Dalton Trumbo





 

 

 


Spartacus, USA History, British History, Second World War, First World War, Germany,
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James Dalton Trumbo was born in Montrose, Colorado on 5th December, 1905. Educated at the University of Colorado. Trumbo wanted to be a writer and by the early 1930s his articles and stories appeared in Saturday Evening Post, McCall's Magazine, Vanity Fair and the film magazine, the Hollywood Spectator.

In 1935 Trumbo published his first novel,
Eclipse,
a satire about a self-made businessman. Trumbo's most popular novel, Johnny Got His Gun, about a disfigured British officer in the First World War, won a National Book Award in 1939.

In the 1930s Trumbo worked on several movies including Love Begins at Twenty (1936), Road Gang (1936), Devil's Playground (1937), Fugitives For a Night (1938) and Career (1939). Trumbo, who joined the Communist Party in 1943, was also active in the Screen Writers Guild.

Other films written by Trumbo included
Five Came Back (1939), Curtain Call (1940) and Kitty Foyle (1940), a film for which he was nominated for an Academy Award Oscar, A Guy Named Joe (1943), Tender Comrade (1943) and Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo (1944).

After the Second World War the House of Un-American Activities Committee began an investigation into the Hollywood Motion Picture Industry. In September 1947, the HUAC interviewed 41 people who were working in Hollywood. These people attended voluntarily and became known as "friendly witnesses". During their interviews they named several people who they accused of holding left-wing views.

Trumbo appeared before the HUAC on 28th October, 1947, but like Alvah Bessie, Herbert Biberman, Albert Maltz, Adrian Scott, Samuel Ornitz, Lester Cole, Edward Dmytryk, John Howard Lawson and Ring Lardner Jr, he refused to answer any questions.
Known as the Hollywood Ten, they claimed that the 1st Amendment of the United States Constitution gave them the right to do this. The House of Un-American Activities Committee and the courts during appeals disagreed and all were found guilty of contempt of Congress and Trumbo was sentenced to ten months in prison.


Blacklisted by the Hollywood studios, Trumbo moved to Mexico with Ring Lardner Jr and Albert Maltz, where he continued to write under assumed names. He won two Academy Awards for the screenplays: Roman Holiday (Ian McLellan Hunter, 1953) and The Brave One (Robert Rich, 1956).


In 1960 Trumbo became the first blacklisted writer to use his own name when he wrote the screenplay for the film
Spartacus. Based on the novel by another left-wing blacklisted writer, Howard Fast, Spartacus is a film that examines the spirit of revolt. Trumbo refers back to his experiences of the House of Un-American Activities Committee
. At the end, when the Romans finally defeat the rebellion, the captured slaves refuse to identify Spartacus. As a result, all are crucified. Ironically, much of Spartacus
was filmed on land owned by William Randolph Hearst. It was Hearst's newspapers that played such an important role in making McCarthyism possible.

After the blacklist was lifted, Trumbo wrote the screenplay for
Lonely Are the Brave (1962), The Sandpiper (1965) and The Fixer (1968). In 1970 Trumbo's anti-war novel, Johnny Got His Gun, was republished. The book had been withdrawn during the Second World War, had a tremendous impact on the generation being drafted to fight in the Vietnam War. In 1971 Trumbo directed a film based on the book, Johnny Got His Gun.

In 1973 Trumbo helped to write the political thriller,
Executive Action, which dealt with an alleged conspiracy to murder John F. Kennedy. Dalton Trumbo died of a heart attack in Los Angeles, California, on 10th September, 1976.

 



Dalton Trumbo receiving his 1956 Oscar
for Brave One from Walter Mirisch in 1975

 

 


 

(1) Dalton Trumbo, letter to Albert Maltz (12th January, 1972)

Whatever else may be said of Communists and the goals they pursued. I think you and I can agree that those who joined the Party were animated by a sincere desire to change the world and make it better, even at the cost of affiliating with an organization that had, from its beginnings, been subject to constant federal harassment, popular hatred, and sometimes physical violence. The impulses which caused them to affiliate with the Communist Party were good impulses, and the men and women who acted on them were good people.

 

(2) Dalton Trumbo was interviewed by Victor Navasky while he was writing his book, Naming Names (1982)

Kazan is one of those for whom I feel contempt, because he carried down people much less capable of defending themselves than he. And he could have at a minimum continued in the theatre, perhaps with somewhat diminished activity, but his reputation would have withstood this blow. But he brought down people in the theatrical and film world who had much more to lose than he and much less ability to function than he. And that is not nice. I just say that that's not a nice thing. That's the way I feel about him.

 

(3) Dalton Trumbo, speech to the Screen Writers Guild when accepting the Laurel Award in 1970.

The blacklist was a time of evil, and that no one on either side who survived it came through untouched by evil. Caught in a situation that had passed beyond the control of mere individuals, each person reacted as his nature, his needs, his convictions, and his particular circumstances compelled him to. There was bad faith and good, honesty and dishonesty, courage and cowardice, selflessness and opportunism, wisdom and stupidity, good and bad on both sides.

When you who are in your forties or younger look back with curiosity on that dark time, as I think occasionally you should, it will do no good to search for villains or heroes or saints or devils because there were none; there were only victims. Some suffered less than others, some grew and some diminished, but in the final tally we were all victims because almost without exception each of us felt compelled to say things he did not want to say, to do things that he did not want to do, to deliver and receive wounds he truly did not want to exchange. That is why none of us - right, left, or centre - emerged from that long nightmare without sin.

 

(4) Albert Maltz, one of the Hollywood Ten, was interviewed by the New York Times in 1972.

There is currently in vogue a thesis pronounced by Dalton Trumbo which declares that everyone during the years of blacklist was equally a victim. This is factual nonsense and represents a bewildering moral position.

To put the point sharply: If an informer in the French underground who sent a friend to the torture chambers of the Gestapo was equally a victim, then there can be no right or wrong in life that I understand.

Adrian Scott was the producer of the notable film Crossfire in 1947 and Edward Dmytryk was its director. Crossfire won wide critical acclaim, many awards and commercial success. Both of these men refused to co-operate with the HCUA. Both were held in contempt of the
HUAC and went to jail.

When Dmytryk emerged from his prison term he did so with a new set of principles. He suddenly saw the heavenly light, testified as a friend of the
HUAC, praised its purposes and practices and denounced all who opposed it. Dmytryk immediately found work as a director, and has worked all down the years since. Adrian Scott, who came out of prison with his principles intact, could not produce a film for a studio again until 1970. He was blacklisted for 21 years. To assert that he and Dmytryk were equally victims is beyond my comprehension.

 

(5) Dalton Trumbo, letter to Albert Maltz (29th December, 1972)

I confess that among those who turned informer there are two or three whose deaths I once actually fantasized, and whom I still view with nothing short of horror. As for the others, I do not associate with them and cannot bring myself to trust them.

In a country which, after a reasonable period of punishment, returns murders and rapists to society on the humane theory that it is still possible for them to become decent and even valuable citizens. I have no intention of fanning the embers of justifiable hatred which burned so brightly twenty-five years ago.

 

(6) Dalton Trumbo, introduction to Johnny Got His Gun, when it was republished in 1970.

Numbers have dehumanized us. Over breakfast coffee we read of 40,000 American dead in Vietnam. Instead of vomiting, we reach for the toast. Our morning rush through crowded streets is not to cry murder but to hit that trough before somebody else gobbles our share.

An equation: 40,000 dead young men = 3,000 tons of bone and flesh, 124,000 pounds of brain matter, 50,000 gallons of blood, 1,840,000 years of life that will never be lived, 100,000 children who will never be born.

Let us use his same arithmetic for World War I; 9,000,000 dead young men equal 1,350,000,000 pounds of bone and flesh, 27,900,000 pounds of brain matter, 11,250,000 gallons of blood, 414,000,000 years of life that will never be lived, and 22,500,000 children who will never be born. The dry if imposing figure "9,000,000 dead" seems a little less statistical when we view it from this perspective.

 

 

 

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