A Memoir of Family, Fame, and Floundering
Author: Meredith Baxter Publication Date: March 2011 Hardcover.
"I remember Sarah asking me, when I'd just begun therapy with her, what I
looked for in a man. After a few moments of silent, tense deliberation I
had it. 'Hair, ' I blurted. 'He has to have hair.'"
Meredith Baxter
is a beloved and iconic television actress, most well-known for her
enormously popular role as hippie mom, Elyse Keaton, on "Family Ties."
Her warmth, humor, and brilliant smile made her one of the most popular
women on television, with millions of viewers following her on the small
screen each week. Yet her success masked a tumultuous personal story
and a harrowing private life. For the first time, Baxter is ready to
share her incredible highs, (working with Robert Redford, Doris Day,
Lana Turner, and the cast of "Family Ties)," and lows (a thorny
relationship with her mother, a difficult marriage to David Birney, a
bout with breast cancer), finally revealing the woman behind the image.
From
her childhood in Hollywood, growing up the daughter of actress and
co-creator of "One Day at a Time" Whitney Blake, Baxter became familiar
with the ups and downs of show business from an early age. After
wholeheartedly embracing the 60s counterculture lifestyle, she was
forced to rely on her acting skills after her first divorce left her a
22-year-old single mother of two. Baxter began her professional career
with supporting roles in the critically panned horror film "Ben," and in
the political thriller "All the President's Men."
More lucrative
work soon followed on the small screen. Baxter starred with actor David
Birney as the title characters in controversial sitcom "Bridget Loves
Bernie." While the series only lasted a year, her high-profile romance
with Birney lasted 15 volatile and unhappy years. Hiding the worst of
her situation from even those closest to her, Baxter's career flourished
as her self-esteem and family crumbled. Her successful run as Nancy on
"Family" was followed by her enormously popular role on "Family Ties,
"and dozens of well-received television movies.
After a bitter
divorce and custody battle with Birney, Baxter increasingly relied on
alcohol as a refuge, and here speaks candidly of her decision to take
her last drink in 1990.
And while another ruinous divorce to
screenwriter Michael Blodgett taxed Baxter's strength and confidence,
she has emerged from her experiences with the renewed self-assurance,
poise, and understanding that have enabled her to find a loving,
respectful relationship with Nancy Locke, and to speak about it openly.
Told
with insight, wit, and disarming frankness, "Untied" is the eye-opening
and inspiring life of an actress, a woman, and a mother who has come
into her own.
|