

As a woman who’s battled her own demons and lived to write about it, I was hooked from page one.”-Carrie White, author of Upper Cut: Highlights of My Hollywood Life “David has the audacity to lift the veil of secrecy around sugar daddy and sugar baby relationships, while treating serious mental health issues like drug and sex addiction with sensitivity. Not only for him, but for the reader since not a word reads anything but heartfelt and sincere.” The devastating heartbreak throughout makes David’s journey and destination hopeful beyond measure.
#Upper cut highlights of my hollywood life movie#
He spends most of his free time dragging his two children to movie theaters, surfing, and golfing.īold. The Arrangement: A Love Story is his first book.David lives in Bel Air, California, but likes to consider himself anything but the typical Hollywood type. In the jaw-dropping tradition of Californication and Valley of the Dolls, The Arrangement takes us down the Hollywood rabbit hole of sex, power, and money, leaving readers in delightful disbelief…because it’s all true.ĭavid Winkler is a successful film producer of such titles as Creed, Rocky Balboa, The Mechanic, and The Gambler. After the relationship begins magically, shadows begin to form and dark secrets take their toll. Using a website that connects successful older men with younger women for romantic/financial relationships, David meets Jordan, a beautiful Instagram model and influencer who harbors dreams of launching her acting career in Los Angeles. But seeking to avoid the drama and disappointment of dating and with his belief in “radical honesty” and ethical non-monogamy, David reasons a shortcut through modern courtship: he becomes a sugar daddy. A film producer of titles such as the Creed franchise, the fifty-three-year-old sits on the top tier of his profession, enjoys a wonderful relationship with his two children, and even gets along famously with his ex-wife. For ten years she sold Tova Borgnine haircare products on QVC.Everything in author David Winkler’s life reads like a “Once Upon a Time in Beverly Hills” fairytale. She has been in a Target commercial and a commercial for Fantastic Sams. She has appeared for Dewey Nicks in GQ, modeling, on separate occasions, with Foo Fighters and Jon Favreau. She has also styled Elvis Presley, Marlon Brando, Nancy Reagan, Michael Crichton more recently, she hair colored Brad Pitt, and for seven years styled Sandra Bullock George Hamilton remains a client from 1970, among many others frequenting her exclusive Beverly Hills salon, which opened in 2005. Film credentials include Model Shop, styling Anouk Aimee, The Goodbye Girl, styling Marsha Mason, Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore, styling Ellen Burstyn, One Flew Over the Cuckoos Nest, styling Louise Fletcher, Dollars, styling Goldie Hawn, Being There, styling Peter Sellers, Coma, styling Geneviève Bujold she was technical advisor on Shampoo, working with her clients, actors Warren Beatty, Julie Christie, and Goldie Hawn, and writer Robert Towne. She also did platform shows for Revlon and Clairol, on such stages as Century Plaza Ballroom and the Hollywood Palladium. This launched White as a hairstylist for film stars, as she did many American beauty product television commercials, from 1967 to 1977. In 1967 photographer Melvin Sokolsky commissioned White to act as hairdresser for Yardley commercials shot in London, with Jean Shrimpton, and India, with Donna Mitchell. Kenneth, in New York, clients, such as Betty Furness, Babs Paley, Mrs Milton Greene started seeing White upon the recommendation of hairdresser Alexandre de Paris, Ursula Andress and Capucine went to White, when they were visiting Hollywood. Upon the recommendation of hairdresser Mr. She appeared as herself on television for To Tell the Truth, in 1968. Through this connection, White took over George Masters's clientele, which included Nancy Reagan, Betsy Bloomingdale, Edith Mayer Goetz, and the wives of Hollywood society, including television and film stars. James Galanos recommended her to Jennifer Jones.

White began her hairdressing career in 1964, in Beverly Hills, working with Billy Grimes, Gene Shacove, and Richard Alcala. After graduating high school, she supported herself while pursuing a cosmetology degree by working at Bob's Big Boy and modeling hats downtown in the garment district to trying out for Playboy she was selected by Playboy as Playmate of the Month in July 1963. At Hollywood High, she studied art with June Hardwood and drama with John Engle and Martin Landau.

Carrie White was born as Carole Enwright, on Burton Way in Beverly Hills, and was uprooted to Pacoima, CA when she was seven, before moving back to Hollywood, CA at the age of fifteen.
