Born in Central Europe during the twilight of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, three âvonderful vimmenââZsa Zsa, Eva, and Magda Gaborâtransferred their glittery dreams and gold-digging ambitions to Hollywood. They supplemented Americaâs most Imperial Age with âguts, glamour, and goulash,â and reigned there as the Hungarian equivalents of Helen of Troy, Madame du Barry, and Madame de Pompadour.
More effectively than any army, these Bombshells from Budapest conquered kings, dukes, and princes, always with a special passion for millionaires, as they amassed fortunes, broke hearts, and amused sophisticated voyeurs on two continents. With their wit, charm, and beauty, thanks to training inspired by the glittering traditions of the Imperial Habsburgs, they became famous for being famous.
âWe sold the New World high-priced goods from the Old World that it didnât need, but bought anyway,â Zsa Zsa said.
In time, they would collectively entrap some 20 husbands and seduce perhaps 500 other men as well, many plucked directly from the pages of Whoâs Who in the World.
At long last, Blood Moon lifts the âmink-and-diamondâ curtain on this amazing trio of blood-related sisters, whose complicated intrigues have never been fully explored before.
Orson Welles asserted, âThe world will never see the likes of the Gabor sisters again. From the villas of Cannes to the mansions of Bel Air, they were the centerpiece of countless boudoirs. They were also the most notorious mantraps since Eve. I can personally vouch for that.â
HUNGARIAN RHAPSODIES: Celebrity biographer Darwin Porter , a former entertainment columnist for The Miami Herald, has been fascinated by the Gabor's "new Hungarian dynasty" since he first began entertaining Jolie Gabor, the family's savvy matriarch, at his home in New York City in collaboration with the publication of one of her cookbooks. Since then, his interest in the Budapest Bombshells (aka the Man-Eating Magyars) has carried him into the salons, some of them in Austria and Hungary, of dozens of eyewitnesses, each eager to share their insights into the tricks and techniques of some of the greatest courtesans of the 20th century.