Extensive Definition
Wladziu Valentino Liberace He had a twin who died
at birth and he was born with a caul, which in his family, as in
many societies, was taken as a sign of genius and an exceptional
future. Liberace's father was a musician who played the French horn
in bands and movie theaters but sometimes had to work as a factory
worker or laborer. While his father encouraged music in the family,
his mother was not musical and thought music lessons and a record
player to be luxuries they couldn't afford, causing angry family
disputes. Liberace later stated, "My dad's love and respect for
music created in him a deep determination to give as his legacy to
the world, a family of musicians dedicated to the advancement of
the art".
Liberace began playing the piano at four and
while his father took them to concerts to further expose the
children to music, he was also a taskmaster demanding high
standards from the children in practice and performance. Liberace's
prodigious talent was in evidence early. He memorized difficult
pieces by age seven. He studied the technique of the famous Polish
pianist and later family friend Paderewski
and at eight, he met the great pianist backstage at the Pabst
Theater in Milwaukee, "I was intoxicated by the joy I got from the
great virtuoso's playing. My dreams were filled with fantasies of
following his footsteps…Inspired and fired with ambition, I began
to practice with a fervor that made my previous interest in the
piano look like neglect."
The Depression was hard on the family
financially. The early-teenage Liberace also suffered from a speech
problem and from the taunts of neighborhood children who mocked his
avoidance of sports and his fondness for the piano and for cooking.
Liberace focused fiercely on his piano playing and blossomed under
the instruction of music teacher Florence Kelly who guided his
musical development for ten years. He gained experience playing
popular music in theaters, on local radio, for dancing classes, for
clubs, and for weddings. He played jazz with a school group called
the "Mixers" in 1934, then other groups later. Liberace also
performed in cabarets and naked strip clubs, and even though his
parents did not approve, he was earning a tidy living during hard
times. For a while he adapted the stage name "Walter Busterkeys".
He was for a time romantically linked to "Pineapple" Andy Kaid. His
artistic talents also emerged in draftsmanship, design, and
painting, and he became a fastidious dresser and follower of
fashion. By now, he already showed the knack of turning his
eccentricities into attention-getting virtues and he grew more
popular at school, though mostly as an object of comic
relief.
Early career
In a formal classical music competition in 1937, Liberace was praised for his "flair and showmanship". At the end of a traditional classical concert in La Crosse, Wisconsin in 1939, Liberace played his first requested encore, "Three Little Fishes", which he played in the style of Bach. The 21-year-old played with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra in 1941, getting strong reviews, and he also toured in the Midwest.Between 1942 and 1944, Liberace moved away from
straight classical performance and reinvented his act to one
featuring "pop with a bit of classics" or as he also called it
"classical music with the boring parts left out". In the early
1940s, he struggled in New York City but by the mid- and late
1940s, he was performing in night clubs in major cities around the
United States, largely abandoning the classical concert goer. He
changed from classical pianist to showman, unpredictably and
whimsically mixing serious with light fare, Chopin with "Home on
the Range". For a while, he played piano along with a phonograph
machine on stage. The tricky gimmick helped gain him attention. He
also added interaction with the audience—taking requests, talking
with the patrons, cracking jokes, giving lessons to chosen audience
members—and mastered the details of staging, lighting, and
presentation. The transformation to entertainer was driven by
Liberace's innate desire to connect directly with his audiences,
and secondarily from the reality of the difficult competition in
the classical piano world.
In 1943, he appeared in a
couple of Soundies (the
1940s precursor to music videos). He re-created two flashy numbers
from his nightclub act, "Tiger Rag" and
"Twelfth
Street Rag". In these films he was billed as Walter Liberace.
Both "Soundies" were later released to the home-movie market by
Castle
Films. In 1944, he made his first appearances in Las Vegas,
which later became his principal performance venue. He was playing
at the best clubs, finally appearing at the celebrated Persian Room
in 1945, with Variety
proclaiming, "Liberace looks like a cross between Cary Grant and
Robert
Alda. He has an effective manner, attractive hands which he
spotlights properly and, withal, rings the bell in the dramatically
lighted, well-presented, showmanly routine. He should snowball into
box office." The Chicago Times was similarly impressed: He "made
like Chopin one minute and then turns on a Chico Marx bit
the next."
During this time, Liberace worked tirelessly to
refine his act. He added the candelabrum as a signature prop and
adopted "Liberace" as his stage name, making a big point in his
press releases that it was pronounced "Liber-Ah-chee". He dressed
elegantly in white tie and tails to be better seen in large halls.
Besides clubs and occasional work as an accompanist and rehearsal
pianist, Liberace also played for private parties, including those
at the Park Avenue home of millionaire oilman J. Paul
Getty. By 1947, he was billing himself as "Liberace—the most
amazing piano virtuoso of the present day."He had to have a piano
to match his growing presence, so he bought a rare, over-sized,
gold-leafed Blüthner Grand, which he hyped up in his press kit as a
"priceless piano". (Later, he would perform with an array of
extravagant, custom-decorated pianos, some encrusted with sequins
and mirrors.) He moved to
North Hollywood, California in 1947 and was performing at local
clubs, such as Ciro's and Mocambo's, for Hollywood stars such as
Rosalind
Russell, Clark Gable,
Gloria
Swanson, and Shirley
Temple. He didn't always play to packed rooms, and early on he
learned to perform with extra energy to sparser crowds, in order to
keep up his own enthusiasm.
Liberace created a very successful publicity
machine which helped rocket him to stardom. In 1950, he performed
for music-loving President Harry S.
Truman in the East room of the White House.
Despite his great success in the supper-club circuit, where he was
often an intermission act, his huge ambition was to reach even
larger audiences as a headliner and a television, movie, and
recording star. Liberace began to expand his act and made it more
extravagant, with more costumes and a larger supporting cast. His
large-scale Las Vegas act became his hallmark, expanding his fan
base dramatically, and making him wealthy in short order. His "big
little boy" and "perfect son" charm was honed to perfection,
appealing especially to older women, and his younger female fans
loved his "Continental" sophistication, which they longed to
receive from their loutish boyfriends or husbands.
His New York City performance at Madison Square
Garden in 1954, which earned him a record $138,000 for one
performance, was more successful than the great triumph his idol
Paderewski had made twenty years earlier. By 1955, he was making
$50,000 per week at the Riviera
Hotel and Casino in Las
Vegas and had over 200 official fan clubs with a quarter of a
million member fans. He was making over $1,000,000 per year from
public appearances, and millions from television. Liberace was
frequently covered by the major magazines and he became a pop
culture superstar, and he also became the butt of jokes by other
comedians and by the public.
Music critics were generally harsh in their
assessment of his piano playing. Critic Lewis Funke wrote after the
Carnegie Hall concert, Liberace's music "must be served with all
the available tricks, as loud as possible, as soft as possible, and
as sentimental as possible. It's almost all showmanship topped by
whipped cream and cherries." Even worse was his lack of reverence
and fealty to the great composers. "Liberace recreates—if that is
the word—each composition in his own image. When it is too
difficult, he simplifies it. When it is too simple, he complicates
it". His sloppy technique included "slackness of rhythms, wrong
tempos, distorted phrasing, an excess of prettification and
sentimentality, a failure to stick to what the composer has
written".
His fans didn't seem to notice the errant
musicianship, however, and they came again and again for the show.
Though not a Horowitz or a Rubinstein, the "Candelabra Casanova of
the Keyboard" was a sure-fire entertainer. As he proudly stated, "I
don't give concerts, I put on a show." Unlike the insular concerts
of classical pianists which normally ended with applause and a
retreat off-stage, Liberace's shows ended with the public invited
on-stage to touch the maestro's clothes, piano, jewelry, and hands.
Kisses, handshakes, hugs, caresses usually followed, all projected
with sincerity and generosity by Liberace. A critic summed up his
appeal near the end of Liberace's life, "Mr. Showmanship has
another more potent, drawing power to his show: the warm and
wonderful way he works his audience. Surprisingly enough, behind
all the glitz glitter, the corny false modesty and the shy smile,
Liberace exudes a love that is returned to him a
thousand-fold."
In contrast to his flamboyant stage presence,
Liberace was a conservative in his politics and faith, eschewing
dissidents and rebels. He believed fervently in capitalism but was
also fascinated with royalty, ceremony, and luxury. He loved to
hobnob with the "rich and famous", acting as star-struck with
presidents and kings as his fans behaved with him. Yet to his fans,
he was still one of them, a midwesterner who had earned his success
through hard work—and who invited them to enjoy it with him. In the
early days of the Beat
Generation, it was Liberace to whom most middle class Americans
related, not Jack
Kerouac.
In the next phase of his life, having earned
sudden wealth, Liberace spent lavishly—incorporating materialism
into his life and his act. He designed and built his first
celebrity house in 1953, with a piano theme appearing throughout,
including a piano top shaped pool. His dream home with its lavish
furnishings, elaborate bath, and antiques all throughout, added to
his appeal. Following up on the show business adage "when you're
hot, you're hot", he shamelessly leveraged his fame through
hundreds of promotional tie-ins with banks, insurance companies,
automobile companies, food companies—even morticians. Liberace was
considered a perfect pitchman, given his folksy connection with his
vast audience of housewives. The sponsors would obligingly send him
complimentary products, including his white Cadillac limo. He
reciprocated enthusiastically, "If I am selling tuna fish, I
believe in tuna fish." The critics would have a field day with his
gimmicky act, his showy but careless piano playing, his non-stop
promotions, and his gaudy display of success but he always had the
last laugh, as immortally preserved by the famous quotation, first
recorded in a letter to a critic, "Thank you for your very amusing
review. After reading it, in fact, my brother George and I cried
all the way to the bank."
Later career
In 1956, Liberace had his first international engagement, playing successfully in Havana, Cuba. He followed up with a European tour later that year. Always a devout Catholic, Liberace considered his meeting with Pope Pius XII a highlight of his life. In 1960, Liberace performed at the London Palladium with Nat King Cole and Sammy Davis Jr. (this was the first televised "command performance", now known as "The Royal Variety Show" for Queen Elizabeth II).Despite successful European tours, his career had
in fact been slumping since 1957. But Liberace skillfully built it
back up by appealing directly to his fan base. Through live
appearances in small town supper clubs, and with television and
promotional appearances, he regained his form and his fans. On
November
23, 1963,
he suffered renal failure from accidentally inhaling excessive
amounts of cleaning fluid and nearly died. Told by doctors that his
condition was fatal, he began to give away his possessions but then
recovered after a month. Around this time in his resurgent career,
Liberace returned to Las Vegas, and upping the glamour and glitz,
he took on the sobriquet "Mr. Showmanship". As his act swelled with
spectacle, he famously stated, "I'm a one-man Disneyland." The
costumes became more exotic (ostrich feathers, mink, and huge
rings), entrances and exits more elaborate (chauffeured onstage in
a Rolls-Royce or dropped in on a wire like Peter Pan),
choreography more complex (involving chorus girls, cars, and
animals), and the novelty acts more varied (jugglers, magicians,
hypnotists and puppeteers). He also introduced several especially
talented juvenile acts including Australian singer Jamie
Redfern and Canadian banjo player Scotty
Plummer. Barbra
Streisand was his most notable new adult act, early in her
career.
Liberace's energy and commercial ambitions took
him in many directions. He owned an antique store for some years in
Beverly
Hills, California. In
addition, he owned a restaurant in Las Vegas for many years and
even published cookbooks, the most famous of these being Liberace
Cooks, with co-author cookbook guru Carol Truax,
which included "Liberace Lasagna" and "Liberace Sticky Buns". The
book features recipes "from his seven dining rooms" (of his
Hollywood home). In addition, he had a line of men's clothing, a
motel chain (Liberace Chateau Inns), a shopping mall, and other
enterprises.
Throughout the 1970's and early 1980's,
Liberace's live shows were major box office attractions in Las
Vegas at the Las Vegas
Hilton and Lake Tahoe
where he would earn $300,000 a week. He maintained homes in both
places.
Always kind to animals and children, Liberace
incorporated them into his shows and helped talented youth through
his Liberace Foundation, whose good works still continue.
Television
Unlike Jack Benny, Liberace mostly bypassed radio before trying a television career, thinking radio unsuitable given his act's dependency on the visual. Despite his enthusiasm about the possibilities of television, Liberace was disappointed after his early guest appearances on The Kate Smith Show and the Cavalcade of Stars. He was particularly unhappy with the frenetic camera work and his short appearance time. He soon wanted his own show where he could control his presentation as fully as he did in his club shows. His first show on local television in Los Angeles was a smash hit, earning the highest ratings of any local show, which he parlayed into a sold out appearance at the Hollywood Bowl. That led to a summer replacement television show in place of Dinah Shore.The fifteen minute network television program, The
Liberace Show, began on July 1, 1952, but did not lead
to a regular network series. Instead producer Duke Goldstone
mounted a filmed version of Liberace's local show performed before
a live audience for syndication
in 1955, and sold it to scores of local stations. The widespread
exposure of the syndicated Liberace series made the pianist more
popular and prosperous than ever. His first two years earnings from
television netted him $7,000,000 and on future re-runs he earned up
to 80% of the profits.
Liberace learned early on to add "schmaltz" to
his television show and to cater to the less sophisticated taste of
the mass audience. Better than most early television performers,
Liberace also projected a very intimate feeling—winking, joking,
and smiling at the camera while playing—as if performing in the
viewer's own living room. He applied a principle of television
which is still true today—viewers are most engaged by a human face
that is expressive and reactive—be it on a talk show, soap opera,
reality show, or sit-com. To this end, he constantly altered his
facial expressions to hold the viewer's attention. He also used
dramatic lighting, split images, costume changes, and exaggerated
hand movements to create visual interest. To that he added
self-deprecating humor, his odd voice, and his endless energy to
complete an engaging and entertaining formula. Liberace also
employed "ritualistic domesticity", used by such early TV greats as
Jack
Benny and Lucille
Ball. His brother George
often appeared as guest violinist and orchestra director, and his
mother was usually in the front row of the audience, with brother
Rudy and sister Angelina often mentioned to lend an air of
"family". Liberace began each show in the same way, then mixed
production numbers with chat, and signed off each broadcast softly
singing I'll
Be Seeing You. His musical selections were broad, including
classics, show tunes, film melodies, Latin rhythms, ethnic songs,
and boogie-woogie.
The show was so popular with his mostly female
television audience that he drew over thirty million viewers at any
one time and received ten thousand fan letters per week. His show
was also one of the first to be shown on UK commercial television
in the 1950s where it was broadcast on Sunday afternoons by
Lew
Grade's ATV
company. This exposure gave Liberace a dedicated following in the
UK. Homosexual men also found him appealing. Elton John
stated that Liberace was his hero and was the first gay person he
had ever seen on television.
Liberace also made significant appearances on
other shows like The
Ed Sullivan Show, the Edward R.
Murrow program Person to
Person and on the shows of Jack Benny and
Red
Skelton where he often parodied his own persona. A new Liberace
Show premiered in 1958, featuring a less flamboyant, less glamorous
persona, but it failed in six months, as his popularity began
slumping. Liberace received a star on the Hollywood
Walk of Fame in 1960 for his contributions to the television
industry. Liberace continued on television as a frequent and
welcomed guest on The Tonight Show with Jack Paar in
the 1960's, with memorable exchanges with Zsa Zsa
Gabor and Mohammad
Ali, and later with Johnny
Carson. In 1966, he appeared in two highly-rated episodes of
the U.S. television series Batman.
During the 1970's, his appearances included guest roles on episodes
of Here's
Lucy and Kojak. In a cameo on
The
Monkees he appeared at an avant-garde art gallery as himself,
gleefully smashing a grand piano with a sledgehammer as Mike Nesmith
looked on and cringed in mock agony.
Liberace was also the guest star in an episode of
The
Muppet Show. His performances included a "Concerto for the
Birds" and an amusing rendition of "Chopsticks". In the 1980's, he
guest starred on television shows such as Saturday
Night Live (on a 10th-season episode hosted by Hulk Hogan and
Mr. T), and
the 1984 film Special People.
Recordings
The huge success of Liberace's syndicated television show was the main impetus behind his record sales. From 1947 to 1951, he produced about 10 disks. By 1954, it jumped to nearly 70. He released several recordings through Columbia Records including Liberace by Candlelight (later on Dot and through direct television advertising) and sold over 400,000 albums by mid-1954. His most popular single was "Ave Maria", selling over 300,000 copies. From 1955 on, his recordings and sales declined steadily.His albums included standards of the time, like
Hello
Dolly but also included his own versions of works from Chopin and other
classical greats. In his life he received 6 gold records. As
successful as his recording career was, however, it never reached
the level of popularity of his live shows, which showcased his
unique act far better.
Films & TV
Even before his arrival in Hollywood in 1947, Liberace wanted to add acting to his considerable talents. His exposure to the Hollywood crowd through his club performances led to his first movie appearance in 1950 in South Sea Sinners, a forgettable South Pacific potboiler, in which he played "a Hoagy Carmichael sort of character with long hair". Liberace also appeared as a guest star in two compilation features for RKO Radio Pictures. Footlight Varieties was an imitation-vaudeville hour released in 1951 and a little-known sequel, Merry Mirthquakes (1953), featured Liberace as master of ceremonies.He was at the height of his career in 1955 when
he starred in the Warner
Brothers feature Sincerely
Yours with Dorothy
Malone, playing 31 songs. The film (about a concert pianist who
loses his hearing) was a commercial and critical failure, which was
attributed in part to his having been overexposed on
television.
In 1965, he had a small part in the movie
When the Boys Meet the Girls starring Connie
Francis, essentially playing himself. He received kudos in 1966
for his brief role as a casket salesman in the film
adaptation of The Loved
One, Evelyn
Waugh's satire of the funeral business and movie industry in
Southern
California. It was the only film Liberace made in which he did
not play the piano.
In 1966, Liberace also played a dual role in the
60s TV show Batman with Adam West and
Burt
Ward as evil pianist Chandell plus his gangster-like twin
Harry. The episodes "The Devil's Fingers" and "The Dead Ringers"
showed off Liberace's acting talents.
Lawsuits and alleged homosexuality
Liberace's fame in the U.S. was matched for a time in the UK. In 1957, an article in The Daily Mirror by veteran columnist Cassandra (William Connor) mentioned that Liberace was "...the summit of sex--the pinnacle of masculine, feminine, and neuter. Everything that he, she, and it can ever want... a deadly, winking, sniggering, snuggling, chromium-plated, scent-impregnated, luminous, quivering, giggling, fruit-flavoured, mincing, ice-covered heap of mother love," a description which did everything it could to imply he was homosexual without saying so. Liberace sued the newspaper for libel, testifying in a London court that he was not a homosexual, and had never taken part in homosexual acts. He won the suit on the basis of the term fruit-flavoured which was held to impute homosexuality. http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0508766/bi The £8,000 ($22,400) damages he received from The Daily Mirror led Liberace to alter his catchphrase to "I cried all the way to the bank!"He fought and settled a similar case in the
United States against Hollywood Confidential. Rumors and gossip
magazines frequently alleged behavior that strongly implied that he
was a homosexual. A typical issue of Confidential in 1957 shouted,
"Why Liberace's Theme Song Should Be 'Mad About the Boy!'"
In 1982, Liberace's alleged live-in boyfriend of
some five years, Scott
Thorson, sued the pianist for $113 million in palimony after an acrimonious
split-up. Liberace continued to publicly deny that he was
homosexual. In 1984, most of Thorson's claim was dismissed although
he received a $95,000 settlement. Later in the decade Thorson
emerged as a pivotal witness in the prosecution of reputed gangster
Eddie
Nash in the 1981 quadruple murder of the Wonderland
Gang.
Confusion over Liberace's true sexuality was
further muddled in the public's mind by his public friendships and
romantic links with actress Joanne Rio (whom he claimed he nearly
married), skater Sonja Henie,
aging Hollywood icon Mae West, and
famous transsexual Christine
Jorgenson. Many publicity releases and women's magazine
articles attempted to counter the gay rumors by portraying Liberace
as "the perfect all-around man any woman would be thrilled to be
with…He's so considerate on dates... He never forgets the little
things that women love…He makes you feel that when you are with
him, well, you really are with him." Another article was entitled
"Mature Women Are Best: TV's Top Pianist Reveals What Kind of Woman
He'd Marry".
Death
Liberace's final stage performance was at the Radio City Music Hall in New York City on November 2, 1986. His final television appearance was on Christmas Day that same year on the recently-aired Oprah Winfrey Show TV talk show. He died at the age of 67 on February 4, 1987 at his winter house in Palm Springs, California due to complications from AIDS. His obvious weight loss in the months prior to his death was attributed to a "watermelon diet" by his longtime and steadfast manager Seymour Heller. But he had been in ill health since 1985 with other health problems including emphysema from his daily smoking off-stage, as well as heart and liver troubles. How and exactly when he became HIV-positive has never been determined, as Liberace vehemently denied to the very end that he had AIDS or that he was homosexual. A few weeks before his death, still convinced that his fans were unaware of his sexuality or the disease he was battling, he confided in Heller his belief that if his fans knew that he was gay or dying from AIDS, "that's all they'll remember about me." He is entombed in Forest Lawn - Hollywood Hills Cemetery in Los Angeles.The Liberace
Museum in Las
Vegas, opened in 1979, contains many of his stage costumes, cars, jewelry, and lavishly-decorated
pianos, along with
numerous citations for philanthropic acts, and a
sizable gift shop.
In August 2007, Kashi Kicks
announced the release of the Liberace shoe, to honor “the King of
Bling” . This was done in collaboration with the Liberace
Foundation of Las Vegas.
Publications
1. Autobiographies- Liberace: An Autobiography, by Liberace. Putnam and Co. Ltd, New York, 1973 (hardcover)
- The Things I Love, by Liberace with Tony Palmer (editor). Grosset & Dunlap, New York, 1976 (hardcover)
- The Wonderful Private World of Liberace, by Liberace and Michael Segell. Harper and Row, New York, 1986 (hardcover)
2. Biographies
- The Liberace Story, by Chester Whitehorn (editor). Screen Publications Inc, New York, 1955 (softcover - #4 in the Candid Profile series)
- Liberace: On Stage and Off, by Anthony Monahan. GRT Music Productions, Sunnyvale California, 1976 (hardcover)
- Liberace: The True Story, by Bob Thomas. St. Martins Press, New York, 1987 (hardcover)
- Behind the Candelabra: My Life With Liberace, by Scott Thorson with Alex Thorleifson. E.P. Dutton, New York, 1988 (hardcover)
- Liberace: A Bio-Bibliography, by Jocelyn Faris. Greenwood Press, Westport CT, 1995
- Liberace: An American Boy, by Darden Asbury Pyron. University of Chicago Press, 2000, (hardcover)
- Liberace (Lives of Notable Gay Men and Lesbians), by Ray Mungo and Martin B. Duberman. Chelsea House Publications
3. Cooking
- Liberace Cooks, by Carol Truax. Doubleday, New York, 1970 (hardcover)
- Cookbook of the Stars, Motion Picture Mothers, Hollywood, 1970. (A collection of recipes by Hollywood stars including Liberace, Bing Crosby, Joan Crawford, Lana Turner, Katharine Ross, Mary Tyler Moore, Don Knotts, and more)
- Joy of Liberace: Retro Recipes from Amercia's Kitchiest Kitchen, by Michael Feder and Karan Feder. Angel City Press, 2007 (hardcover)
- Delicious Recipes from Liberace's #1 Cook, by Gladys Luckie
4. Poetry
- The Ghost of Liberace - New Writing Scotland 11 (an anthology), A.L Kennedy (editor) and Hamish Whyte (editor), Association for Scottish Literary Studies, 1993 (paperback)
- Why My Mother Likes Liberace: a Musical Selection, by Diane Wakoski. (Comparing poetry to music: 13 poems by Wakoski, with line drawings of pianos by Rebecca Gaver). Sun / Gemini Press, Tucson, Arizona, 1985
5. Compilations
- The First Time: 28 Celebrities Tell About Their First Sexual Experiences, by Karl Fleming and Anne Taylor Fleming. Descriptions by Liberace, Debbie Reynolds, Art Buchwald, Erica Jong, Jack Lemmon, Loretta Lynn, Dyan Cannon, Joan Rivers, Dr. Spock, Irving Wallace, Mae West, and 17 others. Berkley Medallion, 1976 (paperback)
- Liberace Christmas Music: A Guide to Cassettes, Compact Discs, Music Scores, Piano Rolls, and Sound Recordings, by Karl B Johnson, John Carlson Press
- The Liberace Collection, 263 page Auction Catalogue jointly produced by Butterfield & Butterfield and Christie's, Los Angeles Convention Centre, 1988
6. Music books
- Liberace Deluxe Big Note Song Book, Shattinger International Music, New York, 1977 (Spirax paperback)
- Liberace by Candlelight – Piano Music of Liberace, Edwin H. Morris & Co. (paperback)
- Liberace Popular Standards, New York: Charles Hansen Music & Books
7. Miscellaneous
- Liberace: Your Personal Fashion Consultant, by Michael Feder and Karan Feder. Abrams Image, 2007 (paperback)
References
External links
liberace in German: Liberace
liberace in French: Liberace
liberace in Dutch: Liberace
liberace in Japanese: リベラーチェ
liberace in Polish: Liberace
liberace in Portuguese: Liberace
liberace in Finnish: Liberace
liberace in Swedish: Liberace