The Mark Hellinger Story: A Biography of Broadway and Hollywood

The Mark Hellinger Story: A Biography of Broadway and Hollywood

by Jim Bishop
The Mark Hellinger Story: A Biography of Broadway and Hollywood

The Mark Hellinger Story: A Biography of Broadway and Hollywood

by Jim Bishop

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Overview

Mark Hellinger, beloved newspaperman, whose Broadway column was read daily by 22,000,000 people, and whose years as a Hollywood producer were marked by such outstanding successes as “High Sierra,” “The Killers,” and “Naked City,” died in 1947 in his forty-fifth year. In this book, Jim Bishop, who was his secretary, takes us behind the scenes to live again, the life of a man who “went everywhere, saw everything, and did everything—without exultation or remorse.”

Rich with the nostalgic echoes of a note-too-distant past, THE MARK HELLINGER STORY is a magnificent account of a fabulous era—Broadway of the twenties and thirties, from the colossal glamour of the Follies, Vanities, and Scandals to the trenchant wit and lilting tunes of the Little Shows, with the heady smell of printer’s ink and the roar of the night presses; the vast canvas of Hollywood in the silent days, and its sudden rebirth with sound.

It is the story, too, of a man who crammed into a lifetime more living than most people will ever know. In the words of Jim Bishop, Hellinger “spent time as though he had stolen it and couldn’t find a fence.”

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781789125016
Publisher: Papamoa Press
Publication date: 12/01/2018
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 328
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

James Alonzo “Jim” Bishop (November 21, 1907 - July 26, 1987) was a syndicated columnist and author of many bestselling books.

Born in Jersey City, New Jersey, he dropped out of school after eighth grade. In 1923, he studied typing, shorthand, and bookkeeping, and in 1929 began work as a copy boy at the New York Daily News.

In 1930, Bishop got a job as a cub reporter at New York Daily Mirror, where he worked until 1943, when he joined Collier’s magazine. He remained there until 1945.

From 1946 to 1948, Bishop was executive editor of Liberty magazine, he then was director of the literary department at the Music Corporation of America until 1951. Next, he was the founding editor of Gold Medal Books (the juvenile division of Fawcett Publications) until 1953.

In the 1950s, Bishop would do his writing at the Jersey Shore in Sea Bright, New Jersey, going back to his home in Teaneck, New Jersey on weekends to see his wife and children. In 1957, he started his column, Jim Bishop: Reporter, with King Features Syndicate, which continued until 1983.

Bishop spent the remainder of his career writing biographical books about notable figures and Christian-themed books. The Day Lincoln Was Shot was published in 1955 and became an instant bestseller. Bishop also wrote The Day Christ Died, The Day Christ Was Born, and The Day Kennedy Was Shot. Perhaps his most critically acclaimed book was FDR’s Last Year: April 1944-April 1945, which brought to public awareness the secrecy that surrounded President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s declining health during World War II.

Bishop died in 1987 at the age of 79.
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