Paul Gallico: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
 
(397 intermediate revisions by more than 100 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Short description|American writer and journalist (1897–1976)}}
'''Paul William Gallico''' ([[July 26]], [[1897]]-[[July 15]], [[1976]]) was a fabulously successful author of popular short stories and novels, many of which were adapted for motion pictures. He is perhaps best remembered for the story ''The Snow Goose,'' which was his only real critical success, and the for motion picture based on his novel "[[The Poseidon Adventure]]."
{{Use mdy dates|date=October 2021}}
{{Infobox person
|name = Paul Gallico
|image = Gallico.paul.jpg
|caption = Gallico photographed by [[Carl Van Vechten]], 1937
|birth_date = {{birth date|1897|7|26}}
|birth_place = New York City, New York, U.S.
|death_date = {{death date and age|1976|7|15|1897|7|26}}
|death_place = [[Monaco]] or [[Antibes]], France
|occupation = {{flatlist|
* Novelist
* short story
* sports writer
}}
|spouse = {{plainlist|
* {{marriage|Alva Thoits Taylor|September 5, 1921|1934|end = divorced}}
* {{marriage|Elaine St. Johns|April 12, 1935|1936|end = divorced}}
* {{marriage|Pauline Gariboldi|1939|1954|end = divorced}}
* {{marriage|Virginia von Falz-Fein|July 19, 1963}}
}}
|children = 2
|signature = Paul Gallico signature.jpg
}}


'''Paul William Gallico''' (July 26, 1897 – July 15, 1976) was an American novelist and short story and sports writer.<ref name=NYT_obit>Ivins, Molly, "[https://www.nytimes.com/1976/07/17/archives/paul-gallico-sportswriter-and-author-is-dead-at-78-founded-golden.html Paul Gallico, Sportswriter And Author, Is Dead at 78]", ''[[The New York Times]]'', July 17, 1976. Retrieved Oct. 25, 2020.</ref> Many of his works were adapted for motion pictures. He is perhaps best remembered for ''[[The Snow Goose: A Story of Dunkirk|The Snow Goose]]'', his most critically successful book, for the novel ''[[The Poseidon Adventure (novel)|The Poseidon Adventure]]'', primarily through the 1972 film adaptation, and for four novels about the beloved character of Mrs. Harris.
He 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 a 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.


==Early life and career==
In the late 1930s he abandoned sportswriting for fiction, 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 was born in New York City in 1897. His father was the Italian concert pianist, composer and music teacher Paolo Gallico ([[Trieste]], May 13, 1868 – New York, July 6, 1955), and his mother, Hortense Erlich, came from Austria; they had emigrated to New York in 1895. Gallico's graduation from [[Columbia University]] was delayed to 1921, having served a year and a half in the [[United States Army]] during [[World War I]].<ref name="bioinfo">[http://www.paulgallico.info/gallicobiog.html Paul Gallico - a biography] www.paulgallico.info. Retrieved February 21, 2022.</ref> He first achieved notice in the 1920s as a [[sportswriter]], sports columnist, and sports editor of the [[Daily News (New York)|New York ''Daily News'']].


In 1937, in Gallico's "Farewell to Sport" he stated, "For all her occasional beauty and unquestioned courage, there has always been something faintly ridiculous about the big-time lady athletes."
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."
In the same book, Gallico later explained why he thinks Jewish people are drawn to and good at basketball, "The game places a premium on an alert, scheming mind, flashy trickiness, artful dodging and general smart aleckness."


Gallico's career was launched by an interview with boxer [[Jack Dempsey]] in which he asked Dempsey to spar with him. Gallico 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 (golfer)|Bobby Jones]]. He became one of the highest-paid sportswriters in America. His book, ''[[Lou Gehrig]]: Pride of the Yankees'' (1941) was adapted into the sports movie ''[[The Pride of the Yankees]]'' (1942), starring [[Gary Cooper]] and [[Teresa Wright]].
'''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."


==Career as a fiction writer==
His story, "Love of Seven Dolls" was adapted into the [[1953]] motion picture [[Lili]], which starred [[Leslie Caron]], and then subsequently into a musical, [[Carnival!]], with [[Anna Maria Alberghetti]]. It concerns a naive adolescent girl who is about to commit suicide, and is dissuaded when she hears kind words from puppet in a carnival puppet show.
{{more citations needed section|date=May 2021}}
In the late 1930s, he abandoned sports writing for fiction, first writing an essay about this decision entitled "Farewell to Sport" (published in an anthology of his sports writing, also titled ''Farewell to Sport'' (1938)), and became a successful writer of short stories for magazines, many appearing in the then-premier fiction outlet, ''[[The Saturday Evening Post]]''. His novella ''The Snow Goose'' and other works are expanded versions of his magazine stories.


Gallico once confessed to ''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."{{sfn|Holtzman|1974|p=45}}
''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]], ''Thomasina: The Cat Who Thought She Was God'' [[1957]] (filmed in 1964 as ''The Three Lives of Thomasina''), and ''The Honorable Cat'' [[1972]].


In 1939, Gallico published ''The Adventures of Hiram Holliday'', known for its [[The Adventures of Hiram Holliday|later television adaptation]] with [[Wally Cox]]. It depicts the comic adventures of a modern American knight-errant visiting Europe on the verge of World War II and waging a single-handed, quixotic struggle against the [[Nazis]] in various countries. Gallico's Austrian background is evident in the book's strong [[Habsburg]] Monarchist theme. (The protagonist saves an Austrian princess, wins her love and takes charge of her young son – who, the book hints, is fated to become the new Habsburg Emperor once the Nazis are driven out of Austria.)
His [[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&mdash;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 was immediately 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 (movie)]], [[The High and the Mighty]], [[A Night to Remember]], [[Titanic]] (the 1953 movie, of course), and [[Phone Call from a Stranger]]. 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.

''The Snow Goose'' was published in 1941 in ''The Saturday Evening Post'' and won the [[O. Henry Award]] 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."<ref>{{Cite book|editor-last=Rothe|editor-first=Anna|title=Current Biography, 1946: Who's News and why|date=1947|publisher=H.W. Wilson Company|isbn=978-0-8242-0112-8|location=New York|page=202|language=en}}</ref> 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."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2011/dec/19/winter-reads-snow-goose-paul-gallico|last=Allardice|first=Lisa|title=Winter reads: The Snow Goose by Paul Gallico|work=The Guardian|date=December 19, 2011|access-date=2021-10-13}}</ref>

On December 25, 1949, Gallico's short story {{"'}}Twas the Night Before Christmas" was dramatized as Attraction 66 of the NBC radio series ''Radio City Playhouse''. It tells the humorous tale of a New York newspaper reporter and a photographer sent on a Christmas Eve wild goose chase by their publisher's wife for two goats harnessed to a little red wagon, which she intends to give her nephews for Christmas. During a night-long search fueled by a few drinks along the way, the reporter and photographer run across the evening's most dramatic news stories, which they must supposedly ignore in favor of the chore set out by their publisher's wife. The radio dramatization remains very popular with Old Time Radio fans and is featured each year on Sirius XM Radio Classics.

His short story "The Man Who Hated People" was reworked into an unpublished short story "The Seven Souls of Clement O'Reilly", adapted into the movie ''[[Lili (1953 film)|Lili]]'' (1953) and later staged as the musical ''[[Carnival!]]'' (1961). The film ''Lili'' is a poignant, whimsical fairy tale, the story of an orphaned waif, a naïve young woman whose fate is thrown in with that of a traveling carnival and its performers, a lothario magician and an embittered puppeteer. In 1954, Gallico published the novella ''The Love of Seven Dolls'', based on "The Man Who Hated People". The versions, while differing, share a core theme surrounding the girl and the puppeteer. The puppeteer, communicating with Lili through his puppets as a surrogate voice, develops a vehicle whereby each of them can freely express their inner pain and anguished emotions.

In the 1950s, Gallico spent time in [[Liechtenstein]], where he wrote ''Ludmila'', the retelling of a local legend.<ref>{{cite book|author=Sack, John |author-link=John Sack |year=1959 |title=[[Report from Practically Nowhere]] |pages=97–103 |publisher=Curtis Publishing Company |location=New York }}</ref>

His novel ''[[Mrs. 'Arris Goes to Paris]]'' (1958) was a bestseller, and became the first of four books about the lovable [[charwoman]] Mrs. 'Arris. The character was said by ''The New York Times'' to be "perhaps Mr. Gallico's most beloved creation".<ref name=NYT_obit/> Negotiations for film rights began as early as 1960 when he was resident in Salcombe. It was produced as a TV movie with [[Angela Lansbury]] in 1992.

During his time in Salcombe, Gallico serialised an account of the sinking of the [[MV Princess Victoria|MV ''Princess Victoria'']], the ferry that plied between Larne and Stranraer, an event which left only 44 out of 179 surviving. It was his habit, at this time, to wander in his garden dictating to his assistant Mel Menzies, who then typed the manuscript in the evening, ready for inclusion in the newspaper.

''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 by the Walt Disney Studios as ''[[The Three Lives of Thomasina]]'' (which was very popular in the former [[Soviet Union|USSR]] in the early 1990s, inspiring the Russian remake ''Bezumnaya Lori''), and ''Honorable Cat'' (1972), a book of poetry and essays about cats.

Gallico's 1969 book ''[[The Poseidon Adventure (novel)|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 (novel)|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&mdash;but the author's skill as a storyteller invests them with enough suspense to last the desperate journey." In contrast, [[Irwin Allen]]'s [[The Poseidon Adventure (1972 film)|motion picture adaptation]] of Gallico's book instantly became a hit. In his article "What makes 'Poseidon' Fun?", reviewer [[Vincent Canby]] coined the term "ark movie" for the genre including ''[[Airport (1970 film)|Airport]]'', ''[[The High and the Mighty (film)|The High and the Mighty]]'', ''[[A Night to Remember (1958 film)|A Night to Remember]]'', and ''[[Titanic (1953 film)|Titanic]]'' (the 1953 movie). 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, part of a decade of [[disaster films]], and remains a cult classic.

In his ''New York Times'' obituary, [[Molly Ivins]] said that "to say that Mr. Gallico was prolific hardly begins to describe his output."<ref name=NYT_obit/> He wrote 41 books and numerous short stories, 20 theatrical movies, 12 TV movies, and had a TV series based on his Hiram Holliday short stories.

==Later life==
On resigning from the ''Daily News'' to become a full-time fiction writer, Gallico moved from New York to the town of [[Salcombe]], England.<ref>Gallico, "Mainly Autobiographical" p. 23 (see list of references)</ref> Later he lived in different regions of the world, including other parts of England, Mexico, [[Liechtenstein]] and [[Monaco]].<ref name=BensonBio>Martin Benson, "[http://www.paulgallico.info/notitle.html Paul Gallico - a biography]"</ref> He spent the last part of his life in [[Antibes]], France, and was buried there after his death from a heart attack in 1976, aged 78, which is variously reported to have happened in Antibes or Monaco.<ref name=BensonBio/><ref name=NYT_obit/>

In 1955, Gallico took an automobile tour of the United States, traveling some 10,000 miles, sponsored by ''Reader's Digest''.<ref name=SULD>Gallico, ''Confessions of a Story-teller'', p.386 (introduction to story "Shut Up, Little Dog")</ref> He wrote that "it had been almost twenty years since I had traveled extensively through my own country and the changes brought about by two decades would thus stand out."<ref name=SULD/> Several stories resulted.

==Popular culture==
In 2000, [[J.K. Rowling]] declared that Gallico's 1968 ''[[Manxmouse]]'' was one of her favorite childhood books.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20020606085653/http://www.angelfire.com/mi3/cookarama/nbctodayoct00.html NBC interview with J.K. Rowling]</ref> The [[boggart]]s appearing in 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 ''[[The Hundred and One Dalmatians]]'' by [[Dodie Smith]]. The Japanese animation studio [[Nippon Animation]] adapted this tale into a feature-length anime film in 1979, directed by [[Hiroshi Saito (director)|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, and released on video by Celebrity Home Entertainment.

The television series ''[[The Adventures of Hiram Holliday]]'' (starring [[Wally Cox]]) was adapted from a series of Gallico's stories about a newspaper proofreader who had many adventures dealing with [[Nazis]] and spies in Europe on the eve of World War II.

In [[Fredric Brown]]'s science-fiction novel ''[[What Mad Universe]]'', a magazine editor from our own world is accidentally sent to a parallel Earth significantly different from ours; in this parallel world, the editor reads a biography written of a dashing space hero, a figure central to the novel's narrative, which is supposedly written by Paul Gallico.

In 1975, the British progressive rock band [[Camel (band)|Camel]] released an album of work based on Gallico's ''The Snow Goose''. Although the author was initially opposed to the album's release, legal action was evaded on the condition that the band used the words "[[Music Inspired by The Snow Goose]]" on the album's cover.

In 2005, a televised disaster film titled ''[[The Poseidon Adventure (2005 film)|The Poseidon Adventure]]'', which was a remake of the movie inspired by Gallico's novel, was aired; the Captain, played by [[Peter Weller]], is named after Gallico.

== Bibliography ==
{{Incomplete list |date=January 2023}}
{{div col|colwidth=35em}}
* ''Farewell to Sport'' (1938)
* ''The Adventures of Hiram Holliday'' (1939, U.S.: ''Adventures of Hiram Holliday'')
* ''Who Killed My Buddy'' (1939)
* ''The Secret Front'' (1940, Sequel to ''The Adventures of Hiram Holliday''}
* ''[[The Snow Goose: A Story of Dunkirk|The Snow Goose]]'' (1941)
* ''Golf Is a Friendly Game'' (1942)
* ''Lou Gehrig: Pride of the Yankees'' (1942)
* ''Selected Stories of Paul Gallico'' (1944)
* ''The Lonely'' (1947)
* ''Confessions of a Story Writer'' (1948)
* ''Jennie'' (1950) (U.S.: ''The Abandoned'')
* ''The Small Miracle'' (1951)
* ''Trial by Terror'' (1952)
* ''Snowflake'' (1952)
* ''The Foolish Immortals'' (1953)
* {{cite book |author=Gallico, Paul |editor=Birmingham, Frederic A. |title=The girls from Esquire |location=London |publisher=Arthur Barker |date=1953 |pages=249–255 |chapter=The savage beast in us}}
* ''Love of Seven Dolls'' (1954)
* ''Ludmila'' (1954)
* ''[[Thomasina, the Cat Who Thought She Was God]] ''(1957)
* ''[[Flowers for Mrs. Harris]]'' (1958, U.S.: ''Mrs. 'Arris Goes to Paris'')
* ''The Steadfast Man'' (1958, biography of St. Patrick)
* ''Too Many Ghosts'' (1959)
* ''The Hurricane Story'' (1960)
* ''Mrs. Harris Goes to New York'' (1960, U.S.: ''Mrs. 'Arris Goes to New York'')
* ''Confessions of a Story Teller'' (1961, U.S.: ''Further Confessions of a Story Writer'')
* ''Scruffy'' (1962)
* ''Coronation'' (1962)
* ''Love, Let Me Not Hunger'' (1963)
* ''The Day the Guinea-Pig Talked'' (1963)
* ''Three Stories'' (1964, U.S.: ''Three Legends'')
* ''The Hand of Mary Constable'' (1964, sequel to ''Too Many Ghosts'')
* ''The Silent Miaow'' (1964)
* ''The Day Jean-Pierre was Pignapped'' (1964)
* ''Mrs. Harris, M.P.'' (1965, U.S.: ''Mrs. 'Arris Goes to Parliament'')
* ''The Day Jean-Pierre Went Round the World'' (1965)
* ''The Golden People'' (1965)
* ''The Man Who Was Magic'' (1966)
* ''The Story of Silent Night'' (1967)
* ''The Revealing Eye'' (1967)
* ''Gallico Magic'' (1967)
* ''[[Manxmouse]]'' (1968)
* ''[[The Poseidon Adventure (novel)|The Poseidon Adventure]]'' (1969)
* ''The Day Jean-Pierre Joined the Circus'' (1969)
* ''Matilda'' (1970)
* ''The Zoo Gang'' (1971)
* ''Honourable Cat'' (1972, U.S.: ''Honorable Cat'')
* ''The Boy Who Invented the Bubble Gun'' (1974)
* ''Mrs. Harris Goes to Moscow'' (1974, U.S.: ''Mrs. 'Arris Goes to Moscow)
* ''Miracle in the Wilderness'' (1975)
* ''Beyond the Poseidon Adventure'' (1978)
* ''The House That Wouldn't Go Away'' (1979)
* ''The Best of Paul Gallico'' (1988)
* ''Under the Clock'' (unpublished work by Paul and wife Pauline)
{{div col end}}

== Adaptations ==
'''Film'''
* 1942, ''[[Joe Smith, American]]''
* 1942, ''[[Pride of the Yankees]]''
* 1945, ''[[The Clock (1945 film)|The Clock]]''
* 1952, ''[[Assignment – Paris!]]''
* 1953, ''[[Lili (1953 film)|Lili]]'', based on ''The Love of Seven Dolls''
* 1958, ''[[Merry Andrew (film)|Merry Andrew]]'', based on "The Romance of Henry Menafee"
* 1958, ''{{Ill|Ludmila (film)|de|3=Ein wunderbarer Sommer|lt=Ludmila}}''
* 1964, ''[[The Three Lives of Thomasina]]'', based on ''Thomasina: The Cat Who Thought She Was God'' (1957)
* 1971, ''[[The Snow Goose (film)|The Snow Goose]]''
* 1972, ''[[The Poseidon Adventure (1972 film)|The Poseidon Adventure]]''
* 1972, ''Honorable Cat''
* 1978, ''[[Matilda (1978 film)|Matilda]]''
* 1979, ''[[Beyond the Poseidon Adventure]]''
* 1991, ''[[:ru:Безумная Лори|Mad Lori (Russia)]]'', based on ''Thomasina''
* 1992, ''Mrs. 'Arris Goes to Paris''
* 2022, ''[[Mrs. Harris Goes to Paris]]''

'''Television'''
* 1974, ''[[The Zoo Gang]]''
* 1978, ''[[A Fire in the Sky]]''
* 1956–1957, ''[[The Adventures of Hiram Holliday]]''
* 1969, ''[[Daughter of the Mind]]'', based on ''The Hand of Mary Constable''
* 1979, ''Tondemo Nezumi Daikatsuyaku: [[Manxmouse]]'' (''Manxmouse's Great Activity'', known in English as ''The Legend of Manxmouse'')

'''Radio'''
* 1949, "Twas the Night Before Christmas", short story dramatized as Attraction 66 of NBC's radio series ''Radio City Playhouse''
* 2010, ''[[Kirsty Williams (drama)#The Lonely|The Lonely]]''<ref>[http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00pxmcz BBC – Afternoon Play – ''The Lonely'']</ref>

'''Stage musicals'''
*''[[Carnival!]]'', based on ''The Love of Seven Dolls''
*''[[Mrs. 'Arris Goes to Paris|Flowers for Mrs. Harris]]''

'''Music'''
* 1975, ''[[Music Inspired by The Snow Goose]]'', album by the British progressive rock band [[Camel (band)|Camel]], based on ''The Snow Goose''


==References==
==References==
=== Citations ===
*The New York Times, Aug 24, 1969; pg. BR26: The Poseidon Adventure
{{Reflist}}
*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]]
===Works cited===
*[http://www.madisonpubliclibrary.org/booklists/tearjerkers.html Madison Public Library's list of "Tearjerkers"]
* {{Cite magazine |last=Holtzman |first=Jerome |date=1974-05-06 |title=The Gallico Adventure |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=UugCAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA45 |magazine=[[New York (magazine)|New York]] |volume=7 |issue=18 |oclc=1760010 |pages=34–45|language=en}}


==External links==
==External links==
{{wikiquote}}
*[http://www.paulgallico.info/ The Literature of Paul Gallico]
*{{IMDb name|id=0302904|name=Paul Gallico}}
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20041127001833/http://www.paulgallico.info/ The Literature of Paul Gallico] (paulgallico.info)
*{{isfdb name|19834}}
*{{LCAuth|n79114016|Paul Gallico|103|}}
*[https://findingaids.library.columbia.edu/ead/nnc-rb/ldpd_4079714 Finding aid to Paul Gallico papers at Columbia University. Rare Book & Manuscript Library.]

{{Paul Gallico|state=expanded}}
{{The Poseidon Adventure}}


{{Authority control}}
{{msg:stub}}


[[Category:1897 births|Gallico, Paul]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Gallico, Paul}}
[[Category:1976 deaths|Gallico, Paul]]
[[Category:1897 births]]
[[Category:1976 deaths]]
[[Category:20th-century American journalists]]
[[Category:20th-century American male writers]]
[[Category:20th-century American novelists]]
[[Category:20th-century American short story writers]]
[[Category:American expatriates in England]]
[[Category:American expatriates in France]]
[[Category:American expatriates in Mexico]]
[[Category:American expatriates in Monaco]]
[[Category:American male novelists]]
[[Category:American male short story writers]]
[[Category:American people of Austrian descent]]
[[Category:American writers of Italian descent]]
[[Category:Columbia College (New York) alumni]]
[[Category:Esquire (magazine) people]]
[[Category:New York Daily News people]]
[[Category:Novelists from New York (state)]]
[[Category:Sportswriters from New York (state)]]
[[Category:Writers from New York City]]

Latest revision as of 04:50, 25 April 2024

Paul Gallico
Gallico photographed by Carl Van Vechten, 1937
Born(1897-07-26)July 26, 1897
New York City, New York, U.S.
DiedJuly 15, 1976(1976-07-15) (aged 78)
Monaco or Antibes, France
Occupations
  • Novelist
  • short story
  • sports writer
Spouses
Alva Thoits Taylor
(m. 1921; div. 1934)
Elaine St. Johns
(m. 1935; div. 1936)
Pauline Gariboldi
(m. 1939; div. 1954)
Virginia von Falz-Fein
(m. 1963)
Children2
Signature

Paul William Gallico (July 26, 1897 – July 15, 1976) was an American novelist and short story and sports writer.[1] Many of his works were adapted for motion pictures. He is perhaps best remembered for The Snow Goose, his most critically successful book, for the novel The Poseidon Adventure, primarily through the 1972 film adaptation, and for four novels about the beloved character of Mrs. Harris.

Early life and career[edit]

Gallico was born in New York City in 1897. His father was the Italian concert pianist, composer and music teacher Paolo Gallico (Trieste, May 13, 1868 – New York, July 6, 1955), and his mother, Hortense Erlich, came from Austria; they had emigrated to New York in 1895. Gallico's graduation from Columbia University was delayed to 1921, having served a year and a half in the United States Army during World War I.[2] He first achieved notice in the 1920s as a sportswriter, sports columnist, and sports editor of the New York Daily News.

In 1937, in Gallico's "Farewell to Sport" he stated, "For all her occasional beauty and unquestioned courage, there has always been something faintly ridiculous about the big-time lady athletes." In the same book, Gallico later explained why he thinks Jewish people are drawn to and good at basketball, "The game places a premium on an alert, scheming mind, flashy trickiness, artful dodging and general smart aleckness."

Gallico's career was launched by an interview with boxer Jack Dempsey in which he asked Dempsey to spar with him. Gallico 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 one of the highest-paid sportswriters in America. His book, Lou Gehrig: Pride of the Yankees (1941) was adapted into the sports movie The Pride of the Yankees (1942), starring Gary Cooper and Teresa Wright.

Career as a fiction writer[edit]

In the late 1930s, he abandoned sports writing for fiction, first writing an essay about this decision entitled "Farewell to Sport" (published in an anthology of his sports writing, also titled Farewell to Sport (1938)), and became a successful writer of short stories for magazines, many appearing in the then-premier fiction outlet, The Saturday Evening Post. His novella The Snow Goose and other works are expanded versions of his magazine stories.

Gallico once confessed to 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."[3]

In 1939, Gallico published The Adventures of Hiram Holliday, known for its later television adaptation with Wally Cox. It depicts the comic adventures of a modern American knight-errant visiting Europe on the verge of World War II and waging a single-handed, quixotic struggle against the Nazis in various countries. Gallico's Austrian background is evident in the book's strong Habsburg Monarchist theme. (The protagonist saves an Austrian princess, wins her love and takes charge of her young son – who, the book hints, is fated to become the new Habsburg Emperor once the Nazis are driven out of Austria.)

The Snow Goose was published in 1941 in The Saturday Evening Post and won the O. Henry Award 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."[4] 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."[5]

On December 25, 1949, Gallico's short story "'Twas the Night Before Christmas" was dramatized as Attraction 66 of the NBC radio series Radio City Playhouse. It tells the humorous tale of a New York newspaper reporter and a photographer sent on a Christmas Eve wild goose chase by their publisher's wife for two goats harnessed to a little red wagon, which she intends to give her nephews for Christmas. During a night-long search fueled by a few drinks along the way, the reporter and photographer run across the evening's most dramatic news stories, which they must supposedly ignore in favor of the chore set out by their publisher's wife. The radio dramatization remains very popular with Old Time Radio fans and is featured each year on Sirius XM Radio Classics.

His short story "The Man Who Hated People" was reworked into an unpublished short story "The Seven Souls of Clement O'Reilly", adapted into the movie Lili (1953) and later staged as the musical Carnival! (1961). The film Lili is a poignant, whimsical fairy tale, the story of an orphaned waif, a naïve young woman whose fate is thrown in with that of a traveling carnival and its performers, a lothario magician and an embittered puppeteer. In 1954, Gallico published the novella The Love of Seven Dolls, based on "The Man Who Hated People". The versions, while differing, share a core theme surrounding the girl and the puppeteer. The puppeteer, communicating with Lili through his puppets as a surrogate voice, develops a vehicle whereby each of them can freely express their inner pain and anguished emotions.

In the 1950s, Gallico spent time in Liechtenstein, where he wrote Ludmila, the retelling of a local legend.[6]

His novel Mrs. 'Arris Goes to Paris (1958) was a bestseller, and became the first of four books about the lovable charwoman Mrs. 'Arris. The character was said by The New York Times to be "perhaps Mr. Gallico's most beloved creation".[1] Negotiations for film rights began as early as 1960 when he was resident in Salcombe. It was produced as a TV movie with Angela Lansbury in 1992.

During his time in Salcombe, Gallico serialised an account of the sinking of the MV Princess Victoria, the ferry that plied between Larne and Stranraer, an event which left only 44 out of 179 surviving. It was his habit, at this time, to wander in his garden dictating to his assistant Mel Menzies, who then typed the manuscript in the evening, ready for inclusion in the newspaper.

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 by the Walt Disney Studios as The Three Lives of Thomasina (which was very popular in the former USSR in the early 1990s, inspiring the Russian remake Bezumnaya Lori), and Honorable Cat (1972), a book of poetry and essays about cats.

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 instantly became a hit. 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). 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, part of a decade of disaster films, and remains a cult classic.

In his New York Times obituary, Molly Ivins said that "to say that Mr. Gallico was prolific hardly begins to describe his output."[1] He wrote 41 books and numerous short stories, 20 theatrical movies, 12 TV movies, and had a TV series based on his Hiram Holliday short stories.

Later life[edit]

On resigning from the Daily News to become a full-time fiction writer, Gallico moved from New York to the town of Salcombe, England.[7] Later he lived in different regions of the world, including other parts of England, Mexico, Liechtenstein and Monaco.[8] He spent the last part of his life in Antibes, France, and was buried there after his death from a heart attack in 1976, aged 78, which is variously reported to have happened in Antibes or Monaco.[8][1]

In 1955, Gallico took an automobile tour of the United States, traveling some 10,000 miles, sponsored by Reader's Digest.[9] He wrote that "it had been almost twenty years since I had traveled extensively through my own country and the changes brought about by two decades would thus stand out."[9] Several stories resulted.

Popular culture[edit]

In 2000, J.K. Rowling declared that Gallico's 1968 Manxmouse was one of her favorite childhood books.[10] The boggarts appearing in 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 The Hundred and One Dalmatians by Dodie Smith. 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, and released on video by Celebrity Home Entertainment.

The television series The Adventures of Hiram Holliday (starring Wally Cox) was adapted from a series of Gallico's stories about a newspaper proofreader who had many adventures dealing with Nazis and spies in Europe on the eve of World War II.

In Fredric Brown's science-fiction novel What Mad Universe, a magazine editor from our own world is accidentally sent to a parallel Earth significantly different from ours; in this parallel world, the editor reads a biography written of a dashing space hero, a figure central to the novel's narrative, which is supposedly written by Paul Gallico.

In 1975, the British progressive rock band Camel released an album of work based on Gallico's The Snow Goose. Although the author was initially opposed to the album's release, legal action was evaded on the condition that the band used the words "Music Inspired by The Snow Goose" on the album's cover.

In 2005, a televised disaster film titled The Poseidon Adventure, which was a remake of the movie inspired by Gallico's novel, was aired; the Captain, played by Peter Weller, is named after Gallico.

Bibliography[edit]

  • Farewell to Sport (1938)
  • The Adventures of Hiram Holliday (1939, U.S.: Adventures of Hiram Holliday)
  • Who Killed My Buddy (1939)
  • The Secret Front (1940, Sequel to The Adventures of Hiram Holliday}
  • The Snow Goose (1941)
  • Golf Is a Friendly Game (1942)
  • Lou Gehrig: Pride of the Yankees (1942)
  • Selected Stories of Paul Gallico (1944)
  • The Lonely (1947)
  • Confessions of a Story Writer (1948)
  • Jennie (1950) (U.S.: The Abandoned)
  • The Small Miracle (1951)
  • Trial by Terror (1952)
  • Snowflake (1952)
  • The Foolish Immortals (1953)
  • Gallico, Paul (1953). "The savage beast in us". In Birmingham, Frederic A. (ed.). The girls from Esquire. London: Arthur Barker. pp. 249–255.
  • Love of Seven Dolls (1954)
  • Ludmila (1954)
  • Thomasina, the Cat Who Thought She Was God (1957)
  • Flowers for Mrs. Harris (1958, U.S.: Mrs. 'Arris Goes to Paris)
  • The Steadfast Man (1958, biography of St. Patrick)
  • Too Many Ghosts (1959)
  • The Hurricane Story (1960)
  • Mrs. Harris Goes to New York (1960, U.S.: Mrs. 'Arris Goes to New York)
  • Confessions of a Story Teller (1961, U.S.: Further Confessions of a Story Writer)
  • Scruffy (1962)
  • Coronation (1962)
  • Love, Let Me Not Hunger (1963)
  • The Day the Guinea-Pig Talked (1963)
  • Three Stories (1964, U.S.: Three Legends)
  • The Hand of Mary Constable (1964, sequel to Too Many Ghosts)
  • The Silent Miaow (1964)
  • The Day Jean-Pierre was Pignapped (1964)
  • Mrs. Harris, M.P. (1965, U.S.: Mrs. 'Arris Goes to Parliament)
  • The Day Jean-Pierre Went Round the World (1965)
  • The Golden People (1965)
  • The Man Who Was Magic (1966)
  • The Story of Silent Night (1967)
  • The Revealing Eye (1967)
  • Gallico Magic (1967)
  • Manxmouse (1968)
  • The Poseidon Adventure (1969)
  • The Day Jean-Pierre Joined the Circus (1969)
  • Matilda (1970)
  • The Zoo Gang (1971)
  • Honourable Cat (1972, U.S.: Honorable Cat)
  • The Boy Who Invented the Bubble Gun (1974)
  • Mrs. Harris Goes to Moscow (1974, U.S.: Mrs. 'Arris Goes to Moscow)
  • Miracle in the Wilderness (1975)
  • Beyond the Poseidon Adventure (1978)
  • The House That Wouldn't Go Away (1979)
  • The Best of Paul Gallico (1988)
  • Under the Clock (unpublished work by Paul and wife Pauline)

Adaptations[edit]

Film

Television

Radio

  • 1949, "Twas the Night Before Christmas", short story dramatized as Attraction 66 of NBC's radio series Radio City Playhouse
  • 2010, The Lonely[11]

Stage musicals

Music

References[edit]

Citations[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d Ivins, Molly, "Paul Gallico, Sportswriter And Author, Is Dead at 78", The New York Times, July 17, 1976. Retrieved Oct. 25, 2020.
  2. ^ Paul Gallico - a biography www.paulgallico.info. Retrieved February 21, 2022.
  3. ^ Holtzman 1974, p. 45.
  4. ^ Rothe, Anna, ed. (1947). Current Biography, 1946: Who's News and why. New York: H.W. Wilson Company. p. 202. ISBN 978-0-8242-0112-8.
  5. ^ Allardice, Lisa (December 19, 2011). "Winter reads: The Snow Goose by Paul Gallico". The Guardian. Retrieved October 13, 2021.
  6. ^ Sack, John (1959). Report from Practically Nowhere. New York: Curtis Publishing Company. pp. 97–103.
  7. ^ Gallico, "Mainly Autobiographical" p. 23 (see list of references)
  8. ^ a b Martin Benson, "Paul Gallico - a biography"
  9. ^ a b Gallico, Confessions of a Story-teller, p.386 (introduction to story "Shut Up, Little Dog")
  10. ^ NBC interview with J.K. Rowling
  11. ^ BBC – Afternoon Play – The Lonely

Works cited[edit]

External links[edit]