July 6, 2019
The Chelsea Girls by Fiona Davis
The Chelsea Hotel in New
York was always a home for artists and eccentrics. Meeting on a USO tour during World War II, Hazel
and Maxine form a friendship that lasts after they return home. Maxine goes to Hollywood to try to break into
the movies, while Hazel moves into the Chelsea Hotel and works on an idea for a
play. Another Chelsea resident reads the play and hooks Hazel up with some of her theater connections. Maxine’s movie career has stalled, so she
returns to New York and takes a room at the Chelsea. When she hears that Hazel’s
play will be performed on Broadway, she is determined to star as the
leading lady. Maxine secures the role,
but it results in disaster as both women and many of their friends are swept up
in McCarthyism, HUAC, and the communist witch hunts of the 1950s. I can’t think of another novel that addresses
the activities of HUAC and the consequences for artists, actors, and others in
the creative fields this well. The Chelsea
Girls would make a great book club book, since there is much to discuss here.
(If you don’t know what
HUAC was, it was the House Un-American Activities Committee, originally formed
to investigate the possibility of spies sending information to Russia, but
quickly descended into a witch hunt focusing on the entertainment
industry. Sort of like a precursor to
Homeland Security.)
Many thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for an e-ARC in return for a review.
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