Jackie
Collins, doyenne of the steamy Hollywood novel, dies at
77
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[September 21, 2015]
By Alex Dobuzinskis
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) -
Jackie Collins, the best-selling author of dozens of
steamy novels who depicted the boardrooms and bedrooms
of Hollywood's power crowd, died on Saturday of breast
cancer at age 77, her family said.
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The British-born Collins, younger sister of actress Joan
Collins, died in Los Angeles, said her spokeswoman Melody
Korenbrot.
"It is with tremendous sadness that we announce the death of our
beautiful, dynamic and one of a kind mother, Jackie Collins, who
died of breast cancer today," the family said in a statement.
Collins, who wrote about characters driven by lust, power and
greed, sold more than 500 millions copies of her books in 40
countries and has some 30 New York Times bestsellers, according
to her own website.
Collins followed her older sister to Los Angeles when she was
just a teenager. She did not only write about Hollywood, she
also enjoyed great success in the entertainment industry with
several of her stories adapted for television.
"I'm a storyteller. I'm not a literary writer and I never
pretended to be," Collins told Reuters in 2008.
Some of her most successful novels included the 1983 "Hollywood
Wives," about women living glamorous lives behind the scenes of
the industry, and the 1985 "Lucky" and 1990 "Lady Boss" from her
series focused on the ravishing and ambitious character Lucky
Santangelo, who was born into an organized crime family.
Collins faced controversy during her career, writing novels so
steamy they outraged political figures from Britain to China.
Her debut novel, "The World is Full of Married Men," was
reportedly deemed "filthy and disgusting" by author Barbara
Cartland and banned in Australia. Collins told Reuters the book
was "way before its time" with its tale of a woman who cheats on
her husband and another who likes sex with married men.
Collins promised readers unrivaled insiders' knowledge of
Hollywood and said she wrote about "real people in disguise."
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"If anything, my characters are toned down - the truth is much more
bizarre," she wrote on her website.
She said people in Hollywood trusted her with their stories because
she knew the rules the town lived by, and because she was devoted to
marriage.
But Collins said her life lacked the scandal of her novels. She
described writing as her lifelong obsession, and confessed to rising
at dawn to write out pages in long hand. She also received emails
from teenagers who said reading her novels taught them about sex.
Collins was married to her second husband, Oscar Lerman, for more
than 25 years until his death in 1992.
Joan Collins, reacting to her sister's death, told People magazine
that Jackie was her best friend. Earlier this month, Jackie Collins
told People she had only recently informed her older sister of her
battle with breast cancer for over six years.
"I admire how she handled this. She was a wonderful, brave and a
beautiful person and I love her," Joan Collins told the magazine.
Jackie Collins is survived by three daughters.
(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis; Editing by Mary Milliken and Diane
Craft)
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