Anyone else famous for being the subject of a biography?

Herman Melville. By 1910, he was an obscure 19th Century author whose works were nearly forgotten. Only his first two books – Omoo and Typee – were successes, and his later books – the ones now considered milestones of literature – received critical thrashings. But in 1921, Russell Weaver’s biography Herman Melville: Man, Mariner and Mystic put him back on the literary map, as did Lewis Mumford’s biography from 1929, Herman Melville: A Study of His Life and Vision. Without those biographies (and other critical works of the 1920s), Melville would have remained forgotten.

I found this difficult to believe – Didn’t “Moby Dick” remain in print? They mad a silent film version of it!
But cruiding through Googfle books N-Gram, I find this:

and this, from 1900:

It’s very surprising the Moby Dick was actually out of print for many years, and had few readers.

Oh yeah, Melville was nowhere for years. Heck, Faulkner and Fitzgerald had some/most (?) of their books out of print until Malcolm Cowley anthologized their works and framed their writing from a scholarly standpoint…