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Paul Hervey Fox

Paul Henry Fox, an American playwright, novelist, and screenwriter From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Paul Hervey Fox (March 13, 1894   November 1, 1956)[1] was an American playwright, novelist, and screenwriter. He wrote several films during the pre-Code era and Hollywood golden age, including Mandalay (1934), Grand Finale (1936), The Last Train from Madrid (1937), Safari (1940), A Gentleman at Heart (1942), and The Stars Are Singing (1953). He also published several novels and short stories, and wrote five Broadway plays.

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Fox was the father of author Paula Fox, whose mother was Cuban writer Elsie Fox (née de Sola). He is the biological grandfather of Linda Carroll, and great-grandfather of her daughter, rock musician Courtney Love.

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Early life

Fox was born in New York City in 1894 to Winfield Douglas Fox and Mary Finch. Fox's paternal great-grandmother, Jane, immigrated to the United States from her native Nova Scotia, Canada.[2] He was the cousin of writer Faith Baldwin and actor Douglas Fairbanks.[3] Fox was raised in Yonkers, New York, and was "thrown out of three [different] colleges."[4]

Career

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At age nineteen, Fox sold his first story to The Smart Set, a New York-based literary magazine.[5]

Fox's play Odd Man Out premiered on Broadway in 1925. Between then and 1938, four more of his plays were performed in Broadway theaters, though he later joked: "My plays dimmed more Broadway stars and killed more good performers than there are in the Actors Home."[4]

In 1928, Fox wrote the short story The Strange Case of Dr. Fell, which was published in a serialized form in Ghost Stories in four parts.[6] Fox's play Soldiers and Women, which was staged on Broadway and ran for just under one year, led to him receiving a screenwriting job offer in California.[5] He accepted the position, and relocated with wife Elsie to Los Angeles, where he quickly developed a drinking problem.[7] Soldiers and Women was adapted into a feature film of the same name in 1930.

Fox's 1929 story Housebroken[8] was adapted into a film of the same name in 1936. Fox wrote the story of the 1937 film The Last Train from Madrid with his then-wife, Elsie. Fox later told his daughter, Paula, that he had written the film "in a week, while Elsie...  handed him Benzedrine tablets from the bed upon which she lay, doing crossword puzzles and lighting cigarette after cigarette."[9] Fox was paid $10,000 for the story.[9] Upon release, the film was lambasted by writer Graham Greene, who publicly deemed it "the worst movie I ever saw."[10]

In 1935, Fox published the novel Sailor Town,[11] which earned high praise, and was deemed by one unnamed English critic as "one of the best six novels to appear in the English language" that year.[4] This was followed by The Antagonists, which followed a self-indulgent mathematics professor.[12] In reviewing The Antagonists, critic E. E. Hollis of The Salt Lake Tribune noted Fox as a "distinctive talent" and praised the work.[12]

In 1946, Fox published his third novel, Four Men.[4] By this time, Fox had become disillusioned by his writing career in Hollywood, and left Los Angeles to return to the east coast.[4]

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Personal life and death

Fox married Cuban writer Elsie de Sola in 1923, and they had a daughter, Paula Fox, born the same year.[13] Fox and Elsie left Paula at a foundling hospital, but Elsie's mother reclaimed her shortly thereafter.[13] Paula was raised by various relatives, friends, and paid caregivers, and grew up to become a writer.[13] In 1944, Paula gave birth to a daughter, Linda Carroll, whom she gave up for adoption.[13] Carroll became a therapist and the mother of musician Courtney Love (b. 1964).[14]

After divorcing Elsie, Fox later remarried to a woman named Mary, with whom he had three other children.[15]

Fox was an alcoholic.[13]

Fox died in Swarthmore, Pennsylvania on November 1, 1956, aged 62.[16]

Filmography

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Bibliography

Novels

  • Sailor Town (1935, Henry Holt Publishing)
  • The Antagonists (1937, Henry Holt Publishing)
  • Four Men (1946, Charles Scribner's Sons)
  • The Daughter of Jairus (1951, Little, Brown)

Plays

  • Odd Man Out (1925; Broadway)[17]
  • Soldiers and Women (1929; Broadway)[17]
  • The Great Man (1931; Broadway)[17]
  • Foreign Affairs (1932; Broadway)[17]
  • If I Were You (1938; Broadway)[17]

Short stories

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References

Sources

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