A Good Bad Boy
Luke Perry and How a Generation Grew Up
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- $14.99
Publisher Description
An artful and contemplative tribute to the late actor famed for his role as Dylan McKay in Beverly Hills, 90210.
Best known for playing loner rebel Dylan McKay in Beverly Hills, 90210, Luke Perry was fifty-two years old when he died of a stroke in 2019. There have been other deaths of nineties stars, but this one hit different. Gen X was reminded of their own inescapable mortality, and robbed of an exciting career resurgence for one of their most cherished icons—with recent roles in the hit series Riverdale and Quentin Tarantino’s Once Upon a Time...in Hollywood bringing him renewed attention and acclaim. Only upon his death, as stories poured out online about his authenticity and kindness, did it become clear how little was known about the exceedingly humble actor and how deeply he impacted popular culture.
In A Good Bad Boy, Margaret Wappler attempts to understand who Perry was and why he was unique among his Hollywood peers. To do so, she uses an inventive hybrid narrative. She speaks with dozens who knew Perry personally and professionally. They share insightful anecdotes: how he kept connected to his Ohio upbringing; nearly blew his 90210 audition; tried to shed his heartthrob image by joining the HBO prison drama Oz; and in the last year of his life, sought to set up two of his newly divorced friends. (After his death, the pair bonded in their grief and eventually married.) Amid these original interviews and exhaustive archival research, Wappler weaves poignant vignettes of memoir in which she serves as an avatar to show how Perry shaped a generation’s views on masculinity, privilege, and the ideal of “cool.”
Timed to the fifth anniversary of Perry’s death, A Good Bad Boy is a profound and entertaining examination of what it means to be an artist and an adult.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Cultural critic Wappler (Neon Green) serves up a loving if unwieldy overview of the acting career of Perry (1966–2019), best known for playing Dylan McKay on the 1990s teen drama Beverly Hills 90210. Growing up in Mansfield, Ohio, Perry endured his father's drunken rages until his mother got a divorce when Perry was six. By middle school, he aspired to act professionally, but it took 216 auditions before he landed his first part in a daytime soap opera in 1987. Three years later, he overcame a lackluster initial audition to nab the role of Dylan on 90210, and quickly became a fan favorite. Wappler traces the ups and downs of Perry's time on the show and discusses his tenure on both HBO's Oz and the CW's Riverdale. Perry's fans will appreciate the doting treatment he receives from Wappler, who describes the actor as empathetic and modest in an industry of big egos. Unfortunately, the omission of significant portions of Perry's personal life (his marriage receives only a handful of fleeting mentions) baffles. Wappler also includes interstitial chapters that use her teenage memories of watching 90210 as a springboard to recount her adolescent relationship problems and troubles fitting in at school, though these sections never quite gel with the biography. This struggles to balance its numerous objectives.