Gaily, Gaily

Gaily, Gaily

by Ben Hecht
Gaily, Gaily

Gaily, Gaily

by Ben Hecht

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Overview

With the vigor and gusto invariably associated with his personality and his works, Ben Hecht recreates in this volume the lusty Chicago of the early twentieth century, as seen from its underside by a cub reporter on a great metropolitan daily. He introduces the reader to a vast cast of eccentric characters-bums, criminals, prostitutes, politicians, and poets, not to mention the police. He conducts you to the scenes of the crimes. He invites you to the courtroom and the murderer’s solitary cell and to the gallows. He lets you sit around with him in the city room of a great Chicago newspaper, where he collected considerable material for that newspaper classic, The Front Page, which he wrote in collaboration with Charles MacArthur.

Some of these stories are bizarre. Most of them are bawdy. But they are all imbued with lusty vitality and with a kind of innocent wonder that life is really so much stranger than fiction. The author looks back on the whole era with the consistently-unchanged fresh eye of youth. He is less concerned with nostalgia than reporting the way it was.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781789128369
Publisher: Valmy Publishing
Publication date: 12/12/2018
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 208
File size: 553 KB

About the Author

Ben Hecht (1893-1964) was an American screenwriter, director, producer, playwright, journalist, and novelist. A leading spirit in the Chicago literary renaissance in the 1920’s, he was the founder of the Literary Times and a frequent contributor to The Little Review and Smart Set. A prolific writer, he wrote some thirty-five books and some of the most entertaining screenplays and plays in America.

Born on February 28, 1893 in New York City, the son of Belarusian Jewish immigrants, Hecht was raised in Racine, Wisconsin. After graduating from Racine High School in 1910, he attended the University of Wisconsin for three days before moving to Chicago, where he lived with relatives, and began a career in journalism. He was a full-time reporter by age seventeen, first with the Chicago Daily Journal, and later with the Chicago Daily News.

After World War I, Hecht worked a foreign correspondent in Berlin for the Daily News, where he wrote his first and most successful novel, Erik Dorn (1921). He also co-authored the reporter-themed play, The Front Page, which became a Broadway hit in 1928.

Hecht received the first Academy Award for Best Story for Underworld (1927). He also provided story ideas for such films as Stagecoach (1939). In 1940, he wrote, produced, and directed Angels Over Broadway, which was nominated for Best Screenplay. In total, six of his movie screenplays were nominated for Academy Awards, with two winning.

The 1969 movie, Gaily, Gaily, directed by Norman Jewison and starring Beau Bridges as “Ben Harvey”, was based on Hecht’s life during his early years working as a reporter in Chicago. The story was taken from a portion of his autobiography, A Child of the Century (1954), and the film was nominated for three Oscars.

Hecht died in New York City on April 18, 1964, aged 71.

He was posthumously inducted into the American Theater Hall of Fame in 1983.
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