Madame Claude, William Stadiem
Madame Claude, William Stadiem
List: $26.99 | Sale: $18.89
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Madame Claude
Her Secret World of Pleasure, Privilege, and Power

Author: William Stadiem

Narrator: Eliza Foss, Keith Sellon-Wright

Unabridged: 11 hr 14 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 05/22/2018


Synopsis

Madame Claude, by renowned social historian William Stadiem, is a magnificent audiobook about the brilliant, complicated, and utterly amoral woman behind the most glamorous and successful escort service in the world.

In post-WWII Paris, Madame Claude ran the most exclusive finishing school in the world. Her alumnae married more fortunes, titles and famous names than any of the Seven Sisters. The names on her client list were epic—Kennedy, Rothschild, Agnelli, Onassis, Niarchos, Brando, Sinatra, McQueen, Picasso, Chagall, Qaddafi, the Shah, and that's just for starters. By the 1950s, she was the richest and most celebrated self-made woman in Europe, as much of a legend as Coco Chanel.

Born Fernande Grudet, a poor Jewish girl in the aristocratic chateau city of Angers, the future Madame led a life of high adventure—resistance fighter, concentration camp survivor, gun moll of the Corsican Mafia and erstwhile streetwalker—before becoming the ultimate broker between beauty and power. She harnessed the emerging postwar technology of the telephone to create the concept of the call girl. But Madame Claude wasn't just selling sex—she was the world's ultimate matchmaker, the Dolly Levi of the Power Elite.

She was also one of the most controversial—and most wanted—women in the world. Now, through his own conversations with the woman herself and interviews with the great men and remarkable women on whom she built her empire, social historian and biographer William Stadiem pierces the veil of Claude’s secret, forbidden universe of pleasure and privilege.

About William Stadiem

William Stadiem is the author of such bestsellers as Mr. S: My Life with Frank Sinatra, Marilyn Monroe Confidential, and Dear Senator: A Memoir by the Daughter of Strom Thurmond. He writes for Vanity Fair and has been the Hollywood columnist for Andy Warhol’s Interview and the restaurant critic for Los Angeles Magazine. Stadiem is also a screenwriter whose credits include Elizabeth Taylor’s last starring vehicle, Franco Zeffirelli’s Young Toscanini, and the television series L.A. Law.

About Eliza Foss

Eliza Foss has performed in numerous theaters both in New York City and around the country.  She's performed in Ten Unknown, Natural Selection, and Angels Don't Dance, among others.  She has appeared in the films Split Ends and Chutney Popcorn as well as on television in Law & Order and The Merrow Report.  She holds a M.F.A from the New York University Graduate Acting Program. Eliza has narrated over thirty audiobooks and short stories, including The Mermaid Chair by Sue Monk Kidd, The Beck Diet Solution by Judith S. Beck, and Big Love by Sarah Dunn.  She was featured in AudioFile magazine as one of “audio’s hottest romance narrators.”


Reviews

For decades, I've been curious about Madame Claude. Now, having read Stadiem's book, I wish I'd saved my energy. Madame Claude was a legend in her time. Stadiem credits her with being the inventor of the call girl and of turning sex into a luxury brand to equal Hermes, Louis Vuitton or Chanel. Her cu......more

Goodreads review by Janice

The author is a professional "ghost writer" and from that information alone I felt confident picking the book up with expectations to be technically well done and it is excellent on that level. However, it is stated that there are conflicting accounts of Madame Claude's origins and even other storie......more

frustrating Less a book about Madame Claude, more about those who used her services. Read as an exercise in shameless name dropping, even mentioning people who were related to or associated with Claude’s customers, just for the sake of it, purely because they were notable persons of the time, who we......more

Goodreads review by Nicole

Kinda fun but kinda went over my head. Might be interesting if your really aware of/have an interest in all the names it drops, but if you aren’t it’s kind of lacklustre. Clearly a lot of research and information went into this book so I can appreciate that, but I felt like it was just telling the s......more