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Zeppo

The Reluctant Marx Brother

Robert S. Bader

“Marx Brothers authority Bader has done a remarkable job successfully uncovering the story of the unknown brother, revealing a genuinely complex character. This book is revelatory not just about Zeppo but also about the rest of the Marx Brothers.” - Library Journal


Zeppo was the Marx Brother who didn’t want to go into the family business. A juvenile delinquent in his teen years, before joining his brothers on stage, Zeppo balanced two careers: auto mechanic and petty criminal. Even after getting dragged into the world of entertainment—for sixteen years, he did his familial duty as a vaudeville, Broadway, and movie star—he finally made his escape from the Four Marx Brothers. After failed attempts to find steady work in real estate, screenwriting, and the restaurant business, Zeppo finally hit it big as a Hollywood talent agent, representing stars like Barbara Stanwyck, Fred MacMurray, and Lana Turner. From there, he bred racehorses, owned a manufacturing plant, tried out citrus ranching and commercial fishing, and patented several new inventions. He was, in short, a complex character, and his own family never quite figured him out.

Zeppo: The Reluctant Marx Brother gives a lively account of this checkered life and career. As Robert Bader recounts, Zeppo’s lifelong addiction to gambling led him into relationships with several notorious organized crime figures, and he would ultimately appear before grand juries more frequently than movie cameras. (He was certainly the only Marx Brother who saw the corpse of a friend in a newspaper crime scene photo.) Socially, he mixed as easily with mobsters like Mickey Cohen as he did with movie stars like Clark Gable. Comprehensively researched with the full cooperation of Zeppo’s estate, including the first-ever interviews with his two sons, this is a remarkable look at the many lives of Zeppo Marx—even the ones he did his best to keep secret.

  • Details
  • Details
  • Author
  • Author
  • Reviews
  • Reviews
  • Features
  • Features
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers / Applause
Pages: 368 • Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-1-4930-8796-9 • Hardback • October 2024 • $34.95 • (£30.00)
Subjects: Performing Arts / Film / History & Criticism, Performing Arts / Film & Video / Biography, Biography & Autobiography / Entertainment & Performing Arts

Robert S. Bader is the author of Four of the Three Musketeers: The Marx Brothers on Stage (2016) and the editor of Groucho Marx and Other Short Stories and Tall Tales (1993), an anthology of the comedian’s lost writings. He is also the co-author of Speaking of Harpo (2022), the autobiography of Harpo Marx's wife, Susan Fleming Marx.

Not much is known about Zeppo Marx, which is probably how he wanted it—but that all changes with this first full-length biography. The youngest of his much older theatrical siblings who made up the Marx Brothers, Zeppo was pushed into the family act to avoid truancy. Unable to develop a distinctive stage persona against his already famous brothers, Zeppo made five films with his brothers (including Monkey Business, Horse Feathers, and Duck Soup) but ultimately left the group at the height of their fame in 1933. Though he’s often characterized as the dullest of the group, this biography contends that the private Zeppo may have been the family’s most exciting and morally checkered member. His subsequent varied careers as an engineer and talent agent and constant dalliances with the criminal underworld expose a man forever striving to outdo his siblings’ successes and unfortunate excesses. Marx Brothers authority Bader has done a remarkable job successfully uncovering the story of the unknown brother, revealing a genuinely complex character. This book is revelatory not just about Zeppo but also about the rest of the Marx Brothers.


— Library Journal


Bader’s meticulous research provides fascinating details about my father that I was unaware of. He's accurately portrayed as a charming, funny, but narcissistic individual driven to constantly prove himself. This is a wonderful look into the life of a brilliant man always striving to be somebody­ – and then ...somebody else!


— Tim Marx, son of Zeppo Marx


What a revelation! The least known Marx Brother had the most colorful and unpredictable life, which is fully explored by Robert Bader in this unflinching biography. I couldn't put it down.


— Leonard Maltin, American film critic and historian


It’s not enough that Robert Bader wrote my favorite book about the Marx Brothers (Four of the Three Musketeers.) He’s now topped it by writing a revelatory book about Zeppo, the least interesting of the brothers on screen. The short version: Zeppo was by far the most interesting of the brothers off-screen. Who knew?


— Scott Eyman, author of Charlie Chaplin vs. America


My Uncle Zeppo was a fascinating and complex guy. He lived a very unusual and successful life, but he was difficult to know. I only really got to know him when l read Zeppo: The Reluctant Marx Brother.


— Bill Marx, son of Harpo Marx


10/18/24, Washington Post Book World: Donald Liebenson discusses this book alongside Shemp! and includes comments from an interview with the author.
Link: https://www.washingtonpost.com/books/2024/10/18/shemp-howard-zeppo-marx-books/



10/6/24, The Guardian’s Observer: Robert Bader is interviewed for this feature article about the book.

Link: https://www.theguardian.com/books/2024/oct/05/this-guy-was-shady-zeppo-marxs-underworld-links-revealed-in-new-book



11/11/24, Leonard Maltin: This is featured in a roundup of new and notable books.

Link: https://leonardmaltin.com/new-and-notable-books-november-2024/



Zeppo

The Reluctant Marx Brother

Cover Image
Hardback
Summary
Summary
  • “Marx Brothers authority Bader has done a remarkable job successfully uncovering the story of the unknown brother, revealing a genuinely complex character. This book is revelatory not just about Zeppo but also about the rest of the Marx Brothers.” - Library Journal


    Zeppo was the Marx Brother who didn’t want to go into the family business. A juvenile delinquent in his teen years, before joining his brothers on stage, Zeppo balanced two careers: auto mechanic and petty criminal. Even after getting dragged into the world of entertainment—for sixteen years, he did his familial duty as a vaudeville, Broadway, and movie star—he finally made his escape from the Four Marx Brothers. After failed attempts to find steady work in real estate, screenwriting, and the restaurant business, Zeppo finally hit it big as a Hollywood talent agent, representing stars like Barbara Stanwyck, Fred MacMurray, and Lana Turner. From there, he bred racehorses, owned a manufacturing plant, tried out citrus ranching and commercial fishing, and patented several new inventions. He was, in short, a complex character, and his own family never quite figured him out.

    Zeppo: The Reluctant Marx Brother gives a lively account of this checkered life and career. As Robert Bader recounts, Zeppo’s lifelong addiction to gambling led him into relationships with several notorious organized crime figures, and he would ultimately appear before grand juries more frequently than movie cameras. (He was certainly the only Marx Brother who saw the corpse of a friend in a newspaper crime scene photo.) Socially, he mixed as easily with mobsters like Mickey Cohen as he did with movie stars like Clark Gable. Comprehensively researched with the full cooperation of Zeppo’s estate, including the first-ever interviews with his two sons, this is a remarkable look at the many lives of Zeppo Marx—even the ones he did his best to keep secret.

Details
Details
  • Rowman & Littlefield Publishers / Applause
    Pages: 368 • Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
    978-1-4930-8796-9 • Hardback • October 2024 • $34.95 • (£30.00)
    Subjects: Performing Arts / Film / History & Criticism, Performing Arts / Film & Video / Biography, Biography & Autobiography / Entertainment & Performing Arts
Author
Author
  • Robert S. Bader is the author of Four of the Three Musketeers: The Marx Brothers on Stage (2016) and the editor of Groucho Marx and Other Short Stories and Tall Tales (1993), an anthology of the comedian’s lost writings. He is also the co-author of Speaking of Harpo (2022), the autobiography of Harpo Marx's wife, Susan Fleming Marx.

Reviews
Reviews
  • Not much is known about Zeppo Marx, which is probably how he wanted it—but that all changes with this first full-length biography. The youngest of his much older theatrical siblings who made up the Marx Brothers, Zeppo was pushed into the family act to avoid truancy. Unable to develop a distinctive stage persona against his already famous brothers, Zeppo made five films with his brothers (including Monkey Business, Horse Feathers, and Duck Soup) but ultimately left the group at the height of their fame in 1933. Though he’s often characterized as the dullest of the group, this biography contends that the private Zeppo may have been the family’s most exciting and morally checkered member. His subsequent varied careers as an engineer and talent agent and constant dalliances with the criminal underworld expose a man forever striving to outdo his siblings’ successes and unfortunate excesses. Marx Brothers authority Bader has done a remarkable job successfully uncovering the story of the unknown brother, revealing a genuinely complex character. This book is revelatory not just about Zeppo but also about the rest of the Marx Brothers.


    — Library Journal


    Bader’s meticulous research provides fascinating details about my father that I was unaware of. He's accurately portrayed as a charming, funny, but narcissistic individual driven to constantly prove himself. This is a wonderful look into the life of a brilliant man always striving to be somebody­ – and then ...somebody else!


    — Tim Marx, son of Zeppo Marx


    What a revelation! The least known Marx Brother had the most colorful and unpredictable life, which is fully explored by Robert Bader in this unflinching biography. I couldn't put it down.


    — Leonard Maltin, American film critic and historian


    It’s not enough that Robert Bader wrote my favorite book about the Marx Brothers (Four of the Three Musketeers.) He’s now topped it by writing a revelatory book about Zeppo, the least interesting of the brothers on screen. The short version: Zeppo was by far the most interesting of the brothers off-screen. Who knew?


    — Scott Eyman, author of Charlie Chaplin vs. America


    My Uncle Zeppo was a fascinating and complex guy. He lived a very unusual and successful life, but he was difficult to know. I only really got to know him when l read Zeppo: The Reluctant Marx Brother.


    — Bill Marx, son of Harpo Marx


Features
Features
  • 10/18/24, Washington Post Book World: Donald Liebenson discusses this book alongside Shemp! and includes comments from an interview with the author.
    Link: https://www.washingtonpost.com/books/2024/10/18/shemp-howard-zeppo-marx-books/



    10/6/24, The Guardian’s Observer: Robert Bader is interviewed for this feature article about the book.

    Link: https://www.theguardian.com/books/2024/oct/05/this-guy-was-shady-zeppo-marxs-underworld-links-revealed-in-new-book



    11/11/24, Leonard Maltin: This is featured in a roundup of new and notable books.

    Link: https://leonardmaltin.com/new-and-notable-books-november-2024/



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