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Leon Uris

 
Who2 Biography: Leon Uris, Writer

  • Born: 3 August 1924
  • Birthplace: Baltimore, Maryland
  • Died: 21 June 2003
  • Best Known As: The author of Exodus

Leon Uris was a best-selling novelist known especially for modern Jewish heroes such as those depicted in his 1958 novel Exodus. An international success, the book resulted from Uris's research as a war correspondent during the early days of the founding of Israel. Uris was a high school dropout who joined the U.S. Marines during World War II, serving in the South Pacific from 1942 to 1945. He started his writing career selling short stories, and published his first novel in 1953: Battle Cry, a tale based on his experiences in the Marines. During the 1950s and '60s he wrote novels and worked on screenplays for Hollywood, either adaptations of his books (Battle Cry, The Angry Hills, Exodus and Topaz) or original stories (1957's Gunfight at the O.K. Corral). A popular author for many years, he wrote novels based on historical research, his own travels and interviews. His best-known works include Mila 18 (1961), Q.B. VII (1970), Trinity (1976, about Ireland, not Israel) and A God in Ruins (1999).

Exodus was made into a 1960 film starring Paul Newman and Eva Marie Saint.

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Columbia Encyclopedia: Leon Uris
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Uris, Leon (yʊrĭs'), 1924-2003, American novelist, b. Baltimore, Md. Uris, who wrote many popular novels, is best known for the runaway best seller Exodus (1958), a fictional account of the early history of Israel that was eventually translated into dozens of languages. Meticulously researched, much of his fiction takes place in various historical periods of the 20th cent. His other novels include Battle Cry (1953), The Angry Hills (1955), Mila 18 (1961), Topaz (1967), QB VII (1970), Trinity (1976), The Haj (1984), Redemption (1995), and A God in Ruins (1999). Uris also wrote screenplays, notably for the classic Western Gunfight at the OK Corral (1957), and many of his novels were made into films.
Works: Works by Leon Uris
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(1924-2003)

1958Exodus. Having published two previous novels--Battle Cry (1953), based on his war experiences as a Marine, and The Angry Hills (1955), about a Jewish unit of British soldiers fighting in Greece--Uris publishes a best-selling novelization of the creation of the modern state of Israel. His characteristic extensive documentary method, based on interviews with more than twelve hundred eyewitnesses, joins the fictional story to historical events.
1961Mila 18. Despite critical complaints that he has turned a tragedy into a melodrama, Uris's follow-up to Exodus is another bestseller, dramatizing the revolt in the Warsaw ghetto against the Nazis.

Quotes By: Leon Uris
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Quotes:

"Often we have no time for our friends but all the time in the world for our enemies."

Writer: Leon Uris
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  • Born: Aug 03, 1924 in Baltimore, Maryland
  • Died: Jun 21, 2003 in Shelter Island, New York
  • Occupation: Writer
  • Active: '50s-'60s
  • Major Genres: Drama, War
  • Career Highlights: Exodus, Gunfight at the O.K. Corral, The Angry Hills
  • First Major Screen Credit: Battle Cry (1955)

Biography

Leon Uris overcame a series of events, including World War II, that seemed to deflect him from his career as a writer, to become one of the top-selling novelists of the second half of the 20th century, his work a source of major motion pictures for 15 years. Born Leon Marcus Uris in Baltimore, MD, in 1924, he was the second child of Wolf William Uris and the former Alma Blumberg, both Polish-Jewish immigrants. The elder Uris had spent a year in Palestine in the late 1910s while traveling from Poland to America; the connection to Palestine would figure in a major way in Leon Uris's later writing career. The impulse to write hit Leon early in life -- according to Current Biography, Leon Uris authored an operetta in 1930, at age six, inspired by the death of his pet dog. Despite his interest in writing, however, he was a poor formal student of English, failing the subject several times. And even such routine matters as his completion of and graduation from high school were thwarted by events around the world -- while still a high school senior, he enlisted in the Marine Corps just weeks after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. Following a period stationed in New Zealand, Uris served in combat on Guadalcanal and Tarawa as a radio operator, all experiences that would play a key role in his subsequent career.

Uris lived in San Francisco after the war with his new wife, herself a former Marine sergeant, and a growing family. He worked in a non-editorial capacity for a newspaper, writing in his spare time and occasionally trying to get a magazine article published. All of his efforts were unsuccessful until 1950, when he sold an article to Esquire dealing with the All-Amercian football team. With that sale, he plunged into writing in earnest, his goal to tell the story of the Marine Corps in the Pacific during World War II, feeling that -- as he put it to Bernard Kalb in the Saturday Review -- "the real Marine story had not been told." The result, published by G.P. Putnam in 1953, after being rejected by a dozen companies, was Battle Cry. Coming out in the wake of a flurry of fact-inspired (if not fact-based) World War II novels, including Herman Wouk's The Caine Mutiny, James Jones's From Here to Eternity, and Norman Mailer's The Naked and the Dead, Battle Cry was highly praised by critics and was a huge seller, possibly helped by the fact that it was a much more unquestioningly patriotic work than many of those other books, most of which took a more cynical, jaundiced, and complex look at the motivations behind the men fighting the war. The marines in Battle Cry, by contrast, signd up and fought for the best of reasons, just as Uris had in early 1942.

Hollywood beckoned in the wake of Battle Cry's success, and by the mid-'50s Uris was working in the story department at Warner Bros., where he was one of the hands that helped to bring Rebel Without a Cause to the screen. At the same time, he also wrote the scenario for Raoul Walsh's screen version of Battle Cry -- a sprawling, epic-length film with a huge cast. The movie was not taken too seriously by reviewers, who mostly criticized it for focusing on what they regarded as soap opera-ish character relationships, and taking two hours to get to any actual fighting. The public, in love with the book and oblivious to the critics, lined up in droves and the movie was an immense success.

For his second novel, Uris wrote The Angry Hills, dealing with the British campaign in Greece during World War II and based on the diary of an uncle of his who had been a member of the Palestine Brigade. That book, in turn, was brought to the screen in 1959 by Robert Aldrich. Uris's own Hollywood output, however, was very spotty at best until 1956, when producer Hal Wallis engaged him to do the screenplay to Gunfight at the O.K. Corral. Although that script was no more accurate than any other Hollywood version of the story -- the actual characters of Wyatt Earp and his brothers hardly being "heroic" in any way that modern audiences could perceive -- it had scope, power, and a storytelling momentum that made it one of the most popular and enduring Westerns of the post-World War II era, driven by a pair of dazzling performances by Burt Lancaster and Kirk Douglas and the unerring directorial eye of John Sturges.

Even as Gunfight was coming to theaters, Uris was already neck-deep in his most challenging project, returning to another aspect of his family's history to research what became the book Exodus, telling of the founding of the State of Israel. He spent two years and traveled 12,000 miles within the tiny country and conducted thousands of interviews with people involved in virtually every aspect of his subject, and he just missed out on getting caught in the late 1956 Sinai War. The book received mixed reviews; critics attacked it on stylistic grounds but were unable to find fault with Uris as a storyteller. The film rights to the book were sold in advance of its writing, an unusual arrangement at the time (made possible by the immense success of Battle Cry as a book and a movie) that covered Uris's expenses for the research. The book, published by Doubleday, became an instant bestseller upon its release in 1958, riding the national list for over a year, with 19 weeks in the number one spot. The 1960 movie, directed and produced by Otto Preminger and released through United Artists, was also a box-office blockbuster, and the paperback edition of the book had sold over five million copies by 1965, with no end in sight.

His 1961 novel, Mila 18, dealt with the Warsaw Ghetto uprising against the Nazis by Polish Jews during World War II; Armageddon: A Novel of Berlin (1964) told of that city's travails in the post-World War II era; Topaz (1967), which was later filmed unsuccessfully by Alfred Hitchcock, dealt with Soviet espionage during the period of the Cuban missile crisis; and Trinity dealt with the Irish struggle for independence from England during the 19th century. Much as Exodus had given Uris a special following among Jewish-American readers for its telling of the history of Israel, Trinity solidified a bond between the author and Irish-Americans that lasted for generations, and all of his books after Battle Cry were widely translated and found audiences around the world. Redemption and A God in Ruins, both follow-ups to Trinity, only extended his special status among Irish readers. Uris's influence on motion pictures waned after Topaz, which somehow became one of Alfred Hitchcock's few failures of the 1960's and perhaps that director's least well known late career movie.

Uris's brand of historical storytelling across a big canvas proved better suited to the printed page or the miniseries, and he acquired a whole new generation of readers in the mid-'70s when QB VII, his 1970 novel based on a lawsuit filed against Uris by a Polish doctor over his mention in the book Mila 18, came to the small screen. A whole new wave of reprints of his novels poured into bookstores and into readers' hands, and all of his novels were steady sellers in the used-book market across the decades. Trinity was still a very quick mover off shelves in New York City (despite its being less Irish in character than ever) in the 1990's and early 2000's, some 25 years after its publication. He remained a popular and successful author into the 1990's, and at the time of his death from renal failure in June 2003, at age 78, he had a new book, O'Hara's Choice -- a story about the Marine Corps -- slated for publication in October of that year. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
Wikipedia: Leon Uris
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Leon Marcus Uris (August 3, 1924 - June 21, 2003) was an American novelist, known for his historical fiction and the deep research that went into his novels. His two bestselling books were Exodus, published in 1958, and Trinity, in 1976.[1]

Contents

Life

Leon Uris was born in Baltimore, Maryland, the son of Jewish-American parents Wolf William and Anna (Blumberg) Uris. His father, a Polish-born immigrant, was a paperhanger, then a storekeeper. William spent a year in Palestine after World War I before entering the United States. He derived his surname from Yerushalmi, meaning "man of Jerusalem." (His brother Aron, Leon Uris' uncle, took the name Yerushalmi) "He was basically a failure," Uris later said of his father. "He went from failure to failure."

Uris attended schools in Norfolk, Virginia and Baltimore, but never graduated from high school, after having failed English three times. At the age of seventeen, Uris joined the United States Marine Corps, serving in the South Pacific as a radioman at Guadalcanal, Tarawa, and New Zealand from 1942 through 1945. While recuperating from malaria in San Francisco, he met Betty Beck, a Marine sergeant; they married in 1945.

In 1950, Esquire magazine bought an article from him and this encouraged him to work on a novel. The resulting best-seller, Battle Cry, graphically showing the toughness and courage of U.S. Marines in the Pacific and The Angry Hills, a novel set in war-time Greece.

As a screenwriter and newspaper correspondent, he became intensely interested in Israel. In the early 1950s, he was hired by Edward Gottlieb, an American public relations man seeking to improve Israel's image in the United States, to write a novel about Israel's origin that portrayed Israel in a favourable light.[2] This led to his best-known work, Exodus, which illustrates the history of Palestine from the late 19th century through the founding of the state of Israel in 1948. Exodus was a worldwide best-seller, translated into a dozen languages, and was made into a feature film in 1960, starring Paul Newman, as well as a short-lived Broadway musical (12 previews, 19 performances) in 1971.

Uris' subsequent works included: Mila 18, a story of the Warsaw ghetto uprising; Armageddon: A Novel of Berlin, which reveals the detailed work by British and American intelligence services in planning for the occupation and pacification of post WWII Germany; Trinity, an epic novel about Ireland's struggle for independence; QB VII, a novel about the role of a Polish doctor in a German concentration camp; and The Haj, with insights into the history of the Middle East and the secret machinations of foreigners which have led to today's turmoil.

He also wrote the screenplays for Battle Cry and Gunfight at the O.K. Corral.

Leon Uris died of renal failure at his Long Island home on Shelter Island, aged 78.[3]

Uris was married three times: to Betty Beck, with whom he had three children, from 1945 through their divorce in 1968; Margery Edwards in 1969, who died of an apparent suicide a year later, and Jill Peabody in 1970, with whom he had two children, and divorced in 1989.

Trivia

  • In some of his books a likeable character is associated with the number 359195: for example, Danny Forrester's (Battle Cry) and Clinton Loveless' (Armageddon: A Novel of Berlin) service numbers and the number tattooed onto Dov Landau's (Exodus) forearm as his registration number in Auschwitz.
  • He was born on the day on which Joseph Conrad died. Both writers had strong Polish connections.
  • He was known for his long epic novels. In one episode of The Simpsons, Cletus attempts to use one of his books to crack open the shell of a turtle, saying "Nothing cracks a turtle like Leon Uris".

Selected titles

See also

References

  1. ^ "Author Leon Uris Dies at 78" The Elyria (Ohio) Chronicle Telegram, June 25, 2003, page A8.
  2. ^ The Persuasion Explosion, Art Stevens, 1985
  3. ^ Leon Uris Biography at nytimes.com

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Who2 Biography. Copyright © 1998-2008 by Who2, LLC. All rights reserved. See the Leon Uris biography from Who2.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ 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
Quotes By. Copyright © 2008 QuotationsBook.com. All rights reserved.  Read more
Writer. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Leon Uris" Read more