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Robert Ardrey

 
Writer: Robert Ardrey
  • Born: in Chicago,Illinois
  • Died: in Kalk Bay, Capetown, South Africa
  • Occupation: Writer
  • Active: '40s-'50s
  • Major Genres: Drama, Romance
  • Career Highlights: Thunder Rock, Quentin Durward, The Green Years
  • First Major Screen Credit: They Knew What They Wanted (1940)

Biography

Robert Ardrey was that rarity in Hollywood, a writer who beat Hollywood and its producers, moguls, and stars at their own game of amassing power, wealth, and respect. Equally comfortable dealing with literary editors such as Bennett Cerf or moguls like Darryl F. Zanuck, he also retained his credibility in the intellectual realm by authoring texts on anthropology, history, and sociology that remain widely respected decades after their publication. Born in Chicago in 1908, he was the son of Robert Leslie Ardrey, an editor and publisher, and the former Marie Haswell. He showed an interest in writing while still a boy, and in his early teens he worked on his first novel. He studied anthropology and a range of natural and social sciences at the University of Chicago, but with the encouragement of Thornton Wilder, Ardrey pursued writing as a career. He supported himself during the Great Depression of the early '30s by playing piano in various jazz clubs, working as a statistician and staff analyst for the city's personnel bureau, and lecturing on pre-Columbian civilization at the Chicago World's Fair. He also authored what he later described as an embarrassingly bad novel set among Cro-Magnon peoples, and a failed play.

Ardrey's first, fleeting taste of success as a writer came in 1934 when his play House on Fire was revised by Jed Harris, Ben Hecht, Charles MacArthur, and George Abbott into Star Spangled -- it went to Broadway in a production starring Garson Kanin, George Tobias, and Millard Mitchell, and racked up 23 performances. He saw two of his plays, How to Get Tough About It and Casey Jones, produced in 1937 and 1938, respectively (the latter done by the Group Theatre), for what turned out to be very short runs in New York. Ardrey's Thunder Rock was produced by the Group Theatre in 1939-1940 under the direction of Elia Kazan, with Myron McCormack, Luther Adler, Lee J. Cobb, Morris Carnovsky, and Frances Farmer in the cast. A topical, anti-isolationist drama, Thunder Rock was a failure in New York, closing after 23 performances, but that same year, Ardrey made his first foray to Hollywood, where he made an uncredited contribution to the movie Kitty Foyle (1940), starring Ginger Rogers.

Ardrey got his first movie credit for the screenplay of They Knew What They Wanted (1940), made at RKO. Meanwhile, Thunder Rock, which had been such a resounding failure in New York, found a profitable new life when it was transferred to the London stage, enjoying strong reviews and a good run before the German blitz and the resulting blackout crippled theatrical activity in the war-torn city. It was so successful that the rights were acquired by the writer/producer/director sibling combo of John Boulting and Roy Boulting and their Charter Films. They made it into a hugely popular, critically praised film in 1942, starring Michael Redgrave and James Mason. Thanks to its success in England, the play eventually found a new life in regional and semi-professional theater companies in the United States, and became Ardrey's biggest success in theater. By then, Ardrey had found a niche in Hollywood, working on such films as A Lady Takes a Chance (1943) at RKO and later moving to MGM, where he worked on The Green Years (1946), Song of Love (1947), The Three Musketeers (1948), The Secret Garden (1949), Madame Bovary (1949), Quentin Durwood (1955), and The Power and the Prize (1956). He later worked on The Wonderful Country at United Artists, and, in 1962, took on the daunting task of turning the World War I-era novel The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse into relevant entertainment for the early '60s, authoring the screenplay for Vincente Minnelli's gargantuan 1962 all-star release.

The widening dates between Ardrey's film projects came as a result of his increasing literary activity, as he began generating screenplays and novels on his own in the early '50s and subsequently returned to his academic training in anthropology and the behavioral sciences. From the end of the 1950s, he kept his oar in both fields, film and academia, and occupied a virtually unique position in the Hollywood pecking order because of his dual career. Ardrey described himself as "the best screenwriter in the world," a bit of self-promotion that, backed up by his actual credentials, worked well in an environment filled with posers. He had little faith in the creative instincts of most studio-employed directors, and was able to parlay his boldness into a practical means of handling those doubts -- by the time he wrote the screenplay for Khartoum (1966), he had received the right to approve any changes in the script before shooting; perhaps not surprisingly, the movie also got Ardrey his sole Oscar nomination. He also proved good at playing Hollywood off against the publishing industry when necessary. Hobe Morrison, writing in Variety, cited an instance (anticipating a similar story involving Peter Stone and the screenplay for Charade) from the early '50s in which Ardrey took an original screenplay that had been rejected by every major studio, and, at the suggestion of editor Bennett Cerf, turned it into a novel, The Brotherhood of Fear (1952). That book was published by Random House, and Ardrey then sold the screen rights for the novel to 20th Century Fox for a reported 100,000-dollar fee.

Ardrey's other career was as a scholarly writer. Among his works in that area, African Genesis (1961), Territorial Imperative (1966), The Social Contract (1970), and The Hunting Hypothesis (1977) were all well-received within the academic community and became standard texts in anthropology. What's more, even their film rights were eventually sold. At the time of his death in 1980, there were plans afoot for a stage musical adaptation of Thunder Rock with music by Oscar Brand, and the original play was presented on network television in 1985. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
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Wikipedia: Robert Ardrey
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Robert Ardrey (b. October 16, 1908, Chicago, Illinois—d. January 14, 1980, South Africa) was an American playwright and screenwriter who returned to his academic training in anthropology and the behavioral sciences in the 1950s.[1][2]

African Genesis and The Territorial Imperative, two of Robert Ardrey's most widely read works, as well as Desmond Morris' The Naked Ape (1967), were key elements in the public discourse of the 1960s which challenged earlier anthropological assumptions. Ardrey's ideas notably influenced Arthur C. Clarke and Stanley Kubrick in the development of 2001: A Space Odyssey,[3][4][5][6] as well as Sam Peckinpah, to whom Strother Martin gave copies of two of Ardrey's books.[7][8][9][10][11]

Contents

Paleoanthropology

As a science writer for the informed non-specialist reader in paleoanthropology, which encompasses anthropology, ethology, paleontology and human evolution, Robert Ardrey was among the proponents of the hunting hypothesis and the killer ape theory.

Ardrey postulated that precursors of Australopithecus survived millions of years of drought in the Miocene and Pliocene epochs, as the savannah spread and the forests shrank, by adapting the hunting ways of carnivorous species. Changes in survival techniques and social organisation gradually differentiated pre-humans from other primates. Concomitant changes in diet potentiated unique developments in the human brain.

The killer ape theory posits that aggression, a vital factor in hunting prey for food, was a fundamental characteristic which distinguished prehuman ancestors from other primates.

These themes have also been investigated in academia by, among others:

Researchers

Some of the scientists whose research particularly informed Robert Ardrey's scientific investigations, and with several of whom Ardrey consulted at length while developing his four major works in Africa from the 1940s through the 1970s, include:

Books

Fiction
  • World's Beginning (1944) (Cited in Everett F. Bleiler's The Checklist of Fantastic Literature, 1948.)
  • The Brotherhood of Fear (1952)
Nonfiction
  • African Genesis: A Personal Investigation into the Animal Origins and Nature of Man (1961)
  • The Territorial Imperative: A Personal Inquiry into the Animal Origins of Property and Nations (1966) http://www.ditext.com/. . .
  • The Social Contract: A Personal Inquiry into the Evolutionary Sources of Order and Disorder (1970) http://www.ditext.com/. . .
  • The Hunting Hypothesis: A Personal Conclusion Concerning the Evolutionary Nature of Man (1976)
  • Aggression and Violence in Man: A Dialogue Between Dr. L.S.B. Leakey and Robert Ardrey (1971) ISBN 0-03649-184-6.

Plays

  • Star Spangled (1936)
  • Casey Jones (1938)
  • God and Texas (1938)
  • How To Get Tough About It (1938)
  • Thunder Rock (1939) (filmed in 1942 in the UK, released 1944 in the US)
  • Jeb (1946)
  • Sing Me No Lullaby (1954)
  • Shadow Of Heroes (1958) (produced in London as Stone and Star)

Screenplays

Honours

Personal

Robert Ardrey was the son of Robert Leslie Ardrey, an editor and publisher, and the former Marie Haswell.[2] He graduated Phi Beta Kappa from the University of Chicago, where his mentor was Thornton Wilder. Ardrey was married to Helen Johnson, whom he met at the University, from 1938 until they divorced in 1960. They had two sons, Ross and Daniel. Ardrey married the South African stage actress Berdine Grunewald, who later illustrated his books, in 1960.

The Howard Gotlieb Archival Research Center in the Mugar Memorial Library at Boston University currently houses the Robert Ardrey Collection.[15]

References

  1. ^ "Finding Aid for the Robert Ardrey Papers, 1935-1960" (html). Online Archive of California. http://content.cdlib.org/ark:/13030/tf5w1006sq/?&query=%22Robert%20Ardrey%22&brand=oac. 
  2. ^ a b c Bruce Eder. "Robert Ardrey" (html). Allmovie (The New York Times). http://movies2.nytimes.com/gst/movies/filmography.html?p_id=173054&mod=bio. "Equally comfortable dealing with literary editors such as Bennett Cerf or moguls like Darryl F. Zanuck, he also retained his credibility in the intellectual realm by authoring texts on anthropology, history, and sociology that remain widely respected decades after their publication. The widening dates between Ardrey's film projects came as a result of his increasing literary activity, as he began generating screenplays and novels on his own in the early '50s and subsequently returned to his academic training in anthropology and the behavioral sciences. From the end of the 1950s, he kept his oar in both fields, film and academia, and occupied a virtually unique position in the Hollywood pecking order because of his dual career. In 1962, he took on the daunting task of turning the World War I-era novel The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse into relevant entertainment for the early '60s, authoring the screenplay for Vincente Minnelli's gargantuan 1962 all-star release." 
  3. ^ Arthur C. Clarke (New American Library, 1972). "2001 Diary (excerpts)". The Lost Worlds of 2001. Kubrick Site. http://www.visual-memory.co.uk/amk/doc/0073.html. 
  4. ^ Stanley Kubrick (27 February 1972). "Letter to the editor". The New York Times. Kubrick Site. http://www.visual-memory.co.uk/amk/doc/0037.html. 
  5. ^ Richard D. Erlich et al. (1997-2005). "Strange Odyssey: From Dart to Ardrey to Kubrick and Clarke". English studies/Film theory course, Science fiction and Film. Miami University. http://www.users.muohio.edu/erlichrd/350/odyssey.php. 
  6. ^ Daniel Richter (2002). "Moonwatcher's Memoir: A Diary of 2001, a Space Odyssey". New York: Carroll & Graf. ASIN 078671073X. ISBN 978-0786710737. http://www.fantasticfiction.co.uk/c/arthur-c-clarke/moonwatchers-memoir.htm. "…the longest flash forward in the history of movies: three million years, from bone club to artificial satellite, in a twenty-fourth of a second. (From the Foreword by Arthur C. Clarke.)" 
  7. ^ "Peckinpah: Primitive Horror". Time. 20 December 1971. http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,879005,00.html. 
  8. ^ David Weddle. If They Move . . . Kill 'Em!: The Life and TImes of Sam Peckinpah (p. 396). 1994 first hardcover edition: Grove Press, ISBN 0-8021-3776-8, ASIN 0802137768.
  9. ^ Paul Cremean (23 May 2006). "Peckinpah's West vs. Mann's Metropolis". Grover Watrous' Golden Egg. http://cremmers.blogspot.com/2006/05/peckinpahs-west-vs-manns-metropolis.html. "Drawing heavily from the work of Robert Ardrey, controversial sociologist and author of ‘African Genesis’ and ‘The Territorial Imperative,’ Peckinpah ascribed to the belief that man is by nature territorial, brutal and elementally animal." 
  10. ^ Garner Simmons. Peckinpah: A Portrait in Montage (p. 128). 1982 first edition: University of Texas Press, ISBN 0-29276-493-6, ASIN 0292764936. 2004 paperback edition: Limelight, ISBN 978-0879102739, ASIN 087910273X.
  11. ^ Marshall Fine. Bloody Sam: The Life and Films of Sam Peckinpah. 1991 first hardcover edition: Dutton Books, ISBN 155611236X, ISBN 978-1556112362. 2006 paperback edition: Miramax Books, ISBN 1-40135-972-8, ISBN 978-1401359720.
  12. ^ "Robert Ardrey (10/16/1908 - 1/14/1980) Other Credits" (html). AMC (TV network) website. http://www.amctv.com/person/detail?CID=8167-1-GMT. 
  13. ^ The Schumann Story (1950) at the Internet Movie Database
  14. ^ "Robert Ardrey Filmography" (html). DVDEmpire.com. http://www.dvdempire.com/Exec/v4_list_cast.asp?userid=&cast_id=60379. "Most Worked With: 1. Peter Ustinov 2. Pandro S. Berman 3. Raoul Walsh 4. Van Heflin 5. Angela Lansbury 6. Christopher Kent 7. Frank Allenby 8. Gene Kelly 9. George Sidney 10. Gladys Cooper" 
  15. ^ "Ardrey, Robert". Howard Gotlieb Archival Research Center (HGARC), Mugar Memorial Library, Boston University. http://www.bu.edu/phpbin/archives-cc/app/details.php?id=7338&return=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.bu.edu%2Fphpbin%2Farchives-cc%2Fapp%2Fbrowse.php%3Fletter%3DA%26sort_column%3Dcomposite_name%26sort_direction%3DASC%26per_page%3D10%26offset%3D20%26set_page%3Dnext. "Also included in the collection is Ardrey’s last manuscript, The Education of Robert Ardrey: An Autobiography (ca. 1980), edited and prefaced by Ardrey’s son, Daniel Ardrey." 

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Plays and screenplays
Paleoanthropology

 
 

 

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