Paul William Gallico (July 26, 1897–July 15, 1976) was a successful U.S. novelist and short story writer. Many of his
works were adapted for motion pictures. He is perhaps best remembered for the story The Snow
Goose, which was his only real critical success, and for his novel The
Poseidon Adventure, primarily because it has been made into several films, particularly the generally well-received
1972 version.
Gallico was born in New York City. His father was an Italian, and his mother came from
Austria; they had emigrated to New York in 1895. Gallico graduated from Columbia
University in 1919 and first achieved notability in the 1920s as a sportswriter, sports columnist, and sports editor of
the New York Daily News. His career was launched by an interview with boxer
Jack Dempsey in which he asked Dempsey to spar with him, and described how it felt to be
knocked out by the heavyweight champion. He followed up with accounts of catching Dizzy Dean's fastball and golfing with
Bobby Jones. He became a national celebrity and one of the highest-paid
sportswriters in America. He founded the Golden Gloves amateur boxing competition. His
1942 book, Lou Gehrig: Pride of the Yankees was adapted into a classic sports movie.
In the late 1930s he abandoned sportswriting for fiction, first writing an essay about this decision entitled "Farewell to Sport", and became an extremely
successful writer of short stories for magazines, many appearing in the then-premier fiction outlet, The Saturday Evening Post. Many of his novels, including The Snow Goose, are
expanded versions of his magazine stories.
Gallico once told New York Magazine "I'm a rotten novelist. I'm not even
literary. I just like to tell stories and all my books tell stories.... If I had lived 2,000 years ago I'd be going around to
caves, and I'd say, 'Can I come in? I'm hungry. I'd like some supper. In exchange, I'll tell you a story. Once upon a time there
were two apes.' And I'd tell them a story about two cavemen."
"The Snow Goose" was published in 1940 in The Saturday Evening Post and won an O. Henry prize for short stories in
1941. Critic Robert van Gelder called it "perhaps the most sentimental story that ever has achieved
the dignity of a Borzoi [prestige imprint of publisher Knopf] imprint. It is a timeless legend that makes use of every timeless
appeal that could be crowded into it." A public library puts it on a list of "tearjerkers." Gallico made no apologies, saying
that in the contest between sentiment and "slime," "sentiment remains so far out in front, as it always has and always will among
ordinary humans that the calamity-howlers and porn merchants have to increase the decibels of their lamentations, the hideousness
of their violence and the mountainous piles of their filth to keep in the race at all."
In 1975, the band Camel released an album entitled "Music Inspired by The Snow
Goose."
His short story, "The Man Who Hated People" was reworked into his book Love of Seven Dolls, which was adapted into the
1953 Oscar-winning motion picture Lili, which starred
Leslie Caron and Zsa Zsa Gabor. It was later staged
as a musical, Carnival!, with Anna Maria
Alberghetti and Jerry Orbach. The versions differ significantly, but all center
around the story of a confusing relationship between a group of friendly puppets, and a young woman who is in love with the
puppets but badly treated by the cruel and bitter puppeteer who controls them.
His novel, Mrs. 'Arris Goes to Paris, published in 1958, was a bestseller, and he wrote three more books about the lovable charlady, 'Mrs. 'Arris'.
The Silent Miaow (1964) purports to be a guide written by a cat, "translated from the
feline," on how to obtain, captivate, and dominate a human family. Illustrated with photographs by Suzanne Szasz, it is considered a classic by cat lovers. Other Gallico cat books include Jennie 1950
(American title The Abandoned), Thomasina: The Cat Who Thought She Was God 1957,
filmed in 1964 as The Three Lives of Thomasina, which was very
popular in the former USSR in the early 1990s, inspiring the Russian remake Bezumyana
Lori, and Honorable Cat 1972.
Gallico's 1969 book The Poseidon Adventure, about a group of passengers attempting to escape from a capsized ocean
liner, attracted little attention at the time. The New York Times gave it a
one-paragraph review, noting that "Mr. Gallico collects a Grand Hotel [a reference to the 1930 Vicki Baum novel] full of shipboard dossiers. These interlocking histories may be damp with sentimentality as
well as brine—but the author's skill as a storyteller invests them with enough suspense to last the desperate journey." In
contrast, Irwin Allen's motion picture
adaptation of Gallico's book was instantly recognized as a great movie of its kind. In his article "What makes 'Poseidon'
Fun?", reviewer Vincent Canby coined the term "ark movie" for the genre including Airport, The High and the Mighty,
A Night to Remember, and Titanic (the 1953 movie, of course). He wrote that "the Poseidon Adventure puts the Ark Movie
back where God intended it to be, in the water. Not flying around in the air on one engine or with a hole in its side." The movie
was enormously successful, spawned a whole decade of disaster movies, and is a cult classic today.
In the spring of 2006, Penguin Publishing was set to re-release "The Poseidon Adventure" in paperback and audio CD formats, in
anticipaton of Warner Bros' re-telling of the disaster story.
J K Rowling has declared that Gallico's 1968 Manxmouse was one of her favorite childhood books. In fact the boggarts appearing
in Ms. Rowling's Harry Potter books closely resemble Manxmouse's "clutterbumph" which takes the form of whatever the viewer fears
the most. Manxmouse was illustrated by Anne and Janet Grahame-Johnstone who also illustrated One Hundred and One Dalmations.
Unfortunately this book is out of print and somewhat hard to find for a reasonable price following Ms. Rowling's declared
fondness of the book. The Japanese animation studio Nippon Animation adapted this tale into a feature-length anime film in 1979,
directed by Hiroshi Saito. The anime, titled Tondemo Nezumi Daikatsuyaku: Manxmouse (Manxmouse's Great Activity) in
Japanese, was dubbed into English in the 1980s, broadcast on Nickelodeon (TV channel), and released on video by Celebrity Home
Entertainment.
A television series, The Adventures of Hiram Holliday
(starring Wally Cox) was adapted from a series of his stories about a newspaper proof-reader
who had many adventures dealing with Nazis and spies in Europe on the eve of World War II.
In his New York Times obituary, Molly Ivins said that "to say that Mr. Gallico was
prolific hardly begins to describe his output." He wrote 41 books and numerous short stories, twenty theatrical movies, twelve TV
movies, and had a TV series based on his Hiram Holliday short stories.
Paul Gallico's style and themes
Gallico is a self-described "storyteller." Many of his stories are told in the apparently artless style of a folk tale or
legend. Like other "storyteller" writers, the charm and power lies in something about the cumulative effect of plainly told
detail after plainly told detail. A summary outline of a Gallico story sounds uninteresting, even bordering on ludicrous; an
individual quotation broken out of its context falls flat; their essence exists only in their entirety.
For example, consider Molly Ivins' summary of The Snow Goose:
- The Snow Goose is a tale about a disabled painter living in a lonely
lighthouse on the coast of Essex County in England. One day a girl brings with him a wounded snow goose, which he nurses back to
health. The goose returns each year, as does the girl, and a romance develops between the girl and the artist. But the artist is
killed rescuing soldiers after the evacuation of Dunkirk, while the snow goose flies overhead.
From this summary, is it possible to believe that this is Gallico's masterpiece and a story which frequently moves readers to
tears?
Andrea Park, in a review of Love of Seven Dolls, notes that Gallico's work has power only as a textural whole. "It is
difficult to describe and impossible to pinpoint the tenuous, even nebulous word magic that successfully carries a reader into
the world of fantasy and make-believe. It is perhaps delineated as a quality, a kind of fragile atmosphere that, once
established, cannot be broken. Mr. Gallico creates this atmosphere when he writes the sequences with Mouche and the puppets."
Beginning writers are often advised to show rather than to describe. One of the mysteries of Gallico's style is its
effectiveness despite his constant violation of this rule. When he wants us to know that a Peyrot is cynical, he says "Wholly
cynical, he had no regard or respect for man, woman, child, or God." When he wants us to know that Mouche is innocent, he tells
us of her "innocence and primitive mind." When he wants us to know that Rhayader has a warm heart in his crippled body, he says
"His body was warped, but his heart was filled with love for wild and hunted things." Much of Gallico's stories are told as a
string of assertions and generalities, illuminated only by touches of the particular and specific.
Gallico sometimes sets the scene by describing his stories as legends. Within the text of The Snow Goose he says that
"this story... has been garnered from many sources and from many people. Some of it comes in the form of fragments from men who
looked upon strange and violent scenes." Later he writes "Now the story becomes fragmentary, and one of these fragments is in the
words of the men on leave who told it in the public room of the Crown and Arrow, an East Chapel pub." Given this presentation, it
is hardly surprising that it has been taken to be a retelling of an actual legend; Gallico writes that "the person and character
of the painter are wholly fictional as is the story itself, although I am told that in some quarters the snow goose appearing
over Dunkirk has been accepted as legend and I have been compelled to reply to many correspondents that it was sheer
invention."
Martin Levin wrote that "Mr. Gallico has long had a way with the quasi-human—puppets (Love
of Seven Dolls), cows (Ludmila,) geese (The Snow Goose)" as well as no fewer than five books about cats.
Often, Gallico's point of view implies that the nonhuman character in some way really possesses a human spirit, or a portion
of a human spirit. In The Love of Seven Dolls, the puppeteer's relation to his puppets suggests at least a resemblance to
multiple-personality disorder, a disorder which was well-known to the lay public in the 1950s. It is significant that Gallico
never even hints at such a thing. He notes that the puppeteer's "primitive" Senegalese assistant
"looked upon the puppets 'as living, breathing creatures.'" and that "the belief in the separate existence of these little people
was even more basic with Mouche for it was a necessity to her and a refuge from the storms of life with which she had been unable
to cope." One could go so far as to say that he leaves it deliberately ambiguous whether the relation between the puppeteer and
his puppets is purely natural or whether there could be at least a trace of the supernatural in it. This ambiguity is hinted at
in the close of the movie adaptation, Lili. Although the puppeteer Paul's hands are engaged
in embracing Lili, the four puppets somehow peek around the puppet stage proscenium to smile their happy approval, apparently
under their own power.
The treatment contrasts with the 1954 Danny Kaye vehicle, Knock on Wood, which turns on the similar theme of a ventriloquist who can express his true self only through his dummy. This movie not only hints at a
psychiatric undertone, it revels in it; Kaye's character's love interest is a "lady psychiatrist" (in the phrase used by a
contemporary reviewer). The pop-psychiatric point of view was prevalent during the late 1940s and 1950s, the same period that
brought us the psychoanalytic musical Lady in the Dark and the book
The Three Faces of Eve. Gallico's distancing of his writing from this
"modern" point of view and his use of the language of legend and fairy-tale seems deliberate, the literary equivalent of what
painter Thomas Kinkade does today in his painting.
References
- The New York Times, Aug 24, 1969; pg. BR26: The Poseidon Adventure
- The New York Times, Jan 14, 1973, p. 121: What Makes 'Poseidon' Fun? (Vincent Canby)
- The New York Times, Jul 7, 1976, p. 20: Paul Gallico, Sportswriter And Author, Is Dead at 78 by
Molly Ivins
- Madison Public
Library's list of "Tearjerkers"
External links
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)