Dorothy Parker, Volney Hotel years. |
Dorothy Parker is one of those
writers now more famous for who she was than what she wrote. She will forever be etched in the public mind
as the queen of the Algonquin
Roundtable, that shifting group of Manhattan
wits and sophisticates who daily gathered at an Algonquin Hotel table to exchange barbs and bon mots. Through the Roaring Twenties and into the early
years of the Depression the pithy
sayings of these gin fueled repasts were
breathless repeated in gossip columns read as avidly in Peoria as on Park
Avenue.
Despite
her own very real accomplishments, Parker recognized this and even reveled in
it. “Every day,” she said, “I get up,
brush my teeth, and sharpen my tongue.”
But
Parker was a widely respected magazine journalist, critic, and above all a
poet. Her volumes of humorous verse were
beloved best sellers.
Parker
was born on August 22, 1893 on the Jersey
Shore where her middle class Manhattan parents kept a summer cabin. Her birth name was Rothschild—her father was of German
Jewish descent (not related to the banking family) and her mother was of Scottish ancestry. Her mother, Eliza died while staying at the same cabin just before her 5th
birthday setting off a troubled and unhappy childhood.
Young
Dot, as she was called, hated her father’s new wife and referred to her contemptuously
as the “the housekeeper.” She claimed
her father physically abused her. She
was openly glad when her step mother died in 1903. Despite a Jewish father and a Protestant birth mother, she was sent
to the Convent of the Blessed Sacrament
School probably in hopes that the stern nuns would train her wild
rebelliousness. It didn’t work. She was expelled when she was 14 for calling
the Immaculate Conception “spontaneous
combustion.”
After
that she was shipped of for an indifferent education at a New Jersey finishing
school mostly to keep her out of her father’s hair. She graduated at age 18 in 1911. Two years later her father died leaving most
of his estate to a sister. Dorothy went
to work playing piano at a dancing school to earn a living. In her spare time, she was writing verse.
She
quickly established a career as a writer after selling her first poem to Vanity
Fair in 1914. Soon after she was
hired as a staff writer at a sister publication, Vogue then moved to a
similar job at Vanity Fair two years
later.
In
1917 she met and married stock broker Edwin
Pond Parker II. They were soon
separated by his service in World War
I. Not that she minded much. Ambivalent about her Jewish identity,
especially because she hated her father, she later joked that she got married
to acquire a WASP name. After Parker’s return from the war, the
marriage was stormy and eventually ended in diverse in 1926.
Parker’s
career really took off when she took over theater reviews at Vanity Fair from the vacationing P.G. Woodhouse. Her criticism was arch, acerbic, witty, and
penetrating. Readers loved it. Skewered playwrights, producers, directors,
and actors felt differently.
Parker
and fellow staff members Robert Benchley
and Robert E. Sherwood began to
take a daily largely liquid lunch at the Algonquin Hotel. They were soon joined by others and by 1919
folks were talking about the Roundtable.
Other early participants included Alexander
Wolcott, newspaperman/playwright Charles
MacArthur, Harpo Marx, sportswriter Haywood
Broun and playwrights George F.
Kaufmann and Marc Connolly. Franklin Pierce Adams not only began
posting quips from the table in his popular column The Conning Tower, but
printed whole poems by Parker and other members helping to make their public
reputations.
Sometimes
all of the publicity the wits received backfired. Theater producers outraged over several
quotes by Parker ridiculing their shows threatened to remove advertising from
her employer. Vanity Fair fired her. Benchley and Sherwood walked out in
solidarity. By then they were all hot
commodities and could place poems, reviews and stories in all of the top
magazines.
In
1925 Harold Ross founded the New
Yorker and brought Parker and Benchley on board as part of his Editorial Board. Parker now really came into her own. Her poems became a favorite feature and she
contributed sharp, well drawn short stories as well. Her caustic book reviews as the Constant Reader were very popular.
In
1926 her first volume of poems, drawn from her contributions to the New Yorker, other popular magazines and the Conning Tower sold an amazing 47,000 copies and had generally
glowing reviews. She followed with two
more collections, Sunset Gun
in 1928 and Death and Taxes in
1931.
Despite
her success, which included collaborating on plays with Kaufmann and Elmer Rice, Parker’s personal life was
a shambles. Not only was she drinking
heavily, but she was subject to bouts of black depression and suicidal
thoughts, which she sometimes hinted at in her poems. Her marriage was on the rocks and she was
engaged in a series of sad, sometimes disastrous love affairs. Affairs with MacArthur, who would go on to
marry actress Helen Hayes, Benchley,
and Wolcott resulted in pregnancies and abortions. After the first she made the first of several
suicide attempts.
Her
love life and disappointments became the fodder of her most famous short story,
Big
Blonde published in The Bookman magazine. It won the prestigious O. Henry Award for Best
Short Story of 1929. She went on to
publish several story collections over the next decade.
Parker’s
life changed dramatically in 1927 as she became interested in the campaign to
save anarchists Sacco and Vanzetti from
execution on dubious murder/bank robbery charges in Massachusetts. Previously
largely apolitical, she traveled to Boston
to protest and was arrested and fined $5 for picketing. The experience set of a commitment to leftist
causes, social justice, and civil rights that only grew and lasted the rest of
her life.
By
the early 1930’s the old gang at the Algonquin and newer members like Tallulah Bankhead and Edna Ferber were drifting apart. The group dynamics of members sleeping with
each other or occasional other’s spouses must have contributed. But so did the increasing demands of
successful careers and political tensions between the more conservative members
and the increasingly radicalized Parker.
One
day in 1932 Ferber showed up for lunch and found the regular table occupied by,
“a party from Kansas.” It was all over.
About
that time Parker began a relationship with a fellow New Yorker contributor and sometimes actor Allan Campbell. Like her, he
was of Jewish and Scottish heritage. He
was also ten years younger and an active bi-sexual. The two were married in 1934 in Taos, New Mexico on the way to Hollywood and the lure of lucrative new
careers as screenwriters.
They
first caught on at Paramount. He was put under a contract for $350
which included acting in bit parts, and she got $1000 a week. They soon, however, established themselves as
a successful screen writing duo
earning $2,000 to $5,000 a week free lancing a quality studios like MGM and Warner Bros. Most of the 15
films on which they collaborated were competent, journeyman efforts. But they earned an Academy Award nomination for the classic A Star is Born in 1937
with Janet Gaynor and Fredrick March. When Parker’s friend and fellow left wing
activist Lillian Hellman was called
away from The Little Foxes to work on another project, they were called
in two write additional dialogues for the Bette
Davis.
The
marriage broke up in divorce in 1938 but despite Parkers drinking and suicidal
depressions, they continued to work together until Campbell entered the service
as a military intelligence officer in World
War II. As her contribution to the
war effort she worked with Wolcott and Viking
Press on a compact edition of her best stories and poems for soldiers
serving overseas. After the War Viking released it for American readers as The
Compact Dorothy Parker. It has
never since gone out of print.
After
the war in 1947 Parker won another Oscar
nomination for her contributions the Susan
Hayward tearjerker Smash-Up, the
Story of a Woman. The tale of a woman whose life was
disintegrating in alcoholism must have hit awfully close to the bone.
But
Parker’s days in Hollywood were number as the Red Scare infected the industry.
For years she had been a leader of local anti-Fascist crusades and
organizations. She had even reported on
the Spanish Civil War for The
Masses and had helped re-locate defeated veterans of the war to safety
in Mexico. She was active on or chaired several
committees—most notably the Hollywood
Anti-Nazi League which grew to 4,000 members and was accused funneling
large sums of money to the Communist
Party.
Parker’s
last Hollywood job was The Fan, and adaptation of Oscar Wilde’s Lady Windermere’s Fan for Otto
Preminger in 1949. After that she
was hauled before a Congressional
Committee, pled the Fifth Amendment,
and blacklisted.
In
the midst of all of that, Parker re-married Campbell in 1950. They separated, but did not divorce, in 1952
and Parker returned to New York to
take up residency in the Volney Hotel.
Advanced alcoholism prevented her from returning to regular magazine
work, although she submitted occasional reviews. Mostly she made a small living as celebrity
guest or panelist on such radio programs as Information Please and Author,
Author. She wrote monologues for
old friends Tallulah Bankhead and Ilka
Chase.
Despite
her drinking, she remained as active as possible politically. She was especially moved by the Civil Rights Movement as it unfolded on
the streets of the South.
In
1960 she reconciled with Campbell and moved back to Los Angeles where the couple worked fitfully on un-realized
projects. In 1962 Campbell committed
suicide. In worse emotional shape than
ever, Parker returned to the lonely life of a Volney Hotel drunk.
When
she died of a heart attack on June 7, 1967 Parker left her estate, including
valuable literary properties, to Martin
Luther King, Jr. to support him in his work. When he was killed days later the estate
ended up in the hands of the NAACP.
With
no living relative or willing friend to claim them Parker’s ashes stayed in a
file cabinet in her lawyer’s office for 17 years until the NAACP claimed
them. They buried them under a marker on
the grounds of their Baltimore headquarters. The plaque reads:
Here lie the
ashes of Dorothy Parker (1893–1967) humorist, writer, critic. Defender of human
and civil rights. For her epitaph she suggested, “Excuse my dust”. This
memorial garden is dedicated to her noble spirit which celebrated the oneness
of humankind and to the bonds of everlasting friendship between black and
Jewish people. Dedicated by the National Association for the Advancement of
Colored People. October 28, 1988.
A Well-Worn Story
In April, in
April,
My one love came
along,
And I ran the
slope of my high hill
To follow a
thread of song.
His eyes were
hard as porphyry
With looking on
cruel lands;
His voice went
slipping over me
Like terrible
silver hands.
Together we trod
the secret lane
And walked the
muttering town.
I wore my heart
like a wet, red stain
On the breast of
a velvet gown.
In April, in
April,
My love went
whistling by,
And I stumbled
here to my high hill
Along the way of
a lie.
Now what should
I do in this place
But sit and
count the chimes,
And splash cold
water on my face
And spoil a page
with rhymes?
—Dorothy
Parker
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