Herbert J. Biberman (b. March 4, 1900, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; d. June 30, 1971, New York City) was an American
screenwriter and film director who may be equally
known for having been one of the Hollywood Ten as for having made a striking if
somewhat ideological film about a Grant County, New Mexico zinc miners' strike,
1954's Salt of the Earth.
Born in Philadelphia to a Jewish family,
Biberman's pre-Ten career included writing such films as King of Chinatown, When Tomorrow Comes, Action in
Arabia, The Master Race, and New Orleans, as well as directing such films as One Way Ticket, Meet
Nero Wolfe, and The Master Race. He married actress Gale Sondergaard in
1930; the marriage endured until Biberman's death.
In 1947, the U.S. House Committee on
Un-American Activities began investigating the film industry, and Biberman became one of ten Hollywood writers and
directors cited for contempt of Congress when they refused to answer questions
about their Communist Party USA affiliation.
Biberman and his fellow Ten went to jail over their contempt convictions, Biberman for six months. Dmytryk ultimately
cooperated with the House committee, but Biberman and the others were blacklisted by official
Hollywood movie studio bosses.
Biberman went to work independently after his release from jail. The result was Salt of
the Earth, a fictionalized account of the Grant County miners' strike written by Michael Wilson and produced by Paul Jarrico, neither of
whom were members of the Ten but both of whom were also blacklisted. Salt of the Earth has been deemed "culturally
significant" by the United States Library of Congress and selected for preservation
in the National Film Registry. The film has also been preserved by the
Museum of Modern Art in New York. Wilson, one of the blacklisted screenwriters who
worked under assumed names, later won an Academy Award for a screenplay he wrote under a nom de plume, Bridge Over the River
Kwai.
Herbert Biberman died from bone cancer in 1971 in New York
City. One of the Hollywood Ten, a 2000 film chronicling his
blacklisting and the making of Salt of the Earth from Biberman's point of view, starred Jeff Goldblum as Biberman and Greta Scacchi as Gale Sondergaard.
The film's closing credits noted Biberman had never been removed from the old blacklist formally, and that Sondergaard never
again found work in Hollywood until after her husband's death. Standing by her man had cost Sondergaard almost a quarter century
of work.
See also
External link
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)