MANKIEWICZ, HERMAN (JACOB)


Meaning of MANKIEWICZ, HERMAN (JACOB) in English

born Nov. 7, 1897, New York, N.Y., U.S. died March 5, 1953, Los Angeles, Calif. American screenwriter, journalist, playwright, and wit, notable as a member of the Algonquin Round Table and as the coauthor of the screenplay for Citizen Kane (1941). Mankiewicz was the son of German immigrants. He grew up in Pennsylvania, where his father edited a German-language newspaper, and moved with his family to New York City in 1913. He graduated from Columbia University in 1917. Serving briefly in the Marine Corps, Mankiewicz held a variety of jobs, including work for the Red Cross press service in Paris. He returned for a short time to the United States, married, and then worked intermittently in Germany as a correspondent for a number of newspapers. He returned once again to New York City in 1922 and, among other activities, collaborated on two unsuccessful plays. He also became a member of the celebrated group of American critics, writers, and miscellaneous wits who met at the Algonquin Hotel and were known as the Algonquin Round Table. One of them, Alexander Woollcott, said that Mankiewicz was the funniest man in New York. Mankiewicz worked at The New Yorker magazine until he was hired by Paramount Publix Studios in Hollywood, Calif. He began by writing titles for silent movies, and he was responsible for a distinct change in their tone. He is credited with the authorship or coauthorship of a number of sound motion picturesincluding The Royal Family of Broadway (1931), Dinner at Eight (1933), It's a Wonderful World (1939, with Ben Hecht), Pride of the Yankees (1942), and Citizen Kane (1941, with Orson Welles). He took much of the story for Citizen Kane from his personal experience with William Randolph Hearst, whose guest he had been on many weekends during the 1930s. The screenplay won an Academy Award. Mankiewicz also produced, wrote, or doctored a number of scripts, some of them uncredited. He was involved, for example, in the Marx brothers' Monkey Business (1931) and Horse Feathers (1932). Plagued by alcoholism, he wrote his last film, The Pride of St. Louis, in 1952. His brother Joseph was also a screenwriter and director.

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