[December 12th
will mark the
100th anniversary of Frank Sinatra’s birth, and since Sinatra
was as well-known for his famous
group of friends as for his individual achievements, I wanted to spend the
week AmericanStudying such circles of friends. Leading up to a special weekend
post on the Rat Pack!]
Dorothy Parker and Robert Benchley are the most
famous members of the group of 30
writers, editors, and actors who met regularly for lunch at New York’s Alongquin Hotel between
1919 and 1927. But here are four other members who might surprise you and whose
collective contributions to American culture and society are just as
significant:
1)
Edna Ferber: Ferber
published two of her most acclaimed and enduring novels during the Round Table
years: So
Big (1924), which won the Pulitzer Prize; and Show
Boat (1926), which was adapted into one of the most popular
American musicals the following year. Two of her later novels became iconic
Western films: Cimarron
(1929; adapted into the 1931 Best Picture winning film) and Giant
(1952; adapted into the 1956 film with James Dean, Rock Hudson, and
Elizabeth Tayor). All told, Ferber was one of the 20th century’s
most popular and influential novelists, and the Round Table helped launch that
career.
2)
Ruth Hale: Hale’s
striking biography connects to a number of crucial early 20th
century histories: she was a prominent advocate
for women’s suffrage and the 19th Amendment, a lifelong feminist
who established the influential Lucy
Stone League in 1921, one of the first female New York Times reporters who traveled to Europe to report on World
War I, and a drama critic who traced and contributed to the rise of modern
American drama. And along with her husband, the journalist
Heywood Broun, she became one of the most consistent participants in the
Round Table, helping shape its social and political activisms.
3)
Herman
Mankiewicz: During the Round Table’s era Mankiewicz was best known for his
theatrical efforts and criticisms, which included becoming the New Yorker’s first regular theatre critic and
collaborating with fellow Round Tablers Heywood Broun, Dorothy Parker, Robert
Sherwood, and George
Kaufman on multiple productions. He would bring these experiences to the
exploding new world of Hollywood filmmaking, becoming one of the most prolific
and influential screenwriters in Hollywood history: Citizen Kane
(1941) would be sufficient all by itself, but Mankiewicz also worked on The Wizard of Oz (1939), Dinner at Eight (1933), numerous Marx
Brother movies, and dozens
of other films.
4)
Harpo Marx:
Thanks to his relationships with both Mankiewicz and (especially) theatre
critic and Round Table co-founder Alexander
Woollcott, the second-oldest Marx Brother became a frequent Round Table
participant as well. Although Harpo is of course known for the entirely
non-speaking, very influential style of physical comedy
he employed in the Marx Brothers films, his Round Table connections led to
another comic role: the character of “Banjo” in George Kaufman’s play The
Man Who Came to Dinner (1939) was based on Harpo, and he would perform that
role (opposite Woollcott) in a subsequent production of the play. Just one
more example of the cultural and social legacy of this New York circle of
artistic friends.
Next friend
circle tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think?
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