We have updated our Privacy Policy Please take a moment to review it. By continuing to use this site, you agree to the terms of our updated Privacy Policy.

Bring on the Empty Horses

Paperback / ISBN-13: 9780340839959

Price: £12.99

ON SALE: 5th June 2006

Genre: Biography & True Stories / Biography: General

Disclosure: If you buy products using the retailer buttons above, we may earn a commission from the retailers you visit.

Here is Niven at his best. He and Errol Flynn were filming The Charge of the Light Brigade for a director, Michael Curtiz, ‘whose Hungarian-orientated English was a joy to us all’. High on the rostrum he decided the moment had come to order the arrival on the scene of a hundred riderless chargers. “Okay,” he yelled into a megaphone, “Bring on the empty horses!” ‘

BRING ON THE EMPTY HORSES is the second part of David Niven’s internationally bestselling autobiography, following the superbly entertaining THE MOON’S A BALLOON. Both books were highly acclaimed by the critics and remain as wonderful reminders of a much-loved actor who epitomised, for many, the essential British gent, even when surrounded by the stars of Hollywood.

What's Inside

Read More Read Less

Reviews

Were David Niven not a famous actor, he would be thought a brilliant writer. And after this book he will surely be thought a brilliant writer
J.K. Galbraith
Hilariously readable
<i>Sunday Telegraph</i>
So bring on the empty horses and fill their saddles with shades of Cooper, Gable, Fairbanks and Flynn. This time David Niven is riding a winner
<i>Irish Times</i>
The best book buy available at the moment
<i>West Lancashire Evening Gazette</i>
Some very funny stories indeed, well told
<i>The Scotsman</i>
He is nothing if not an individualist: a raconteur of style and sophistication and a writer with imagination and a sense of pace . . . It adds to his stature
<i>Coventry Evening Telegraph</i>
David Niven has done it again!
<i>Boston Globe</i>
BRING ON THE EMPTY HORSES is a delight from start to finish. With shrewdness and warmth . . . Niven brings us to Hollywood in its golden prime, from the early '30s to the age of TV. Above all, he brings us them - the outstanding stars, producers, directors, writers, tycoons and oddballs, many of whom were his friends . . . An inspired mix of descriptions, impressions, and anecdotes.
<i>Publishers Weekly</i>
Might easily be the best book ever written about Hollywood.
<i>New York Times Book Review</i>
BRING ON THE EMPTY HORSES is a delight from start to finish. With shrewdness and warmth ... Niven brings us to Hollywood in its golden prime, from the early '30s to the age of TV. Above all, he brings us them - the outstanding stars, producers, directors, writers, tycoons and oddballs, many of whom were his friends ... An inspired mix of descriptions, impressions, and anecdotes.
<i>Publishers Weekly</i>
Might easily be the best book ever written about Hollywood.
<i>New York Times Book Review</i>
Hilariously readable
<i>Sunday Telegraph</i>
A big name-dropping bitch of a book written with a wit as sharp as a dagger - and more than one famous personality gets it right between the shoulder blades ... Niven continues to weave the spell he cast on us with his autobiography
<i>Belfast Telegraph</i>
His charm and twinkling sense of humour are rarely completely suppressed
<i>Sunday Express</i>
So bring on the empty horses and fill their saddles with shades of Cooper, Gable, Fairbanks and Flynn. This time David Niven is riding a winner
<i>Irish Times</i>
BRING ON THE EMPTY HORSES surpasses his first book. It is fun personified, hilarious in parts, highly entertaining and provides excellent reading
<i>Evening Post</i>, Port Elizabeth
BRING ON THE EMPTY HORSES has star quality
<i>Christchurch Star</i>, New Zealand
A really glamorous autobiography
<i>Woman</i>
David Niven gives a marvellously readable account of his contacts with Hollywood
<i>Birmingham Post</i>
Niven still tells a good tale
<i>The Observer</i>
One of the most illuminating books yet to come out about Hollywood
<i>Press and Journal</i>
He is nothing if not an individualist: a raconteur of style and sophistication and a writer with imagination and a sense of pace ... It adds to his stature
<i>Coventry Evening Telegraph</i>