To Hell and Back | |
Author: | Meat Loaf, with David Dalton |
Language: | English |
Genre: | Autobiography |
Publisher: | Virgin Publishing |
Release Date: | 2000 |
Media Type: | Print (Paperback) |
Isbn: | 0-7535-0443-X |
Oclc: | 43719861 |
To Hell and Back is the title of the autobiography of rock singer, Meat Loaf. It was later made into a television movie, called Meat Loaf: To Hell and Back, with W. Earl Brown in the title role.
To Hell and Back was co-written by David Dalton and was publicized as the true story of Meat Loaf's life and career from young boy in Texas to the time of the release of his massive comeback album, in 1993. Included in the book were references to his drunken father beating him and even trying to kill him, how he once picked up Charles Manson on a highway, how he saw John F. Kennedy land in Dallas, and—upon hearing that Kennedy had been shot—going to Parkland Hospital, seeing Jackie Kennedy coming out of the car, along with Governor John Connally, and describes his fall into alcoholism and depression after the release of the first Bat Out of Hell album in 1977. It also describes how he was in New York City when he heard the news of the death of his mother and how he scrounged money for a flight home from his fellow cast in the musical he was appearing in at the time.
To Hell and Back: The Meat Loaf Story | |
Director: | Jim McBride |
Starring: | W. Earl Brown |
Language: | English |
Music: | Hummie Mann |
Network: | VH1 |
The television movie version of the book, directed by Jim McBride, is only vaguely faithful to the autobiography itself. Changes which are obvious include showing Meat Loaf as still in Texas—indeed still in high school—when his father comes in, looking sad, and he realizes that his mother has died. In addition little is made of his time between leaving Texas and meeting Jim Steinman. A large portion of the film is devoted to the attempts to get Bat Out of Hell released and Meat Loaf's alcoholism problems and legal arguments, especially with Steinman. The film ends with Meat performing a concert at a cancer charity event, which Meat agrees to attend due to the death of his mother from cancer. The song "I'd Do Anything for Love (But I Won't Do That)" is sung, initially a cappella, at the very end of the film, when in real life, at the charity, he sang "I'd Lie for You (And That's the Truth)".
Actor | Role | |
---|---|---|
Meat Loaf | ||
Leslie Aday | ||
Zachary Throne | Jim Steinman | |
Kevin Frears | ||
Wilma Aday | ||
Wes Aday | ||
Clerk | ||
Tim Curry | ||
Todd Rundgren |