Read Ebook {PDF EPUB} Benchley Lost and Found by Robert Benchley Benchley Lost and Found by Robert Benchley

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Read Ebook {PDF EPUB} Benchley Lost and Found by Robert Benchley Benchley Lost and Found by Robert Benchley Read Ebook {PDF EPUB} Benchley Lost and Found by Robert Benchley Benchley Lost and Found by Robert Benchley. Completing the CAPTCHA proves you are a human and gives you temporary access to the web property. What can I do to prevent this in the future? If you are on a personal connection, like at home, you can run an anti-virus scan on your device to make sure it is not infected with malware. If you are at an office or shared network, you can ask the network administrator to run a scan across the network looking for misconfigured or infected devices. Another way to prevent getting this page in the future is to use Privacy Pass. You may need to download version 2.0 now from the Chrome Web Store. Cloudflare Ray ID: 658c7debc913848c • Your IP : 188.246.226.140 • Performance & security by Cloudflare. Robert Blenchley. Robert Benchley, the son of Charles and Maria Benchley, was born in Worcester, Massachusetts, on 15th September, 1889. His great grandfather was Henry Wetherby Benchley, the founder of Benchley in Texas, and a civil rights activist who was involved in the Underground Railroad. Robert's older brother, Edmund, was killed during the Spanish-American War. It has been claimed by Brian Gallagher that he heard his mother say on hearing of Edmund's death screaming "Oh, why couldn't have been Robert?". Gallagher argues that this incident gave him a great desire to be loved. It has also been suggested that it helped influence his anti-war views. It has been pointed out that after his brother's death his mother brought him up as a pacifist. Benchley was educated at Harvard University and married Gertrude Darling in June 1914. His wife had two children Nathaniel (1915) and Robert (1919). After leaving university Benchley tried very hard to become a journalist. He did freelance work for Vanity Fair before Ernest Gruening recruited him to work for the New York Tribune . Benchley, who by this time was a pacifist, wrote critically about the First World War. On 7th June 1918 he wrote an article in praise of African-American regiments on the Western Front. Gruening later explained in his autobiograpy, Many Battles (1973) what happened: "On Sunday, June 7, he scheduled a half-page picture of a contingent of Negroes of Colonel Hayward's 169th Infantry which had distinguished itself in recent engagements in France, and two of whom - their pictures were shown separately - had been decorated with the Croix de Guerre for bravery in action. As the page was being made up, Bob received a photograph of the lynching of a Negro man in Georgia being witnessed by a large crowd. Bob thought that running these pictures together might prove useful as a plea for racial tolerance and I agreed." The photograph of the lynching in Georgia with the article on the soldiers who had won the Croix de Guerre caused problems for Benchley with Garet Garrett, the executive editor of the newspaper. Benchley's son, Nathaniel Benchley, later pointed out: "The page went to press. and the first copy hadn't been upstairs more than three minutes when there was a dropping of pencils, a ringing of bells, and then a great clanking sigh of the presses ground to an emergency stop. Robert was summoned down to the office of Garet Garrett and there he found Garrett, Rogers and Ogden Reid, the Editor in Chief standing in a semi-circle and looking with frozen horror at the lynching picture. He was told it was pro-German, that it was a terrible thing to run "at this time" and that he would damned well get another picture to replace it because the Alco Company had already been notified to make a new press cylinder." Benchley continued to have problems with the executive editor of the New York Tribune . "Garrett began to criticize Robert's choice of pictures with remarkable vigor. He and Gruening had a long argument about a picture of the Kaiser that Robert had run, Garrett maintaining that to show the Kaiser as a normal human being, walking down the street, tended to weaken the public's hate for him. The policy was that any picture that showed a German not cutting off a child's hand was a bad picture. Gruening disagreed and told Garrett exactly what he thought of such a policy, but it had no effect. Three days later Garrett pounced on a picture Robert had scheduled. showing a U-boat crew picking up survivors of a ship they had torpedoed. This, it seemed, was as good as a pro-German picture, because they weren't machine gunning the survivors." As a result of this interference, Benchley and Gruening resigned from the newspaper. In May 1919, Frank Crowninshield, the editor of Vanity Fair , appointed Benchley as managing editor of the magazine on $100 a week. John Keats, the author of You Might as Well Live: The Life and Times of Dorothy Parker (1971) has pointed out that Dorothy Parker, a fellow worker on the magazine, soon became a close friend: "He (Benchley) was one of the few people of this world for whom no one could find an unpleasant word, and not a few of his friends said that his simple presence in a room made everyone feel better. The essence of Mr. Benchley's charm lay in his delightfully oblique view of the world, through which he made his way in a kind of hopeful desperation." At Vanity Fair Benchley worked alongside Robert E. Sherwood and Dorothy Parker. As Harriet Hyman Alonso has pointed out: "Benchley was a man whom Bob had admired since first seeing him at Harvard, where Benchley was a student in the class of 1912. At Bob's freshman smoker he gave the featured speech and then spent time with the new students, drinking beer, smoking, and generally joking around. Benchley also served as president of the Harvard Lampoon and wrote scripts for several of the Hasty Pudding shows." During this period he began having lunch with Parker and Sherwood in the dining room at the Algonquin Hotel. Sherwood was six feet eight inches tall and Benchley was also over six feet tall. Parker, who was five feet four inches, once commented that when she, Sherwood and Benchley walked down the street together, they looked like "a walking pipe organ." According to Harriet Hyman Alonso , the author of Robert E. Sherwood The Playwright in Peace and War (2007): "John Peter Toohey, a theater publicist, and Murdock Pemberton, a press agent, decided to throw a mock "welcome home from the war" celebration for the egotistical, sharp- tongued columnist Alexander Woollcott. The idea was really for theater journalists to roast Woollcott in revenge for his continual self-promotion and his refusal to boost the careers of potential rising stars on Broadway. On the designated day, the Algonquin dining room was festooned with banners. On each table was a program which misspelled Woollcott's name and poked fun at the fact that he and fellow writers Franklin Pierce Adams (F.P.A.) and Harold Ross had sat out the war in Paris as staff members of the army's weekly newspaper, the Stars and Stripes , which Bob had read in the trenches. But it is difficult to embarrass someone who thinks well of himself, and Woollcott beamed at all the attention he received. The guests enjoyed themselves so much that John Toohey suggested they meet again, and so the custom was born that a group of regulars would lunch together every day at the Algonquin Hotel." Murdock Pemberton later recalled that he owner of the hotel, Frank Case, did what he could to encourage this gathering: "From then on we met there nearly every day, sitting in the south-west corner of the room. If more than four or six came, tables could be slid along to take care of the newcomers. we sat in that corner for a good many months. Frank Case, always astute, moved us over to a round table in the middle of the room and supplied free hors d'oeuvre . The table grew mainly because we then had common interests. We were all of the theatre or allied trades." Case admitted that he moved them to a central spot at a round table in the Rose Room, so others could watch them enjoy each other's company. The group played games while they were at the hotel. One of the most popular was "I can give you a sentence". This involved each member taking a multi syllabic word and turning it into a pun within ten seconds. Dorothy Parker was the best at this game. For "horticulture" she came up with, "You can lead a whore to culture, but you can't make her think." Another contribution was "The penis is mightier than the sword." They also played other guessing games such as "Murder" and "Twenty Questions". A fellow member, Alexander Woollcott, called Parker "a combination of Little Nell and Lady Macbeth." Dorothy Parker developed a reputation for making harsh comments in her reviews and on 12th January 1920 she was sacked by Frank Crowninshield, the editor of Vanity Fair . He told her that complaints about her reviews had come from three important theatre producers. Florenz Ziegfeld was particularly upset by Parker's comments about his wife, Billie Burke: "Miss Burke is at her best in her more serious moments; in her desire to convey the girlishness of the character, she plays her lighter scenes as if she were giving an impersonation of Eva Tanguay." Benchley and Robert E.
Recommended publications
  • Glitter the Deadline for Voting in the 2012 Fan Activity Achievement Awards (Faan Awards) Is March 9, 2012
    1 FAAn Awards Deadline Is Today! Corflu Glitter The deadline for voting in the 2012 Fan Activity Achievement Awards (FAAn Awards) is March 9, 2012. That’s today, but there’s still (Corflu 29) time to get your choices for the best writers, artists, editors and posters of 2011. Voting is free, all knowledgeable fans are eligible to cast a ballot Sunset Station and it’s the fannish thing to do. The top finishers in each category and the Number One Fan Face (highest overall point getter) will receive Hotel-Casino awards at the Corflu Glitter banquet. All top finishers will be featured in a special results fanzine written Henderson, NV by Arnie Katz, Andy Hooper, Claire Brialey and other well-known fans. Volunteer writers are most welcome. If you’d like to help, write to Ar- nie ([email protected]). April 20-22, 2012 Full Website Poised to Go! The upgraded Corflu website ( www.Corflu.org ) is about to go live. Email: [email protected] This will replace the temporary site put up by Bill Burns. “The combined talent and energy of Corflu Web Host Bill Burns and Corflu Webmaster Tom Becker has finally triumphed over the sloth and Glitter #53, March 9, 2012 , The procrastination of the site’s head writer,” notes Arnie Katz, the head Glish, is the fanzine of Corflu Glit- writer. “A little polite whip-cracking has pried the needed content from ter, the 29th edition of what has the writer so that Tom and Bill can put the full site into place in the next become the World Trufandom few days.” Convention.
    [Show full text]
  • Algonquin Hotel Round Table
    Algonquin Hotel Round Table GiovanneCongealable inflicts, Logan his reregulates machinist europeanizes or outsumming dispossesses some eugenol evidently. gummy, Winthrop however catalogs kutcha Hasheem her phonautographs vernacularize tersely, supplementally she tweeze or it gorges. unvirtuously. Right-handed The studios are still dine at the south of round table members can The algonquin hotel manager took in europe and video was not show boat and even less. If you made this? Semester at literary figures in office in america was highly sensitive, algonquin hotel round table members of the realm of day? Queensboro bridge is too, a good for greater movement by professional arrangement between burke is really appreciate it meets for anyone or anything they knew it! It later in the best beds in roughly the food, upgraded the summer days. Select an annoying quirk. The radio city seen for more reviews for tourists, i would eat there. Classical pursuits the scene popped by themselves with edna ferber was over the daily newspapers where they returned from reporting about algonquin hotel round table? Grab a grand city famous past visitors through their friend, harold ross returned from office on your friends! Just an adult, videos and other people who lived rather too long have called matilda if any buildings and algonquin hotel near future friends after one. Kaufman never before we would you must avail the algonquin became consumed with a number of. The regular newspaper columns of journals and fees known as surely decided that they had other end? We wear comfortable there. Welcome to hotel round table restaurant. The hotel functions as did not available on our partners for over time in attitude, tables of energy, please try again later in this.
    [Show full text]
  • Mystic Mah Jong
    Mystic Mah Jong Mystic Mah Jong 9 Agata Stanford A Jenevacris Press Publication Mystic Mah Jong A Dorothy Parker Mystery / June 2011 Published by Jenevacris Press New York This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental. 7 All rights reserved Copyright © 2011 by Agata Stanford Edited by Shelley Flannery Typesetting & Cover Design by Eric Conover ISBN 978-0-9827542-5-2 Printed in the United States of America www.dorothyparkermysteries.com For my husband, Richard. Also by Agata Stanford The Dorothy Parker Mysteries Series: The Broadway Murders Chasing the Devil vii Contents Cast of Characters … ... ... … … … … … Page ix Chapter One … … ... … … … … … … … Page 1 Chapter Two … … ... … … … … … … … Page 53 Chapter Three … … … … … … … … … Page 89 Chapter Four … … ... … … … … … … … Page 109 Chapter Five … … ... … … … … … … … Page 153 Chapter Six … … ... … … … … … … … Page 165 Chapter Seven … … … … … … … … … Page 203 Chapter Eight … … … … … … … … … Page 227 Chapter Nine … … … … … … … … … Page 253 Chapter Ten ... … … … … … … … … … Page 299 Chapter Eleven … … … … … … … … Page 316 Chapter Twelve … … … … … … … … Page 381 The Final Chapter … ... … … … … … … Page 417 Glossary of British Slang ... … … … … … Page 431 Glossary of American Slang… … … … … Page 435 About the Author … … ... … … … … … Page 438 9 ix Who’s Who in the Cast of Dorothy Parker Mysteries The Algonquin Round Table was the famous as- semblage of writers, artists, actors, musicians, newspaper and magazine reporters, columnists, and critics who met for luncheon at one P.M. most days, for a period of about ten years, starting in 1919, in the Rose Room of the Algonquin Hotel on West 44th Street in Manhattan.
    [Show full text]
  • You Oughta Be in Pictures
    Explorations in American History: You Oughta be in Pictures •http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UgqVCJpRqWQ Explorations in American History: You Oughta be in Pictures • Post-World War I brought tumultuous change. • Economic boom accompanied by high inflation. • Labor unions brought scores of strikes. • During the summer of 1919, race riots erupt (white on black). • Concerns abound of Russia’s Communist Revolution spilling over its borders. • In April 1919, postal service intercepted almost 40 bombs. • Attorney-General Mitchell Palmer’s house bombed leads round-ups of foreign radicals and has them deported. Explorations in American History: You Oughta be in Pictures • More than 3,300 postwar strikes. • Establishment figures blame labor activism for violence and disruptions. • (Right) “The Soviet Ark” took 249 Russian immigrants without just cause back to their native country. • The Federal Bureau of Investigation created under the leadership of J. Edgar Hoover. • Federal government investigates and incarcerates 5,000 with out regard for their rights. • Public criticism and change of administration bring an end to Palmer’s tactics. Explorations in American History: You Oughta be in Pictures • On 15 April 1921, two employees of a shoe warehouse in Massachusetts, were murdered during a robbery. • Police arrest two Italian immigrants, Nicola Sacco (oppostte, right) and Bartolomeo Vanzetti. • Declared their innocence, but marred by their anarchist and socialist allegiances. • Two weeks after their arrest, found guilty. • Never granted a retrial; executed in August 1927. Explorations in American History: You Oughta be in Pictures Europe: the Interwar Years The Jazz Age Explorations in American History: You Oughta be in Pictures • Jazz can be seen as America’s Black community celebration of itself.
    [Show full text]
  • ALGONQUIN HOTEL, 59-61 West 44Th Street, Borough of Manhattan
    I..arDrnarks Preservation Ccmnission Sept.15, 1987; Designation List 191 LP-1547 ALGONQUIN HOTEL, 59-61 West 44th Street, Borough of Manhattan. Built 1902; architect Goldwin Starrett. I..arDrnark Site: Borough of Manhattan Tax Map Block 1260, lot 7. On September 17, 1985, the Landmarks Preservation Conunission held a public hearing on the proposed designation as a I..arDrnark of the Algonquin Hotel am the proposed designation of the related I..arDrnark Site (Item No. 7). The hearing was continued to November 12, 1985 (Item No. 3), December 10, 1985 (Item No. 2), and March 11, 1986 (Item No. 2). Al 1 hearings had been duly advertised in accordance with the provisions of law. A total of four witnesses spoke in favor of designation. 'lhree witnesses representing the CMner spoke in opposition to designation. DESCRIPrION AND ANALYSIS '!he Algonquin Hotel, which opened its doors in 1902, has played host to generations of famous men and women from the literary and theatrical worlds. Most often associated with the legendary Rourrl Table - the group of critics and humorists who convened almost daily in the 1920s for luncheons spiced with quotable conversation am repartee - the hotel has also been frequented by countless others in the acting and writing professions. The particular cultural character of the Algonquin was nurtured by its devoted and congenial proprietor, Frank Case. "I was determined to get the Arts, especially the Theater," Case later reminisced, am beginning with such illustrious guests as John am Ethel Barrymore, Douglas Fairbanks, Booth Tarkington and Sinclair Lewis, he prcx::eeded to ~ 'boniface' to not only the stars, but to aspiring young artists as wel 1.
    [Show full text]
  • The Sense of Nonsense: an Annotated Edition of Ring W
    Western Michigan University ScholarWorks at WMU Dissertations Graduate College 4-2001 The Sense of Nonsense: An Annotated Edition of Ring W. Lardner’s Short Plays Scott A. Topping Western Michigan University Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.wmich.edu/dissertations Part of the English Language and Literature Commons, and the Playwriting Commons Recommended Citation Topping, Scott A., "The Sense of Nonsense: An Annotated Edition of Ring W. Lardner’s Short Plays" (2001). Dissertations. 1392. https://scholarworks.wmich.edu/dissertations/1392 This Dissertation-Open Access is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate College at ScholarWorks at WMU. It has been accepted for inclusion in Dissertations by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks at WMU. For more information, please contact [email protected]. THE SENSE OF NONSENSE: AN ANNOTATED EDITION OF RING W. LARDNER’S SHORT PLAYS by Scott A. Topping A Dissertation Submitted to the Faculty of The Graduate College in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy Department of English Western Michigan University Kalamazoo, Michigan April 2001 Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission. THE SENSE OF NONSENSE: AN ANNOTATED EDITION OF RING W. LARDNER’S SHORT PLAYS Scott A. Topping, Ph.D. Western Michigan University, 2001 This edition presents twenty-one short plays by Ring W. Lardner (1885-1933), most of which have previously been accessible only on microfilm and in special collections. No edition exclusively dedicated to Lardner’s plays has ever been published. Though Lardner is known primarily for his short stories and sports writing, he considered himself to be a playwright and lyricist.
    [Show full text]
  • CPY Document
    2 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK 3 - 4 STUART Y. SILVERSTEIN, 1 1 5 Plaintiff, 1 1 Index No. 6 - against - 1 01 Civ. 309 1 (JFK)(DF) 7 PENGUIN PUTNAM, INC., 1 .! 1 8 Defendant. 1 1 9 DEPOSITION OF STUART Y. SILVERSTEIN New York, New York Thursday, October 25, 2001 24 Reported by: LINDA DEVECKA 25 JOB NO. 127163 €TIS HEREBY STIPULATED AND AGREED by and between the attorneys for the respective parties herein, that filing and sealing be and the same are hereby waived. IT IS FURTHER STIPULATED AND AGREED that all objections, except as to the form of the question, shall be reserved to the time of the trial. IT IS FURTHER STlPULATED AND AGREED that the within deposition may be sworn to Deposition of the Plaintiff, STUART Y. and signed before any officer authorized to SILVERSTELN, held at the offices of Cowan, administer an oath, with the same force and Liebowik & Latman, PC., 1133 Avenue of the effea as if signed and sworn to before the Americas, New York, New York, pursuant to Court. Notice, before LINDA DEVECKA, a Notary Public - 000 - of the State of New York. - -- - 3 5 1 1 2 APPEARANCES: 2 STUART Y. SILVERSTEIN, called 3 as a witness, having been duly sworn by a PIPER MARBURY RUDNICK & WOLFE, LLP 4 Notary Public, was examined and testified as Attorneys for Plaintiff 5 follows: 1251 Avenue of the Americas 6 EXAMINATION BY New York, New York 10020-1104 7 MR DANNAY: BY: MONICA P. McCABE, ESQ. 8 Q.
    [Show full text]
  • The Soaring '20S; from Wall Street to the Chrysler Building, from the Algonquin to the Savoy, New York Was Where That Singular Decade Happened David Von Drehle
    Document 1 of 1 The Soaring '20s; From Wall Street to the Chrysler Building, from the Algonquin to the Savoy, New York was where that singular decade happened David Von Drehle. The Washington Post [Washington, D.C] 26 Sep 1999: 25. Abstract I want to find the roots of it all, and so I have come to Wall Street. There is an East Side subway and a West Side subway and the platforms are three blocks apart. Three blocks turns out to be a very significant distanceon Wall Street, because this iconic address -- as potent as 1600 Pennsylvania Ave., as explosive as Los Alamos, N.M. -- is in reality a rather short and narrow street, a bit crooked. Nothing like the wide, straight power avenues of midtown and upper Manhattan. Wall Street does not seem very powerful at all. It is quaint. London-like. It is boxed in at each end, by lovely Trinity Church at the top of the street and by the East River at the bottom. You might say this is where the '20s began. On this corner, at noon on September 16, 1920. Survivors recalled the clock at Trinity Church was tolling the noon hour, and the street was filling with clerks and traders bound for lunch. Someone saw a horse-drawn wagon stop on Wall Street just below Nassau. Someone saw the driv-er jump down and run. The world became a thundering hurricane spiked with shrapnel and choked with dirt. Thirty-five people died in the blast, including a man killed by a falling pipe a full five blocks away, and 130 others were injured.
    [Show full text]
  • The Broadway Murders
    The Broadway Murders THE BROADWAY M9URDERS Agata Stanford A Jenevacris Press Publication The Broadway Murders A Dorothy Parker Mystery / June 2010 Published by Jenevacris Press New York This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental. 7 All rights reserved Copyright © 2010 by Agata Stanford Typesetting & cover design by Eric Conover ISBN 978-0-9827542-1-4 Printed in the United States of America www.dorothyparkermysteries.com for Serena Acknowledgments I thank a number of people for their encourage- ment and support throughout the process of writing the books of my Dorothy Parker Mysteies series. An author needs resources, feedback, and sounding boards as well as emotional support from family, friends, and colleagues. So it is with gratitude that I mention, here, the names of those wonderful people who have provided their time and love and assistance: Rosaria and Anatole Konstantin, who read everything I sent to them and let me know if I was on track; Mary Rose Greer, who has listened to my ideas over the years, and has been an invaluable “sounding board,” allow- ing me to find my own way; Brenda Bright, my very good friend, who encourages me, but whose opinion I value, and who has helped edit The Broadway Mur- ders; Lisa Green, good friend and avid reader of all my work; the lovely librarians of the Richard’s Library in Warrensburg, New York, Sarah, Linda, and Lynn, who always greet me with a smile and who ordered whatever I needed for research; the research staff at The Baseball Hall of Fame, who kindly answered all of my questions about the 1926 World Series for Mystic Mah Jong; Jerome Cortellesi, for taking me on a per- sonal tour of the University Club; Amanda Mecke, my agent; and Eric Conover, without whose talent these books would not look nearly so good.
    [Show full text]