Dorothy Baker
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Dorothy Baker (April 21, 1907–June 17, 1968) was an American novelist. She was born Dorothy Dodds in Missoula, Montana and raised in California.
She attended Whittier College then transferred to the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) from which she graduated in 1929. This is where she met her future husband, the poet Howard Baker whom she married in 1930.
For a short while, she taught French and Spanish in a high school in Oakland, California but she then went back to UCLA to complete her Master of Arts in French in 1934.
She wrote her first novel, Young Man with a Horn, in 1938, it was based on the life of notable jazz cornet player, Bix Beiderbecke. It was a success and she won a Houghton Mifflin Literary Fellowship, it was made into a movie in 1950 by Kirk Douglas. She received a Guggenheim Fellowship for the same book in 1942.
Her next book would be Trio. She and her husband made it into a play which was quickly taken off Broadway because of its lesbian theme and a protest by a certain group of Protestant clergymen. At this moment, Dorothy was beginning to show her homosexual inclinations.
After the failure of her play, she went back to her usual novels, the next one would be Our Gifted Son written in 1948. She then wrote Cassandra at the Wedding in 1962 whose subject was of two daughters who were especially close. Baker's husband said that this novel was based on the couple's own two daughters. In 1967, she co-wrote the script of The Ninth Day in Playhouse 90. The subject of this episode is of a young man living in a group just after World War 3, when he tries to leave, he is forced by the elders to stay and marry the only young woman in the group.
Baker died of cancer at the age of 61.