Carl Rollyson's Blog
June 21, 2012
Budd Schulberg's Hollywood, biography, and the blacklist
I asked biographer Marion Meade to comment on Budd Schulberg because he has come up several times on my Hollywood Legends blog (http://www.carlrollyson.com)
Here is her fascinating response:
BUDD, BLACKLIST, BIOGRAPHY, AND THE INTERVIEWS THAT GOT AWAY
My first meeting with Budd Schulberg took place on December 9, 1982, in midtown Manhattan, in a dark chilly apartment that appeared to be uninhabited. (A pied-a-terre, he explained.) I was surprised to be introduced to his attorney, the first time in my experience that an interview subject brought legal backup.
Previous subjects of mine had lived hundreds of years ago. Now, with Dorothy Parker, I was embarking on the life of a 20th century person and much of my material would come from those who’d known her. Budd Schulberg was one of hundreds I solicited for interviews, one of about a hundred who agreed to speak with me. In the Thirties, Parker, her husband Alan Campbell, and Schulberg had worked together at United Artists.
There was no problem setting up the interview, no question of mine that he refused to answer, no reason for his lawyer’s presence. Schulberg turned out to be a perfectly pleasant guy with a bad stutter but astute observations and excellent recall. The trouble came later.
Continuing to pursue interviews, I began running into people who instantly asked “Did you talk to Budd?” Or "You didn’t talk to Budd, did you?” To these queries I gave the same truthful answer.
In 1982, Schulberg was a prestigious writer honored for his novels (“What Makes Sammy Run?”) and screenplays (“On the Waterfront”). But an ugly scent of betrayal and controversy clung to him. A Communist Party member in the Thirties, he resigned after the Party attempted to influence his writing. In 1951, as a friendly witness before the House Un-American Activities Committee, he “named names” of other Party members.
I was fully aware of the blacklist and its implications, the wrecked lives, the broken careers, the prison terms, the legacy of hatred. At the same time, I also assumed that decades afterward a person like myself would be accepted as an impartial biographer simply trying to document a life encompassing both the literary and political. Obviously I was not going to ignore Parker’s left wing political activities or her subsequent blacklisting. What harm in a conversation with Schulberg? Was this the Hatfields and McCoys?
As I soon discovered, the blacklist has no sell-by date. It was incredible how fast doors were slammed in my face. The following individuals treated me like poison:
Ring Lardner, Jr. : screenwriter, one-time buddy of Schulberg’s, member of the “Hollywood Ten.” Served one year in prison, blacklisted.
Arnaud d’Usseau: playwright, screenwriter, Parker’s intimate friend and collaborator on “The Ladies of the Corridor,” blacklisted.
Lester Cole: screenwriter, another member of the “Hollywood Ten,” served ten months in prison, blacklisted.
Lillian Hellman; playwright, screenwriter, Parker’s friend and one-time executor. Given her contempt for biographers in general she would not likely have cooperated, no matter who I interviewed. But consorting with squealers and stool pigeons probably did not further my cause.
Ian McLellan Hunter, Oscar-winning screenwriter for “Roman Holiday” (fronting for blacklisted Dalton Trumbo), later blacklisted himself. Hunter agreed to see me but after learning that I had conversed with Budd—and had failed to clear our interview with Hellman--he physically bundled me out of his apartment and down the hall to the elevator. Left behind was my untouched glass of ice tea.
At the time, these rejections upset me a lot. In hindsight, I don’t believe that “What Fresh Hell Is This?” suffered because a number of other blacklisted writers and actors and their families were quite willing to speak. (My biggest regret was Lardner whose father had been a particularly favorite friend of Parker’s.) Still, it would have been smart to hold off on any contact with Budd until after seeing his enemies. My other choice was to evade or lie, which is what I would do today.
Here is her fascinating response:
BUDD, BLACKLIST, BIOGRAPHY, AND THE INTERVIEWS THAT GOT AWAY
My first meeting with Budd Schulberg took place on December 9, 1982, in midtown Manhattan, in a dark chilly apartment that appeared to be uninhabited. (A pied-a-terre, he explained.) I was surprised to be introduced to his attorney, the first time in my experience that an interview subject brought legal backup.
Previous subjects of mine had lived hundreds of years ago. Now, with Dorothy Parker, I was embarking on the life of a 20th century person and much of my material would come from those who’d known her. Budd Schulberg was one of hundreds I solicited for interviews, one of about a hundred who agreed to speak with me. In the Thirties, Parker, her husband Alan Campbell, and Schulberg had worked together at United Artists.
There was no problem setting up the interview, no question of mine that he refused to answer, no reason for his lawyer’s presence. Schulberg turned out to be a perfectly pleasant guy with a bad stutter but astute observations and excellent recall. The trouble came later.
Continuing to pursue interviews, I began running into people who instantly asked “Did you talk to Budd?” Or "You didn’t talk to Budd, did you?” To these queries I gave the same truthful answer.
In 1982, Schulberg was a prestigious writer honored for his novels (“What Makes Sammy Run?”) and screenplays (“On the Waterfront”). But an ugly scent of betrayal and controversy clung to him. A Communist Party member in the Thirties, he resigned after the Party attempted to influence his writing. In 1951, as a friendly witness before the House Un-American Activities Committee, he “named names” of other Party members.
I was fully aware of the blacklist and its implications, the wrecked lives, the broken careers, the prison terms, the legacy of hatred. At the same time, I also assumed that decades afterward a person like myself would be accepted as an impartial biographer simply trying to document a life encompassing both the literary and political. Obviously I was not going to ignore Parker’s left wing political activities or her subsequent blacklisting. What harm in a conversation with Schulberg? Was this the Hatfields and McCoys?
As I soon discovered, the blacklist has no sell-by date. It was incredible how fast doors were slammed in my face. The following individuals treated me like poison:
Ring Lardner, Jr. : screenwriter, one-time buddy of Schulberg’s, member of the “Hollywood Ten.” Served one year in prison, blacklisted.
Arnaud d’Usseau: playwright, screenwriter, Parker’s intimate friend and collaborator on “The Ladies of the Corridor,” blacklisted.
Lester Cole: screenwriter, another member of the “Hollywood Ten,” served ten months in prison, blacklisted.
Lillian Hellman; playwright, screenwriter, Parker’s friend and one-time executor. Given her contempt for biographers in general she would not likely have cooperated, no matter who I interviewed. But consorting with squealers and stool pigeons probably did not further my cause.
Ian McLellan Hunter, Oscar-winning screenwriter for “Roman Holiday” (fronting for blacklisted Dalton Trumbo), later blacklisted himself. Hunter agreed to see me but after learning that I had conversed with Budd—and had failed to clear our interview with Hellman--he physically bundled me out of his apartment and down the hall to the elevator. Left behind was my untouched glass of ice tea.
At the time, these rejections upset me a lot. In hindsight, I don’t believe that “What Fresh Hell Is This?” suffered because a number of other blacklisted writers and actors and their families were quite willing to speak. (My biggest regret was Lardner whose father had been a particularly favorite friend of Parker’s.) Still, it would have been smart to hold off on any contact with Budd until after seeing his enemies. My other choice was to evade or lie, which is what I would do today.
Published on June 21, 2012 08:35
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Tags:
biography, blacklist, budd-schulberg, hollywood
May 1, 2012
Lillian Hellman & Joel McCrea
The April 2012 Turner Classic Movies Newsletter announces Joel McCrea month. He was a wonderful actor. I got to know him better while working on my biography of Lillian Hellman. He appears in a film she wrote, "These Three," which you can see on TCM. On the TCM website you can watch the original movie trailer plus a crucial scene in the film. Hellman rewrote her controversial play, "The Children's Hour," for Hollywood abd did a very clever job. Look too for a wonderful brief performance from the always reliable Walter Brennan, the subject of a future biography by yours truly. While I'm at it, let me recommend Alice Kessler-Harris's new biography of Hellman. She does a superb job of putting one of my favorite subjects into a historical context. My review of the new Hellman biography will appear soon in the Minneapolis Star-Tribune.
Published on May 01, 2012 06:25
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Tags:
lillian-hellman