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1-22 of 22
- Music Artist
- Actor
- Producer
Jimmy Buffett was born in Pascagoula, Mississippi and grew up living beside the the Gulf of Mexico. After graduating from the University of Southern Mississippi he worked his way to success in the music industry. His hits in the 1970s including "Margaritaville" and "Come Monday". He struck a chord and helped to build a huge fan-base of all ages over the decades. Now married with three kids, Buffett loves fishing, flying and world travel. Buffett is also the author of numerous books including the bestselling "A Pirate Looks At Fifty" and has added movies to his repertoire as co-producer and co-star of an adaptation of Carl Hiaasen's novel Hoot (2006).- Director
- Cinematographer
- Editor
D.A. Pennebaker was born on 15 July 1925 in Evanston, Illinois, USA. He was a director and cinematographer, known for Bob Dylan: Dont Look Back (1967), The War Room (1993) and Unlocking the Cage (2016). He was married to Chris Hegedus, Kate Taylor and Sylvia Bell. He died on 1 August 2019 in Sag Harbor, New York, USA.- Alice Lyon was born on 26 November 1934 in Tokyo, Japan. She was an actress, known for The Horror of Party Beach (1964). She died on 6 June 2003 in Sag Harbor, New York, USA.
- Writer
- Director
Salter is considered one of the finest "writers' writers" in the U.S. in the second half of the 20th century. Born in 1925 in Passaic, NJ, Salter had his work published in _Poetry_ magazine while still in high school. His father, a former West Pointer, convinced him to attend the military institute, from which he graduated in 1945. His exploits as an Air Force fighter pilot are recounted in his memoirs, _Burning the Days_. He started writing while stationed in Honolulu, although his first novel wasn't published until 1956, just before he resigned from the Air Force. Salter has worked only intermittently on films.- Writer
- Producer
- Additional Crew
Don Brinkley was born on 9 March 1921 in Bronx, New York City, New York, USA. He was a writer and producer, known for The Fugitive (1963), West Point (1956) and Trapper John, M.D. (1979). He was married to Marge Brinkley and Lois Annette Beard. He died on 14 July 2012 in Sag Harbor, New York, USA.- Nelson Algren, the author of two of the seminal works of post-World War II American letters ("The Man With the Golden Arm" and "A Walk on the Wild Side") was born Nelson Ahlgren Abraham on March 28, 1909 in Detroit, Michigan, into a Jewish family. His paternal grandfather, who was on Scandinavian extraction, had converted to Judaism on his own volition, and then married a Jewish woman, as had his half-Jewish father. Nelson had an older sister, Bernice.
His family's roots were in Chicago, Carl Sandburg's "City of Broad Shoulders", and in Black Oak, Indiana, where his grandparents owned a trading post, and in 1913, his parents moved back to Chicago, settling into what was then an Irish neighborhood on the South Side. The future writer attended the neighborhood public schools. Chicago would become his muse and be the real subject of his all his major works,a major character in his oeuvre just as it was for the writer James T. Farrell in his Studs Lonigan trilogy.
The family subsequently relocated to the Chicago's Northwest Side, where his father went into business with a tire and battery shop. The young Nelson attended Hibbard High School and roamed his neighborhood, playing pool and beginning his obsession with gambling that would continue throughout his life. After graduating from high school in 1927, he attended the University of Illinois, majoring in studying sociology. The subject was congruent with his fascination with the lower class people and culture of Chicago's ethnic neighborhoods. He often spent times in the Polish neighborhoods east and south of his own neighborhood.
After graduation from college in 1931, he hitchhiked through the Midwest in order to find a job as a journalist. During those opening years of the Great Depression, while Herbert Hoover was still president, jobs were scare. Algren worked briefly at a Y.M.C.A. in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, before returning to Chicago, but he hit the road again that autumn. Traveling south with only the Mississippi River as his pilot, Algren wound up in New Orleans, where he was struck by the great amount of poverty in the Crescent City. Algren remained in New Orleans, working as a door-to-door salesman for a coffee company and a pharmacy, before using his savings to hit the road again in 1932.
In South Texas, Algren earned his living as a fruit picker. Striking out as an entrepreneur, he tried to renovate a gas station (the location will be fictionalized over 20 years later in "A Walk on the Wildside"), but the venture was both boring and unprofitable, so like his future character Dove Linkhorn, he began again to wander. He journeyed throughout Texas, Oklahoma and Mexico.
At the end of 1932, Algren moved back to Chicago where he joined the left-wing John Reed Club (named after the American Communist buried in the Kremlin who wrote the book about the 1917 Russian Revolution "Ten Days That Shook the World", and the subject of the movie Reds (1981). His active membership in the group allowed him to befriend Richard Wright, who would later borrow the original title of Algren's first novel "Somebody in Boots" for his own classic "Native Son".
Algren hit the road again in 1933, traveling to Texas where he drifted through San Antonio, El Paso, and El Paso's border-town of Juarez, Mexico before settling in Alpine, Texas. Upon leaving Alpine, Nelson attempted to steal one of the typewriters from the local business college and was arrested. In a surprisingly long trial, Algren's lawyer defends on the common law principle that he, as a writer, is allowed the tools of his trade. Found guilty, he was sentenced to two years of punishment with the proviso he could serve the sentence wherever he wanted to. It was clearly time to leave Texas, though he would write of Texas in his first novel, "Somebody in Boots" and in his fourth, "A Walk on the Wildside" (1956) and in multiple short stories.
Back in Chicago by June 1934, Algren established himself as a member of a literary circle that met on Rush Street in the North Side. It was during this period that he wrote his first published novel, "Somebody in Boots", which received poor reviews when it was published in March 1935. The bad reviews and a poor relationship with his girlfriend led to a suicide attempt, and he received mental health care at the University of Chicago Psychiatric Center.
After recovering his mental equilibrium, he and his girlfriend Amanda moved to a small apartment on the South Side of Chicago. Algren was taken on by the Federal Writers' Project, part of the Works Progress Administration that sought to put people back to work in their areas of expertise. During frequently visits to East St. Louis, Illinois, he befriended prostitutes and junkies, the kinds of people who would become the characters in his novels and short-stories.
In a fateful decision, Algren and Amanda moved in May 1940 to the neighborhood at Milwaukee and Division Street, Chicago's so-called Polish Triangle. As the clouds of war moved closer to the United States, Algren's father and sister Bernice died, and their passing and the Polish-Americans of his new neighborhood inspired his second novel, "Never Come Morning". Though the book received good reviews, the city of Chicago banned it from its public libraries due to it potentially offending the city's denizens of Czech and Polish extraction, who have seen their native countries devoured by the Nazis. In fact, due to his pen name "Algren", the writer is attacked for being pro-Nazi, as -- in a case of reverse racism -- anyone of Scandinavian stock would be so inclined. In truth, Algren is not a fascist, or a racist; he has tried to tell the truth, and as his later friend Kurt Vonnegut would say after his death, he knew that the poor were not the saints that sentimental writers tried to portray them, as in neo-late-Tolstoy writing. The poor and disenfranchised who were his subject were, in reality, frequently mean-spirited and ignorant. It was his lack of a balancing "normative" character to redeem the others in his tales, by promising hope and a brighter future, that opened him up to charges of being mean-spirited himself.
The 34-year old Algren was drafted into the Army in November 1943 (the draft effected all males age 18-44, as enlistments had dropped off precariously after the initial six months of the war and a military that would encompass 16 million souls before the VJ-Day was in the process of being built). Ironically, he was shipped back to Texas for infantry training, and in the spring of 1944, he was shipped on to Europe as part of the vast reserve of troops needed to bolster the upcoming invasion of Normandy. Algren, who was designated a litter bearer, never made rank, and despite being a college graduate, was never considered as a candidate for a commission, likely due to his left-wing political beliefs. While in liberated France, Algren quite naturally became involved in the demimonde, attempting to set himself up as a black marketeer. He was not a noted success.
Algren returned to Chicago in November 1945 after being demobilized, moving into another Polish neighborhood, this one located at Wabansia and Bosworth. (Towards the end of his life, Algren -- still living in poor neighborhoods -- said he felt comfortable among people who were on welfare.) Algren's life primarily was involved in reading and writing short-stories, and the translation of his work into French brought him into contact with the woman who would be the great love of his life -- and his greatest frustration -- the great French feminist intellectual Simone de Beauvoir. It was an unusual coupling as Beauvoir, descended from the Parisian haute-bourgeoisie and the "mother" of modern, post-War feminism, would visit Algren in his Chicago semi-slum and visited the dives filled with hookers, pimps, drunks, drug-addicts and thieves with him, then writing him letters from France pledging her fealty as a submissive woman. Unfortauntely for Algren, though Beauvoir loved him and was fulfilled by him sexually, her soul rather than her heart belonged to her paramour and partner, 'Jean Paul Satre. After many years of association, he would say around 1970 that the two Existentialist philosophers were less honest.
Before this epiphany, Algren moved into the Brevoort Hotel in New York's Greenwich Village with her at her urging, in April 1947. However, their new living arrangement could not last, as Algren needed Chicago and Beavoir needed Paris -- and Sartre. She and Sartre had an open relationship, and Algren visited her in Paris. Fired with energy from his new Muse, Algren immersed intensely in his writing and produced his masterpiece in 1948, "The Man With the Golden Arm", a novel about an illicit card-dealer, Frankie the Machine, who is a morphine junkie with an (allegedly) crippled wife in love with another woman and trying to stay clean in a bad, bad world that had no sympathy for junkies, pushers or anyone else, for that matter.
Algren had wanted to entitle his dark novel "Night Without Mercy," but his publisher, Doubleday, convinced him to use the title that graces the now classic novel. Published by Doubleday in November 1949, the novel won the first National Book Award in 1950. One of the seminal novels of post-World War II American letters, "The Man with the Golden Arm" is Algren's greatest and most enduring work. With its publication, and book award handed to him by Eleanor Roosevelt, Algren had reached the zenith of his craft.
Unfortunately, he would never again reach those heights, publishing only one more major novel, "A Walk on the Wild Side", seven years after "Golden Arm". It seems that Algren never really got over the failure of his relationship with Beauvoir (who featured him as a main character in her own 1957 novel, "The Mandarins", in which he is "Lewis Brogan"). "Wild Side", which in many ways was a rehash of "Somebody in Boots" and several short stories, did not receive a great critical reception, though it sold well. The recycling of earlier material may indicate Algren was suffering from a writer's block. As it were, he never again produced a major novel, though he continued writing until the end of his life.
Nelson Algren died of a heart-attack on May 9, 1981, secure in his reputation of having written one, if not two, of the great post-War novels. He was 72 years old. - Ray Johnson was born on 16 October 1927 in Detroit, Michigan, USA. He died on 13 January 1995 in Sag Harbor, New York, USA.
- Writer
- Producer
- Director
A former journalist, Willis Goldbeck entered films as a screenwriter in the early 1920s. He wrote most of the "Dr. Kildare" series for MGM, starting with the first one, Young Dr. Kildare (1938), and directed several of them. Although he directed several more films after that--including one of Burt Lancaster's more enjoyable early swashbucklers, Ten Tall Men (1951)--he mainly concentrated on screenwriting, and in the mid-'50s turned to producing. He retired from films in 1962.- Producer
- Second Unit Director or Assistant Director
- Production Manager
Bill Finnegan was born on 29 June 1928 in Kansas City, Missouri, USA. Bill was a producer and assistant director, known for Reality Bites (1994), The Fabulous Baker Boys (1989) and Night of the Creeps (1986). Bill was married to Patricia Finnegan. Bill died on 28 November 2008 in Sag Harbor, New York, USA.- Marge Brinkley was born on 23 September 1930 in the USA. She was married to Don Brinkley and Herbert Hudson. She died on 9 September 2012 in Sag Harbor, New York, USA.
- Joe Pintauro was born on 22 November 1930 in Ozone Park, Queens, New York City, New York, USA. He was a writer, known for Rules of Love (2002), Twenty Dollar Drinks (2006) and Rex (2007). He was married to Greg Therriault. He died on 29 May 2018 in Sag Harbor, New York, USA.
- Sally Gross was born on 3 August 1933 in Manhattan, New York, USA. She was an actress, known for Pull My Daisy (1959), Sally Gross: A Life in Dance (2001) and Sally Gross: The Pleasure of Stillness (2007). She was married to Theodore Gross. She died on 20 July 2015 in Sag Harbor, New York, USA.
- Writer
- Actor
- Second Unit Director or Assistant Director
William Demby was born on 25 December 1922 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA. He was a writer and actor, known for Commando (1962), The Eye of the Needle (1963) and Europe '51 (1952). He was married to Lucia Drudi Demby. He died on 23 May 2013 in Sag Harbor, New York, USA.- Art Department
- Location Management
- Special Effects
Eoin Sprott was born in 1933 in the USA. He is known for Moonstruck (1987), Kate & Leopold (2001) and The January Man (1989). He was married to Susan Sprott. He died on 3 December 2011 in Sag Harbor, New York, USA.- Additional Crew
John Garraty was born on 4 July 1920 in Brooklyn, New York City, New York, USA. John is known for The Great Depression (1993), The Yanks Are Coming (1974) and The Congress (1989). John was married to Rita Angelo, Gail Neilson and Joan Perkins. John died on 19 December 2007 in Sag Harbor, New York, USA.- Additional Crew
Robert H. Montgomery Jr. was born on 1 April 1923 in Boston, Massachusetts, USA. He is known for American Playhouse (1980), Alien Space Avenger (1989) and Message to Love: The Isle of Wight Festival (1996). He died on 2 September 2000 in Sag Harbor, New York, USA.- Additional Crew
Jason Epstein was born on 25 August 1928 in Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA. He is known for Bail Jumper (1990), Un alma pura (1965) and The 50 Year Argument (2014). He was married to Judith Miller and Barbara Epstein. He died on 4 February 2022 in Sag Harbor, New York, USA.- Actor
- Composer
- Music Department
Hal McKusick was born on 1 June 1924 in Medford, Massachusetts, USA. He was an actor and composer, known for We Shall Return (1963), New York Television Theatre (1965) and NET Playhouse (1964). He was married to Jan. He died on 11 April 2012 in Sag Harbor, New York, USA.- Additional Crew
Valerie Sharaf was born on 12 March 1925 in New London, Connecticut, USA. Valerie is known for You Are There (1953). Valerie was married to George Justin. Valerie died on 9 January 2023 in Sag Harbor, New York, USA.- Doris Gronlund was born on 8 May 1924 in Brooklyn, New York, USA. She died on 19 January 2018 in Sag Harbor, New York, USA.
- Jeremiah Stamler was born on 27 October 1919 in Brooklyn, New York City, New York, USA. He was married to Gloria Beckerman and Rose Steinberg . He died on 26 January 2022 in Sag Harbor, New York, USA.
- Additional Crew
- Actor
- Writer
Lee Kresel was born on 6 February 1918 in New York City, New York, USA. He was an actor and writer, known for The Conformist (1970), Black Magic (1949) and Caltiki, the Immortal Monster (1959). He died on 25 December 1980 in Sag Harbor, New York, USA.