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George S. Kaufman

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American Theater Guide: George Simon Kaufman
 

Kaufman, George S[imon] (1889–1961), playwright and director. He was born in Pittsburgh and served on the staffs of newspapers in Washington, D.C., and New York before joining with Marc Connelly to write his first successful play, the comedy Dulcy (1921). The collaboration continued for three more years and resulted in seven additional offerings, most memorably To the Ladies (1922), Merton of the Movies (1922), and Beggar on Horseback (1924). Throughout his career, Kaufman was known as the “Great Collaborator” because all of his works (with the exception of the 1925 solo effort The Butter and Egg Man) were written with others. With Edna Ferber, he penned Minick (1924), The Royal Family (1927), Dinner at Eight (1932), and Stage Door (1936). With Morrie Ryskind he wrote the musical librettos for Animal Crackers (1928), Strike Up the Band (1930), Of Thee I Sing (1931), and Let 'Em Eat Cake (1933). But it was with Moss Hart that Kaufman wrote his most interesting (and often successful) shows: Once in a Lifetime (1930), Merrily We Roll Along (1934), You Can't Take It with You (1936), I'd Rather Be Right (1937), The Man Who Came to Dinner (1939), George Washington Slept Here (1940), and others. Other works with other collaborators included The Cocoanuts (1925), June Moon (1929), The Band Wagon (1931), The Late George Apley (1944), The Solid Gold Cadillac (1953), and Silk Stockings (1955). Kaufman was also a much‐sought‐after director. Besides staging many of his own plays, he directed such hits as The Front Page (1928), My Sister Eileen (1940), and Guys and Dolls (1950). To the public, Kaufman was a master of the barbed riposte, but his professional associates also admired his ability as a play doctor and his impeccable sense of timing. Biography: George S. Kaufman: His Life, His Theatre, Malcolm Goldstein, 1979.

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Writer: George S. Kaufman
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  • Born: Nov 16, 1889 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
  • Died: Jun 02, 1961
  • Occupation: Writer, Director
  • Active: '20s-'50s
  • Major Genres: Comedy
  • Career Highlights: A Night at the Opera, Stage Door, Dinner at Eight
  • First Major Screen Credit: Dulcy (1923)

Biography

Pulitzer prize-winning playwright George Kaufman has co-written many distinguished plays alone and in conjunction with such writers as Ring Lardner, Moss Hart, Edna Ferber and Mark Connelly. Many of Kaufman's plays have been adapted into films including Merton of the Movies(1924, 1947), Animal Crackers (1930), You Can't Take It with You (1938), and The Man Who Came to Dinner (1941). His popularity led to many offers to work in Hollywood, but Kaufman never concealed his disdain for Tinseltown moguls and the way they treated screenwriters. In the early '30s, he finally allowed Sam Goldwyn to convince him to write a comedy script for an Eddie Cantor film, Roman Scandals (1933). While writing the script with Robert E. Sherwood, Kaufman was greatly annoyed by Cantor who kept interfering. By the time the first draft was completed, Kaufman was so fed up that he left the project. In 1935, Kaufman returned to co-pen the script for A Night at the Opera with Morrie Ryskind. Though the film was a smash and earned him a small fortune, Kaufman was not interested in remaining in Hollywood and so went back to New York. He again returned in 1947, directing his first and last film, The Senator Was Indiscreet. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
 
Biography: George S. Kaufman
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American playwright George S. Kaufman (1889-1961) collaborated on a great number of successful plays that merged theatricality with satiric comedy.

George S. Kaufman was born in Pittsburgh, Pa., on Nov. 16, 1889. After attending public schools in Pittsburgh and Paterson, N.J., he studied law briefly. He worked as a clerk, stenographer, and ribbon salesman before he started contributing humorous verses to the newspaper column of Franklin P. Adams in 1908. With Adams's help, Kaufman joined the Washington Times in 1912. After working on the New York Evening Mail and the New York Tribune, he went to the New York Times in 1917 and remained as drama editor until 1930. In 1917 he married Beatrice Bakrow.

Tense and tireless, caustic and witty, Kaufman was somewhat eccentric in his personal mannerisms. His first successful play, Dulcy (1921), written with Marc Connelly, is a satire of a vapid woman who is wrecking her bright husband's plans. To the Ladies (1922) reverses this, as a bright woman saves her vapid husband's plans. For 20 years one Kaufman collaboration, and sometimes several, appeared annually on Broadway.

Among the best examples of Kaufman's satiric comedy were two collaborations with Edna Ferber: The Royal Family (1928) focuses on the American theater's first family, the Barrymores, and Dinner at Eight (1932) deals with social climbing. His musical satire, the Pulitzer Prize-winning Of Thee I Sing (1931), written with Morrie Ryskind, hilariously indicts the chicanery of politicians. He collaborated with Ryskind again on the musical Let 'Em Eat Cake (1933). In First Lady (1935) he again derided politicians.

Sometimes Kaufman succeeded with sheer theatricality, as in another Pulitzer Prize-winner, You Can't Take It with You (1936), written with Moss Hart. The classic The Man Who Came to Dinner (1939) was also written with Hart. Working with John P. Marquand on an adaptation of the latter's novel The Late George Apley (1944), Kaufman tossed barbs at the proper Bostonians.

After the death of his first wife in 1945, Kaufman married actress Leueen McGrath, whom he divorced in 1957; they wrote The Small Hours (1951). After World War II he worked increasingly as a play doctor. His knowledge of play structure was highly valued, and his plays rarely failed. He died on June 2, 1961, in New York City.

Further Reading

Kaufman and his work are discussed in John Mason Brown, Two on the Aisle: Ten Years of the American Theatre in Performance (1938) and The Worlds of Robert E. Sherwood: Mirror to His Times (1965); Edna Ferber, A Peculiar Treasure (1939; rev. ed. 1960); Edmond M. Gagey, Revolution in American Drama (1947); Six Modern American Plays, introduced by Allan G. Halline (1951); Moss Hart, Act One (1959); and Jean Gould, Modern American Playwrights (1966).

Additional Sources

Meredith, Scott, George S. Kaufman and his friend, Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, 1974.

Goldstein, Malcolm, George S. Kaufman: his life, his theater, New York: Oxford University Press, 1979.

 
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: George S. Kaufman
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(born Nov. 16, 1889, Pittsburgh, Pa., U.S — died June 2, 1961, New York, N.Y.) U.S. playwright and director. He was drama critic for The New York Times (1917 – 30). Known for his caustic wit and talent for brilliant satire, he wrote many plays in collaboration with other writers, including Marc Connelly, Morrie Ryskind (1895 – 1985), and Edna Ferber. His most memorable collaboration was with Moss Hart, with whom he wrote Once in a Lifetime (1930), You Can't Take It with You (1936, Pulitzer Prize), and The Man Who Came to Dinner (1939).

For more information on George S. Kaufman, visit Britannica.com.

 
Works: Works by George S. Kaufman
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(1889-1961)

1921Dulcy. The playwrights' first of eight collaborations over the next three years is a successful comedy about a ditzy housewife who blunders into assisting her husband's career. It establishes the career of Lynn Fontanne, who stars in the title role. Kaufman and Connelly were both from Pennsylvania and worked as newspapermen.
1922To the Ladies. In their second collaboration, the playwrights atone for their portrayal of a brainless young wife in Dulcy (1921) by depicting a sensible woman who helps her befuddled husband succeed in business. The team also adapts Harry Leon Wilson's series from the Saturday Evening Post, Merton of the Movies (about a country grocery clerk's success in Hollywood) into one of the best satires of the 1920s movie industry.
1924Beggar on Horseback. The playwrights capitalize on the vogue for expressionism in this popular comic fantasy of a young composer's dream about what his life would be like if he submits to a fashionable marriage into a rich, soulless American family. He resorts to murder and contemplates suicide before awakening. A critique of the materialism of the era, the play causes one reviewer to proclaim it "the most searching bit of stage satire yet produced in America."
1925The Butter and Egg Man. The playwright achieves his only solo success in this drama about small-time Broadway producers who recruit a naive out-of-town backer. The play's title derives from a phrase coined by nightclub hostess Texas Guinan to designate a hick from the sticks. Kaufman also writes The Cocoanuts, a farce with music and lyrics by Irving Berlin. It spoofs the Florida real estate boom through the manic humor of the Marx Brothers. It would be filmed in 1929. Kaufman's second vehicle for the Marxes would be Animal Crackers (1928), released as a film in 1930.
1927The Royal Family. This popular comedy about America's first family of the theater, the Cavendishes, bears such a resemblance to the Barrymores that Ethel Barrymore threatens a lawsuit and would never forgive the playwrights. Years later she turned down Kaufman's request to appear at a benefit, using a line from the play: "But I'm going to have laryngitis that night."
1930Once in a Lifetime. The first of the Kaufman-Hart collaborations is a popular Hollywood satire about a vaudeville team that blunders into success in films. The play initiates a series of dramas about the movie industry.
1931Of Thee I Sing. In the first musical to win a Pulitzer Prize and one of the first to tackle serious issues, George Gershwin's music, Ira Gershwin's lyrics, and a book by George S. Kaufman and Morrie Ryskind combine to create a satire on American politics as presidential candidate John P. Wintergreen agrees to marry the winner of a beauty contest as part of his campaign.
1932Dinner at Eight. Dinner guests at turning points in their lives interact in this literate social comedy.
1936Stage Door. Although less critically acclaimed than the collaborators' previous plays, this drama about a group of aspiring actresses boarding together at the Footlights Club proves a popular success and includes identifiable portraits of contemporary theatrical figures such as Clifford Odets.
1936You Can't Take It with You. The playwrights achieve their longest-running success and second Pulitzer Prize for this comedy about the eccentric New York Vanderhof family, who resists the forces of conformity and underscores the theme that money is not everything. One of the most enduring American comedies, the play is frequently revived and a staple of amateur and summer stock companies.
1937I'd Rather Be Right. The first drama to depict an incumbent president in a lead role, this musical satire on the New Deal and the Roosevelt administration features George M. Cohan in his last dramatic role as FDR (a man the actor detested) surrounded by almost all of the important political figures of the day.
1939The American Way. The playwrights set aside their usual style of barbed comedy for an uplifting, patriotic spectacular, employing as many as 250 performers for crowd scenes illustrating American life from the 1890s. The duo also produce The Man Who Came to Dinner, one of the most popular American comedies. It concerns the acid-tongued celebrity (based on writer, actor, and radio commentator Alexander Woollcott) who recuperates from a fall in a middle-class Ohio household.
1940The Land Is Bright. This multigenerational family saga, tracing the evolution of a social conscience, is only a moderate success, with one reviewer calling the play's uplifting social theme "a sort of grease paint message of the new national ego."
1940George Washington Slept Here. The failure of this comedy about country life leads Kaufman and Hart to dissolve their writing partnership.
1944The Late George Apley. The two writers collaborate on a dramatic version of Marquand's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel of 1937.
1953The Solid Gold Cadillac. Kaufman's last produced play is a comedy about a sweet old lady who manages to take over a huge, corrupt corporation. Teichmann, who began his theater career with the Mercury Theatre, would write biographies of Kaufman and Alexander Woollcott.

 
Quotes By: George S. Kaufman
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Quotes:

"When I was born I owed twelve dollars."

"I like terra firma; the more firma, the less terra."

 
Wikipedia: George S. Kaufman
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George S. Kaufman

photographed c. 1915
Born George Simon Kaufman
16 November 1889(1889-11-16)
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
Died 2 June 1961 (aged 71)
New York City, New York, USA
Spouse Beatrice Bakrow (1917-1945†)
Leueen MacGrath (1949-1957)
Information
Debut works Some One in the House (1918)
Someone Must Pay (1919)
Notable work(s) Of Thee I Sing
You Can't Take It With You
Works with Marc Connelly
Edna Ferber
George Gershwin
Ira Gershwin
Moss Hart
Morrie Ryskind
Awards Pulitzer Prize for Drama (1932, 1937)
Tony Award Best Director (1951)

George Simon Kaufman (16 November 1889 - 2 June 1961) was an American playwright, theatre director and producer, humorist, and drama critic.

Contents

Biography

Early years

Born to a Jewish family in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania he graduated from high school in 1907 and pursued legal studies, but grew disenchanted and took on a series of odd jobs. Kaufman then began his career as a journalist and drama critic. He was the drama editor for The New York Times, and held on to that job until 1930, nearly a decade after he achieved great success as a playwright. Kaufman took his editorial responsibilities very seriously. According to legend, on one occasion a press agent asked: “How do I get our leading lady’s name in the Times?” Kaufman: “Shoot her.”[1]

Career

Theatre

His Broadway debut was in 1918 with Someone in the House, written with Larry Evans and W.C. Percival. This play was panned, and it had the further handicap of opening on Broadway during a flu epidemic, when theatre attendance in New York City diminished drastically because the public were warned to avoid crowds. Kaufman sardonically advised his play's producers to print advertisements with this message: "Avoid crowds: see Someone in the House."

It would be quite a long time before Kaufman had another flop. In every Broadway season from 1921 through 1958, there was a play written or directed by Kaufman. Since Kaufman's death in 1961, every decade has featured at least a couple of revivals of his work. There have also been productions based on Kaufman properties, such as the 1981 musical version of Merrily We Roll Along, adapted by George Furth and Stephen Sondheim.

Kaufman was known as "The Great Collaborator" because he wrote very few plays alone. His most successful solo script was The Butter and Egg Man in 1925. With others, Kaufman was prolific: with Marc Connelly he wrote Merton of the Movies, Dulcy, and Beggar on Horseback; with Ring Lardner he wrote June Moon; with Edna Ferber he wrote The Royal Family, Dinner at Eight, and Stage Door; with John P. Marquand he wrote a stage adaptation of Marquand's novel The Late George Apley; and with Howard Teichmann he wrote The Solid Gold Cadillac.

For a period Kaufman lived at 158 West 58th in New York City. The building would be the setting for Stage Door.[2] It is less than two blocks from Broadway. It is now the Park Savoy Hotel and for many years was considered a single room occupancy hotel.[3]

His most successful collaborations were with Moss Hart, with whom he wrote many plays, including Once in a Lifetime, Merrily We Roll Along, You Can't Take It With You, his most-revived play, which won the Pulitzer Prize in 1937, and The Man Who Came to Dinner.

Despite his claim that he knew nothing about music and hated it in the theatre, Kaufman collaborated on many musical theatre projects. His most successful such efforts include two Broadway shows crafted for the Marx Brothers, The Cocoanuts, written with Irving Berlin, and Animal Crackers, written with Morrie Ryskind, Bert Kalmar, and Harry Ruby. These two productions allowed the Marx Brothers to make the transition from their vaudeville roots into the more prominent worlds of "legitimate" musical comedy and film. Kaufman was one of the writers who excelled in writing intelligent nonsense for Groucho Marx, a process that was inevitably collaborative, given Groucho's skills at expanding upon the scripted material. Though the Marx Brothers were notoriously critical of their writers, Groucho and Harpo Marx expressed admiration and gratitude towards Kaufman. (Dick Cavett, introducing Groucho onstage at Carnegie Hall in 1972, told the audience that Groucho considered Kaufman to be "his god".)

In spite of Kaufman's success as a co-writer and director of stage musicals (one of his biggest musical hits was Guys and Dolls, which he directed on Broadway but did not write), there is some truth to the legend about his lack of musical instincts. While The Cocoanuts was being developed in Atlantic City, Irving Berlin was hugely enthusiastic about a song he had written for the show. Kaufman was less enthusiastic, and refused to rework the libretto to include this number. The discarded song was Always, ultimately a huge hit for Berlin (in another show). The Cocoanuts would remain Irving Berlin's only Broadway musical -- until his very last one, Mister President -- which did not include at least one eventual hit song.

Humor derived from political situations was of particular interest to Kaufman. He collaborated on the hit musical Of Thee I Sing (1931 Pulitzer Prize, the first musical so honored), and its sequel Let 'Em Eat Cake, as well as one troubled but eventually successful satire that had several incarnations, Strike Up the Band. Working with Kaufman on these ventures were Ryskind, George Gershwin, and Ira Gershwin. Also, Kaufman, with Moss Hart, wrote the book to I'd Rather Be Right, a musical starring George M. Cohan as Franklin Delano Roosevelt (the U.S. President at the time), with songs by Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart. He also co-wrote the 1935 comedy-drama First Lady.

This inveterate collaborator also contributed to historically important New York revues, including The Band Wagon (not to be confused with the Astaire/Minnelli 1953 film) with Arthur Schwartz and Howard Dietz. His often anthologized sketch "The Still Alarm" from the revue The Little Show lasted long after this influential show closed. Another well-known sketch of his is "If Men Played Cards As Women Do."

Hollywood

Many of Kaufman's plays were adapted into Hollywood films. Among the more well-received were Dinner At Eight, Stage Door (almost completely rewritten for the film version) and You Can't Take It With You, which won the Best Picture Oscar in 1938. He also occasionally wrote directly for the movies, most significantly the screenplay for A Night at the Opera for the Marx Brothers. His only credit as a film director was The Senator Was Indiscreet (1947) starring William Powell.

On the boards, Kaufman directed the original productions of The Front Page by Charles MacArthur and Ben Hecht, Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck, My Sister Eileen by Joseph Fields and Jerome Chodorov, Romanoff and Juliet by Peter Ustinov, and the Frank Loesser musical Guys and Dolls, for which he won the 1951 Best Director Tony Award. Kaufman produced many of his own plays as well as those of other writers. He also acted in the original production of his own Once In A Lifetime.

After World War II, perhaps because his output and commercial success as a writer was declining, Kaufman devoted more energy to directing, producing, writing prose, and appearing on television.

Kaufman was also a prominent rubber bridge player. Many of his humorous writings about bridge appeared in The New Yorker and have often been reprinted. They include Kibitzers' Revolt and the ingenious suggestion that bridge clubs should post information that North-South or East-West are holding good cards. Kaufman was notoriously impatient with less-competent partners at the bridge table. According to legend, one such victim asked permission to use the men's room. Kaufman: "Gladly. For the first time today I'll know what you have in your hand."[4]

Personal life

Kaufman was a key member of the celebrated Algonquin Round Table, a circle of witty writers and show business people. From the 1920s through the 1950s, Kaufman was as well known for his personality as he was for his writing. The Moss Hart autobiography Act One certainly popularized Kaufman as a character. Hart portrayed Kaufman as a morose and intimidating figure, uncomfortable with any expressions of affection between human beings -- in life or on the page. This perspective, along with a number of taciturn observations made by Kaufman himself, led to a simplistic but commonly held belief that Hart was the emotional soul of the creative team while Kaufman was a misanthropic writer of punchlines.

Despite the fact that Kaufman lived in the public eye alongside celebrities and journalists, he was a tireless worker, dedicated to the writing and rehearsal processes. He was particularly revered within the business as a "play doctor." Late in his life he managed to trade upon his long-developed persona by appearing as a television wag.

Of one unsuccessful comedy he wrote, "There was laughter at the back of the theatre, leading to the belief that someone was telling jokes back there." Even though he was a sometime satirist, he remarked that "Satire is what closes on Saturday night." Much of Kaufman's fame occurred due to his mastery of sharp lines such as these, generally referred to in the press as "wise cracks." However, Kaufman was more than a writer of gags. He created scripts that revealed a mastery of dramatic structure; his characters were likable and theatrically credible.

Kaufman was the prototypical New Yorker who preferred never to leave Manhattan. He once said: “I never want to go any place where I can’t get back to Broadway and 44th by midnight.”[5]

A noted philandering ladies' man, Kaufman found himself in the center of a scandal in 1936 when, in the midst of a child custody suit, the former husband of actress Mary Astor threatened to publish one of Astor's diaries purportedly containing extremely explicit details of an affair between Kaufman and the actress. The diary was eventually destroyed unread by the courts, but details of the supposed contents were published in Confidential magazine and various other scandal sheets. Kaufman later had a long affair with actress Natalie Schafer.

Kaufman was married in 1917 to Beatrice Bakrow until her death in 1945. Four years later, he married actress Leueen MacGrath on 26 May 1949 with whom he collaborated on a number of plays before their divorce in 1957. Kaufman died in New York City at the age of seventy-one.

References

  1. ^ Herrmann, Dorothy (1982). With Malice Toward All. New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons. p. 58. 
  2. ^ Teichmann, Howard (1972). George S. Kaufman; An Intimate Portrait. New York: Atheneum. OCLC 400765. 
  3. ^ Laurence Okane (1965-01-24). "Adjunct Garages Irk City Planners; Loophole in Zoning Permits All Comers to Use Space". The New York Times. http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F60910F8345B157A93C6AB178AD85F418685F9. Retrieved on 2008-10-13. 
  4. ^ Hall, Donald (ed.) (1981). The Oxford Book of American Literary Anecdotes. New York: Oxford. p. 234. 
  5. ^ Meryman, Richard (1978). Mank: The Wit, World, and Life of Herman Mankiewicz. New York: William Morrow. p. 100. 

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American Theater Guide. The Oxford Companion to American Theatre. Copyright © 2004 by Oxford University Press, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Writer. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Biography. © 2006 through a partnership of Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Works. The Chronology of American Literature, edited by Daniel S. Burt. Copyright © 2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "George S. Kaufman" Read more