assumed various personas to survive. 

“Back then, I was the Mexican you didn’t want to f— with,” he writes in the book. He was also the same person who acted out scenes from “The Wizard of Oz” and sang “Zip-A-Dee-Doo-Dah” in solitary confinement to keep from going crazy.

“Everybody has done a movie with Danny Trejo. He is like the new Kevin Bacon,” said actress Patricia Rae, who appeared with Trejo in the film “North by El Norte.”  She described him as “humble, very into causes, and very much a humanitarian.”

“He (Trejo) is down-to-earth,” Rae said. “When you talk to him, he is not a name-dropper, unlike many people in the business. And as an actor, he is super available and present.”

In 2015, Trejo branched out from the entertainment industry and opened Trejo’s Tacos and Trejo’s Coffee and Donuts in Los Angeles.     

Trejo’s co-writer, Logue, has been friends with Trejo for 30 years. “Although Danny has told his story many times, I think we were able to go much deeper with this book,” Logue said. “He dealt with the specter of his childhood traumas and discovered things he had compartmentalized and put away.” 

In his memoir, Trejo confronts the cycle of addiction and violence that has engulfed his family for generations. On the day Trejo met President Barack Obama in 2013, Trejo’s son was homeless and on drugs. 

“What is interesting to me is Danny’s dichotomy,” Logue said. “He can be that hard guy in movies, he can act in a terrifying way. But he has tremendous spiritual equanimity as well, and he is always helping people.” 

To this day, Trejo still works as a recovery counselor and has made headlines for real-life acts of heroism and philanthropy, like donating food to front-line workers and families in East L.A. during the pandemic. Last year, the city of Los Angeles honored him for his community service by declaring Jan. 31, “Danny Trejo Day.” 

Trejo hopes that people see his life as proof that it is always possible to change. “I was so blessed. I made a deal with God, and I honestly have lived up to my end of the deal. I say His name every day, and I try to help people, whether they are homeless or people getting out of prison, and that’s how I live my life.”

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Trent Reznor: sexual assault story in Marilyn Manson memoir is ‘fabrication’ | Marilyn Manson

Trent Reznor, the Oscar-winning composer and frontman of Nine Inch Nails, has denied claims that he was involved in a sexual assault alongside Marilyn Manson, made by Manson in his memoir.

Earlier this week, Manson was accused by his former partner, actor Evan Rachel Wood, of years of “horrific” abuse. She had previously accused an unnamed person of sexual assault, physical violence including torture, and various forms of emotional abuse. Four other women concurrently published accounts of sexual, physical and emotional abuse from Manson.

He denies the allegations, calling them “horrible distortions of reality”, and saying “my intimate relationships have always been entirely consensual”.

In the wake of the allegations, a passage from Manson’s 1998 autobiography The Long Hard Road Out of Hell began circulating online, in which Manson claims that he and Reznor sexually assaulted a heavily intoxicated woman. Reznor has responded, saying:

I have been vocal over the years about my dislike of Manson as a person and cut ties with him nearly 25 years ago. As I said at the time, the passage from Manson’s memoir is a complete fabrication. I was infuriated and offended back when it came out and remain so today.

The book passage is from an unpublished 1995 Manson interview with Empyrean magazine. A publisher’s note in the book explains the interview was never printed in Empyrean because the magazine publishers “believed that the magazine had followed unethical interview procedures in order to extract information from Mr Manson”.

Reznor and Manson were once close, with Reznor signing him to his label Nothing Records and co-producing his first two albums. He later cut ties, and in 2009 called Manson “a malicious guy [who] will step on anybody’s face to succeed and cross any line of decency. Seeing him now, drugs and alcohol now rule his life and he’s become a dopey clown.”

Following the allegations of the five aforementioned women this week, further women have alleged abuse from Manson.

Model Scarlett Kapella alleges emotional, physical and sexual abuse; musician Chloe Black alleges physical and verbal abuse; artist and film-maker Louise Keay Bell, who has previously made allegations against the singer, reiterated her claims that he “emotionally and financially abused me”, and harassed her following the initial allegations. Fashion stylist Love Bailey claims he held a Glock pistol to her head in a 2011 incident, and retailer Torii Lynn also alleges that Manson abused her. Manson has not responded to these particular allegations. The Guardian has contacted his management for comment.

Following this week’s allegations, Manson has been dropped by his label Loma Vista Recordings, and removed from two US TV series he was due to appear in.

Los Angeles police were called to the singer’s home on Wednesday night to check on the welfare of the singer, and stated to the Daily Mail there was “no evidence of any trouble whatsoever”.

His ex-wife Dita Von Teese made a statement following the allegations, saying she had not experienced abuse from Manson, and that their marriage had ended due to “infidelity and drug abuse”.

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Mariah Carey’s estranged sister sues for $1.25m accusing the diva of lying in her tell-all memoir

Mariah Carey’s estranged sister Alison is suing the star for $1.25million, claiming her 2020 tell-all memoir The Meaning Of Mariah Carey caused ‘immense emotional distress.’

Alison, 59, says that Mariah, 50, lied about her older sibling drugging her and her older brother Morgan abusing her as a child in the book.

The elder Ms. Carey – who described herself as ‘profoundly damaged’ – said that the Butterfly singer fabricated the stories ‘to promote sales of her book’ and offered no ‘evidence to substantiate’ her claims, according to legal documents obtained by TMZ.

At odds: Mariah Carey’s estranged sister Alison Carey is suing the star for $1.25million for emotional distress claiming she made ‘heartless, vicious, vindictive, [and] despicable’ accusations in her 2020 memoir The Meaning Of Mariah Carey

Mariah recalls her troubled childhood in the chapter ‘Dandelion Tea,’ claiming Alison ‘gave her Valium, tried to pimp her out and threw a cup of boiling hot tea on her causing third-degree burns’ at 12-years-old, according to Alison’s Manhattan Supreme Court summons filed Monday.

Made up: The elder Ms. Carey – who described herself as ‘profoundly damaged’ – said that the Butterfly singer fabricated the stories ‘to promote sales of her book’ and offered no ‘evidence to substantiate’ her claims, according to legal documents 

Alison, who is representing herself in the case, says the Honey songstress made the untrue claims despite knowing the damage it would cause her, given her personal trauma and health troubles.

She cited trauma stemming from the alleged ‘satanic’ abuse she suffered at the hands of their mother Patricia, which are the subject of another suit Alison Carey filed against her mom last year, per Page Six.

She also said Mariah was aware her sister was suffering from spine and digestive disorders and a traumatic brain injury, short term memory problems and vision problems after being attacked in 2015 in an ‘unsolved home invasion.’

Alison – who is HIV+ has been arrested for soliciting prostitution in the past – also said she was struggling with alcohol abuse after having been sober for ‘a long time.’

With this in mind, Alison says her famous sister maliciously ‘used her status as a public figure to attack her penniless sister, generating sensational headlines describing lurid claims to promote sales of her book.’ 

The elder Ms. Carey is asking for restitution for ‘intentional infliction of immense emotional distress caused by defendant’s heartless, vicious, vindictive, despicable and totally unnecessary public humiliation of defendant’s already profoundly damaged older sister.’

She said she sent Mariah’s legal team an offer to settle on January 8th but never heard back, according to the court docs.

Accusations: Mariah recalls her troubled childhood in the chapter ‘Dandelion Tea,’ claiming Alison ‘gave her Valium, tried to pimp her out and threw a cup of boiling hot tea on her causing third-degree burns’ at 12-years-old, according to Alison’s Manhattan Supreme Court summons filed Monday

Estranged: Her brother Morgan, 60, said he planned to sue during a November 2020 conversation with The Sun , calling his sister’s recollection he was hired to kill someone for $30k ‘delusional.’ They’re pictured in the 90s above

Mariah’s sister isn’t the only one who’s heated over the book.

Her brother Morgan, 60, said he planned to sue during a November 2020 conversation with The Sun, calling his sister’s recollections ‘delusional.’

In the book she also claims Morgan was hired to kill someone for $30,000, but never went through with the job. 

‘It’s heartbreaking to witness my little sister’s descent into this hatefully delusional revisionist rant because it is so reminiscent of her unhinged behavior during her first breakdown,’ he said.

‘The so-called “memoir” is laden with lies, distortions and gross revisionism from beginning to end, and I can prove it.

‘When I reveal the truth, the facts and supporting evidence, it will be a very harsh pill for she and her publishers to swallow and rest assured I will be filing a lawsuit.’ 

Mariah was similarly chilly while talking about her relationship with her siblings during a profile with Vulture last August, saying: ‘Here’s the thing: They have been ruthlessly just heartless in terms of dealing with me as a human being for most of my life. I never would have spoken about my family at all had they not done it first.’

‘I have forgiveness in my heart, and so I forgive them, but I am not trying to invite anybody to come hang out over here. I think they’re very broken, and I feel sad for them.’  

Mariah says it ‘took a lifetime’ for her to be brave enough to write the book, which was ‘incredibly hard’ for her.

In the foreword, she writes: ‘This book is composed of my memories and my mishaps, my struggles, my survival… I went deep into my childhood and gave the scared little girl inside of me a big voice.’

Feeling’s mutual: Mariah was similarly chilly while talking about her relationship with her siblings during a profile with Vulture last August, saying: ‘Here’s the thing: They have been ruthlessly just heartless in terms of dealing with me as a human being for most of my life. I never would have spoken about my family at all had they not done it first’

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