2
0
Support the library.
Your support helps keep books free for everyone ❤️
📍 Noticed
Love, Queenie: Merle Oberon, Hollywood's First South Asian Star
by Mayukh Sen
Sponsored
Synopsis
“Extraordinary."—The New York Times Book Review
One of Publisher's Weekly and Booklist's Best Books of 2025
A Kirkus and The Millions Most Anticipated Book
One of Town & Country's Best Books of Spring 2025
One of Bookpage's 7 books to read this Women’s History Month
A beautiful reclamation of ...
One of Publisher's Weekly and Booklist's Best Books of 2025
A Kirkus and The Millions Most Anticipated Book
One of Town & Country's Best Books of Spring 2025
One of Bookpage's 7 books to read this Women’s History Month
A beautiful reclamation of ...
“Extraordinary."—The New York Times Book Review
One of Publisher's Weekly and Booklist's Best Books of 2025
A Kirkus and The Millions Most Anticipated Book
One of Town & Country's Best Books of Spring 2025
One of Bookpage's 7 books to read this Women’s History Month
A beautiful reclamation of a pioneering South Asian actress captures her glittering, complicated life and lasting impact on Hollywood.
Merle Oberon made history when she was announced as a nominee for the Best Actress Oscar in 1936. Hers was a face that “launched a thousand ships,” a so-called exotic beauty who the camera loved and fans adored. Her nomination for The Dark Angel marked the first time the Academy recognized a performer of color. Almost ninety years before actress Michelle Yeoh would triumph in the same category, Oberon, born to a South Asian mother and white father in India, broke through a racial barrier—but no one knew it. Oberon was “passing” for white.
In the first biography of Oberon (1911–1979) in more than forty years, Mayukh Sen draws on family interviews and heretofore untapped archival material to capture the exceptional life of an oft-forgotten talent.
Born into poverty, Queenie Thompson dreamt of big-screen stardom. By sheer force of will, she immigrated to London in her teens and met film mogul Alexander Korda, who christened her “Merle Oberon” and invented the story that she was born to European parents in Tasmania. Her new identity was her ticket into Hollywood. When she was only in her twenties, Oberon dazzled as Cathy in Wuthering Heights opposite Laurence Olivier. Against the backdrop of Hollywood’s racially exclusionary Golden Age and the United States’s hostile immigration policy towards South Asians in the twentieth century, Oberon rose to the highest echelons of the film-world elite, all while keeping a secret that could have destroyed her career.
Tracing Oberon’s story from her Indian roots to her final days surrounded by wealth and glamor, Sen questions the demands placed on stars in life and death. His compassionate, compelling chronicle illuminates troubling truths on race, gender, and power that still resonate today.
You May Also Like
The History Of The Blues: The Roots, The Music, The People
Francis Davis
José Silva's Guide to Effective Decision Making and Goal Setting
Ed Bernd Jr.
Nederlandske Skoytelopere: Sven Kramer, Bob de Jong, Jaap Eden, Mark Tuitert, Eddy Verheijen, Ireen Wust, Erben Wennemars, Hans Van Helden
Source Wikipedia
Silent Victim
Caroline Mitchell
Dauntless
Elisa A. Bonnin
Hollow Kingdom
Kira Jane Buxton
Travel Picks
View All
Joyride: A Memoir
Susan Orlean
Forbidden City
James Ponti
So, I Met This Guy
Alexandra Potter
The Wide Wide Sea: Imperial Ambition First Contact and the Fateful Final Voyage of Captain James Cook
Hampton Sides
The Road to Little Dribbling: Adventures of an American in Britain
Bill Bryson
The Sky Beneath Us
Fiona Valpy