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Irving Wallace

 
Writer: Irving Wallace
  • Born: Mar 19, 1916
  • Occupation: Writer
  • Active: '50s
  • Major Genres: Drama, Western
  • Career Highlights: The Prize, Meet Me at the Fair, Bombers B-52
  • First Major Screen Credit: Jive Junction (1943)

Biography

Prominent American novelist Irving Wallace wrote many screenplays for average-quality Hollywood films during the 1950s. Before that, he had 20 years experience as a freelance foreign correspondent. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
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Irving Wallace
Born March 19, 1916(1916-03-19)
Chicago, United States
Died June 29, 1990 (aged 74)
Los Angeles, United States
Occupation writer, journalist, screenwriter
Nationality United States American
Writing period 1900
Genres Fiction, Historical
Spouse(s) Sylvia Wallace
Children Amy Wallace, David Wallechinsky

Irving Wallace (March 19, 1916 - June 29, 1990) was an American bestselling author and screenwriter, penned best-selling books that were extensively researched, including such page-turners as The Chapman Report (1960), about human sexuality; The Prize (1962), a fictional behind-the-scenes account of the Nobel Prizes; The Man, about a black man becoming president of the U.S. in the 1960s; and The Word (1972), about the discovery of a new gospel.

Contents

Life

Wallace was born in Chicago, Illinois to Bessie Liss and Alexander Wallace (an Americanized version of the original family name of Wallechinsky). The family was Jewish[1] and originally from Russia, and he was named after his maternal grandfather, a bookkeeper and Talmudic scholar of Narewka. He grew up in Kenosha, Wisconsin, where he attended Kenosha Central High School.[2] He was the father of Olympic historian David Wallechinsky and author Amy Wallace.

Wallace began selling stories to magazines when he was a teenager. After serving in World War II, he continued to write for magazines, but soon turned to a more lucrative job as a Hollywood screenwriter. He collaborated on such films as The West Point Story (1950), Split Second (1953), Meet Me at the Fair (1953), and The Big Circus (1959).

After an unsatisfying stint in Hollywood, he devoted himself full-time to writing books. He published his first nonfiction work in 1955, The Fabulous Originals, and his first fiction offering, The Sins of Philip Fleming, in 1959. The latter, ignored by critics, was followed by the enormously successful The Chapman Report.

Wallace was a prolific author and published 33 books during his lifetime, all translated into 31 different languages.

Irving Wallace was married to Sylvia Wallace, a former magazine writer and editor. Her first novel, The Fountains, was an American best seller and published in twelve foreign editions. Her second novel, Empress, was published in 1980. She also helped produce, along with their two children, The Book of Lists #2. Sylvia Wallace died October 20, 2006 at the age of 89.

Several of Wallace's books have been made into films. Among his best known books are The Chapman Report (1960), The Prize (1962), The Word (1972) and The Fan Club (1974). He also produced some notable non-fiction works, including several editions of The People's Almanac and The Book of Lists.

Wallace died of pancreatic cancer in 1990 and was interred in the Hillside Memorial Park Cemetery in Culver City, California.

Bibliography

Novels

Non-fiction

  • Fabulous Originals: Lives of Extraordinary People Who Inspired Memorable Characters in Fiction (1955)
  • Square Pegs: Some Americans Who Dared to Be Different (1958)
  • The Fabulous Showman: The Life and Times of P.T. Barnum (1959)
  • The Twenty-Seventh Wife (1961)
  • The Sunday Gentleman (1966) (non-fiction)
  • Writing of One Novel (1968)
  • The Nympho and Other Maniacs: The Lives, the Loves and the Sexual Adventures of Some Scandalous and Liberated Ladies (1971)
  • The People's Almanac (1975) (with David Wallechinsky)
  • Stardust to Prairie Dust (1976)
  • The Book of Lists (1977) (with David Wallechinsky and Amy Wallace)
  • Two: Biography of The Original Siamese Twins (1978) (with Amy Wallace)
  • The People's Almanac No. 2 (1978) (with David Wallechinsky)
  • The Book of Lists 2 (1980) (with Amy Wallace and David Wallechinsky)
  • The Intimate Sex Lives of Famous People (1981)
  • The Book of Lists 3 (1983) (with Amy Wallace and David Wallechinsky)
  • Significa (1983) (with Amy Wallace and David Wallechinsky)
  • The Seventh Secret (1986) (in the Dutch translation of 1989 with an additional chapter by Tom Posch)
  • Secret Sex Lives of Famous People (1993)

Quotes

  • "To be one's self, and unafraid whether right or wrong, is more admirable than the easy cowardice of surrender to conformity."
  • "If successful novelists had a formula, they would not have failures, and I know of no novelist who has not had a failure at one time or another."
  • "Every man can transform the world from one of monotony and drabness to one of excitement and adventure."
  • "We have placed security in a position of primacy and subordinated individual liberty to it."

Notes

External links


 
 

 

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