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- From: hypes@boi.hp.com (Gary Hypes)
- Subject: Re: Dorothy Parker
- Sender: news@boi.hp.com (News Server Project)
- Message-ID: <C17qxv.EM8@boi.hp.com>
- Date: Thu, 21 Jan 1993 16:53:55 GMT
- References: <ll9iihINNbn3@jive.cs.utexas.edu>
- Organization: Hewlett-Packard / Boise, Idaho
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-
- Janet M. Swisher (swisher@cs.utexas.edu) wrote:
- :
- : Golly, I consider myself pretty culturally literate, but I didn't know
- : she did that stuff (well, I knew she wrote stories). Those may be her
- : best accomplishments, but I suspect it's true that she's best known
- : for being a wit.
- :
-
- The sad truth is that the corpus of her work is not large, and the
- memorable work that remains is largely couplets (she originated "Men
- seldom make passes at girls who wear glasses") and witticisms. She was
- a capable and promising writer whose lifestyle prevented her from
- performing major focused efforts.
-
- Parker was probably mentally ill (manic-depressive) and became
- self-destructive through alcoholism, obsessive sexual behaviors, and
- several suicide attempts. Although she lived until the 1960s, her really
- good literary work was only during the 20s and 30s.
-
- On the other hand, in addition to her journalistic efforts, she was
- There At The Creation. Her friends and associates included the Lost
- Generation writers (F Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway, ...) and all
- the major literary and theater figures of those times. She was one of
- the original staff writers at the birth of The New Yorker magazine and
- was a regular (for Parker, anyway) contributer to the great periodicals
- of the day: Vanity Fair, Vogue, etc.
-
- Her anti-Fascist activities earned her a grilling before Joe McCarthy's
- HUAC in the 50's. She basically told them, "I am who I am, I've done
- what I've done, and you can go to hell." Cowed by the thought of
- sending a famous woman to a prison cell, the McCarthy crowd dropped
- charges against her and let her alone. The left-wing taint, however,
- coupled with her already damaging reputation for being unreliable about
- writing assignments (a combination of laziness, poor work ethic, and
- alcoholism) caused offers for work to disappear.
-
- At best, Parker was a difficult person to like; she could be (and was)
- nasty and vicious publicly to even her best friends. Robert Benchley was
- probably the only friend she never turned on.
-
- Sadly, tragically, Parker was alone, mostly forgotten, penniless, and
- essentially blind when she died in 1967. She made the grave error of
- outliving both her friends and her times.
-
-
- - Gary Hypes -
-