Author Biographies
About Us
Contact
Browse by Author

authors : A authors : B authors : C authors : D authors : E
authors : F authors : G authors : H authors : I authors : J
authors : K authors : L authors : M authors : N authors : O
authors : P authors : Q authors : R authors : S authors : T
authors : U authors : V authors : W authors : X authors : Y
authors : Z

Find books at Biblio.com

Find out about the major literary prizes and their past winners.

Pulitzer Prize for Fiction
Booker Prize

Nobel Prize for Literature

Biblion.co.uk Biblio.com
Pulitzer Prize
Booker Prize
Nobel Prize


biblion.com
by:
for:

 

Free shipping on quality books


Paul Jarrico Biography and List of Works

Books by Paul Jarrico | Shop used books at Biblio.com

American screenwriter who started his career in Hollywood in the late 30s. From the late 1950s to the late 1960s Jarrico was blacklisted on both sides of the Iron Curtain, in the United States and in the Soviet Union.

Paul Jarrico was born in Los Angeles, California. His father was a Russian immigrant, lawyer, amateur poet, socialist and Zionist. Jarrico started to write stories in his youth and while studying at the University of California, Los Angeles, Jarrico joined the National Student League, and then the Young Communist League. He was an active member of the Communist Party between the years 1937 and 1951. In the 1930s Jarrico wrote scripts for the film No Time to Marry (1937), and co-scripted I Am the Law (1938), The Little Adventures, (1938) and Beauty for the Asking (1939).

During World War II Jericho served in the merchant marines in North Africa and Italy. In the 1940s Jerrico worked in Hollywood for MGM, writing scripts for such films as The Face Behind the Mask (1941), directed by Robert Florey and starring Peter Lorre, Men of the Timberland (1941), and Thousand Cheer (1943). Song of Russia (1943) was directed by Gregory Ratoff and produced by MGM under pressure from President Roosevelt to create sympathy for the Soviets in their wars against Nazi Germany. The Search (1948) was directed by Fred Zinneman and depicted the fate of orphaned children in post-war Europe. Not Wanted (1949) was directed by Ida Lupino and not the credited Elmer Clifton, who suffered a heart attack on the third day of the production. Among Jarrico's best screenplays was Tom, Dick, and Harry (1941), for which he was nominated for an Academy Award for his original screenplay.

In the 1950s a hearing of the House Of Un-American Activities Committee, at which he refused to testify, blacklisted him. Jarrico's last major work in Hollywood in the 1950s was the script for THE WHITE TOWER. It was Howard Hughes's attempt at grandeur, produced by RKO. The film was based on a novel by James Ramsay Ullman. In the pretentiously symbolic melodrama a group of people climbs an Alpine mountain. Glenn Ford played a cynical ex-GI. And Lloyd Bridges was a Nazi bigot. Howard Hughes fired Jarrico immediately when he heard that Jarrico had received the subpoena for the hearings.

Jarrico's passport was confiscated after his journey to London in 1951. His most important project in the following years was Salt of the Earth (1953), a union-sponsored drama about the appalling conditions of striking coal miners in New Mexico. The film was written by Michael Wilson and directed by Herbert J. Biberman - the only independent production made by blacklisted people in the US film industry. Salt of the Earth was subsequently blacklisted and its distribution was prohibited, but later it has gained the status of a cult film. In 1958 Jarrico left the US and worked in Europe for 20 years.

During the 1960s Jarrico used such pseudonyms as Peter Achilles and co-scripted Jovanka e le altre (1960), directed by Martin Ritt, Call Me Bwana (1963), directed by Gordon Douglas, Der Schatz der Azteken (1965), directed by Robert Sidmark, Who killed Johnny Ringo (1966). He also worked for television productions.

Jarrico returned to the United States in 1977 and settled in Santa Monica, Los Angeles. He has taught at the University of California, at the University of San Francisco and continued his career as a screenwriter. Among his later American works is the screenplay for J. Lee Thompson's Messenger of Death (1988), and scripts for television, including Ivan Passer's dramatized biography of Stalin (1992), starring Robert Duvall. Jarrico died at the age of 82 in a car accident returning from an event dedicated to victims of the black list.

For further reading: Salt of the Earth by Herbet Biberman (1965); The Inquisition in Hollywood by Larry Ceplair & Steven Englund (1980, 1983), Hiljaiset sankarit by Matti Salo (1994) - Other blacklisted screenwriters: Dalton Trumbo, Michael Wilson, Hugo Butler, Abraham Polonsky (director, screenwriter, novelist).

Free shipping on select books. No minimum purchase

Selected works:


Find books by Paul Jarrico at Biblio.com
Find books by Paul Jarrico at Biblion.co.uk



Author Biographies | About Us | Browse by Author | Donations for Literacy | Book Discussion Group | Free bookstore software | for.thelo veofbooks.com - Book blog
Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Contact Us

Copyright © 2000-2007 LitWeb All rights reserved.

Powered by: Biblio Used Books