Tess Slesinger
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Tess Slesinger (July 16, 1905 - February 21, 1945) was a Jewish-American writer and screenwriter and is credited as being a charter member of the New York intellectual scene.
She was born as Theresa Slesinger on July 16, 1905, in New York. She was the fourth child of Anthony Slesinger, a Hungarian-born dress manufacturer, and Augusta (Singer) Slesinger, a prominent psychoanalyst.
She was educated at Ethical Culture Fieldston School from September 1912 until June 1922, Swarthmore College and the Columbia University School of Journalism in New York.
Her one novel The Unpossessed (1934) is a satire of the East coast left-wing milieu in which she then lived and details the ins and outs and ups and downs of left-wing New York intellectual life. The cutting comedy about hard times, bad jobs, lousy marriages, little magazines, high principles, and the morning after features a cast of litterateurs, layabouts, lotharios, academic activists, and fur-clad patrons of protest and the arts.
Her first husband was Herbert Solow, editor of the Menorah Journal. After marrying her second husband, screenwriter Frank Davis, she moved to California in 1935. Slesinger was responsible for the screenplays, among others, of The Good Earth (1937) and, at the end of her life, she adapted A Tree Grows In Brooklyn (1946) with Davis, which won them an Oscar for Best Adaptation.
She was the younger sister of Red Ryder creator Stephen Slesinger.
Tess Slesinger died of cancer at the age of 39.
[edit] Works
- Books
- On Being Told That Her Second Husband Has Taken His First Lover, and Other Stories (Reprint of Time: the Present) (1971)
- Time: the Present (1935)
- The Unpossessed (1934)
- Screenplays
- A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1946)
- Are Husbands Necessary? (1942)
- Remember the Day (1941)
- Dance, Girl, Dance (1940)
- Girls' School (1938)
- The Bride Wore Red (1937)
- 'The Good Earth (1937)