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Oscar Night: 75 Years of Oscar Parties, From the Editors of Vanity Fair
November, 2004

Hollywood nights

Alas, Vanity Fair's annual Oscar night bash is "by invitation only." But we mere mortals can party-crash with Oscar Night: 75 Years of Oscar Parties, From the Editors of Vanity Fair . Along with VF's Oscar night pics, this monumental tome (measuring 11-by-14 inches) raids the to-die-for archives of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, the folks behind the Oscars. With captions featuring trivia and gossipy dish, it's the definitive look at Oscar-night partying over the decades.

Kicking off with the first-ever 1929 Oscar gala, held at the Roosevelt Hotel, the book takes us to the various ceremony venues, after-show hot spots like the Bistro and Spago, and into the living rooms of notable notables. The guest lists are a "Who's Hot, Who's Not" panorama, depicting changing fashions, hairstyles and attitudes. Take a look: there's Madonna with bad hair and Pamela Anderson in a denim miniskirt with a blouse she forgot to button. They're no match for the elegantly coifed, dazzlingly bling-blinged Liz Taylor. Now she's someone we want to party with. Pat H. Broeske is the co-author of Howard Hughes: The Untold Story, which would also make a terrific holiday gift.