He's a high profile super-agent and showbiz entrepreneur who famously was quoted as saying: "I don't have nervous breakdowns, I give them," and in is much-anticipated autobiography, Harry M. Miller dishes the dirt and tells all about clients as well as his colourful life.
Miller's turbulent journey to fame and fortune began as a young man, when he headed for Australia from New Zealand in the late 1960's determined to become one of the world's youngest show business impresarios. In the decades which followed, he evolved to become a leading figure in Australian media and entertainment, working with an impressive cast of entertainment legends including Louis Armstrong, Shirley Bassey, The Rolling Stones and Alan Jones.
For Miller, now aged 75, the road he travelled was peppered with successes and failures, glamorous women, several marriages, children, a difficult spell in prison, and some infamous battles with media icons. This book not only shares anecdotes about some of many famous faces this super-agent has encountered, but is also an open account of his own life, including the childhood he has described as "a bastard." Fast moving and witty, it's a story of a man who has lived large.