Joseph Moncure March

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Joseph Moncure March (born July 27, 1899 New York, New York-February 14, 1977 Los Angeles, California) was an American poet and essayist, best known for his long narrative poems The Wild Party and The Set-Up.

Contents

[edit] Life

After serving in World War I and graduating from Amherst College (where he was a protégé of Robert Frost), March worked as managing editor for The New Yorker in 1925, and helped create the magazine's "Talk of the Town" front section. After leaving the magazine, March wrote the first of his two important long Jazz Age narrative poems, The Wild Party. Due to its risqué content, this violent story of a vaudeville dancer who throws a booze and sex-filled party could not find a publisher until 1928. Once published, however, the poem was a great success despite being banned in Boston. Later in 1928, March followed up The Wild Party's success with The Set-Up, a poem of a skilled black boxer who had just been released from prison.

In 1929, March moved to Hollywood to provide additional dialogue for the film Journey's End and, more famously, to turn the silent version of Howard Hughes' classic Hell's Angels into a talkie—a rewrite that brought the phrase "Excuse me while I put on something more comfortable" into the American lexicon. March stayed with Hughes' Caddo Pictures studio for several years, temporarily running the office, overseeing the release of Hell's Angels, and getting into legal trouble after an attempt to steal the script for rival Warner Bros.' own flying picture Dawn Patrol.

March worked as a screenwriter in Hollywood until 1940, under contract to MGM and Paramount and later as a freelancer for Republic Pictures and other studios; he wrote at least 19 produced scripts in his Hollywood career. His most prominent late script is probably the left-leaning John Wayne curio Three Faces West, a knockoff of The Grapes of Wrath that ends with a faceoff between Okies and Nazis.

With his third wife, Peggy Prior (a Pathé screenwriter) and her two children, March returned to the East Coast in 1940. During World War II he worked at a shipbuilding plant in Groton, Conn., and wrote features (mostly acid assessments of the movie business) for the New York Times Magazine. In later years, he wrote documentaries for the State Department and industrial films for Ford Motor Company, Monsanto, American Airlines, and others. Several films starring industrial films icon Thelma "Tad" Tadlock were made from March's rhyming scripts. March died in 1977.

[edit] Works and legacy

March revised both The Set-Up and The Wild Party in 1968, removing some anti-Semitic caricatures from both works. Most critics deplored these changes, and Art Spiegelman returned to the original text when he published his illustrated version of The Wild Party in 1994. (The Set-Up has not been reprinted since 1968.)

Both of March's long poems were made into films. Robert Wise's film version of The Set-Up (1949) loses the poem's racial dimension by casting the white actor Robert Ryan in the lead, while the Merchant Ivory Productions version of The Wild Party (1975) changes March's plot to conflate the poem with the Fatty Arbuckle scandal.

The Wild Party continues to attract new readers and adaptations. In 2000, two separate musical versions played in New York, one on Broadway, composed by Michael John LaChiusa, and the other off-Broadway, composed by Andrew Lippa, with mixed critical and popular success. The Amherst College library's large collection of March's papers includes unpublished poems, scripts, and a memoir entitled Hollywood Idyll.

March's uncle, General Peyton Conway March, was once Chief of Staff of the U.S. Army in World War I; his grandfather was the philologist Francis Andrew March. His adopted daughter is the retired actress Lori March Williams.

[edit] References

  • Art Spiegelman's prologue to the 1994 Spiegelman-illustrated reissue of The Wild Party. See Joseph Moncure March, The Wild Party: The Lost Classic by Joseph Moncure March, Pantheon Books (1994), pp. VI-VIII

[edit] External links