Millard Kaufman
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Millard Kaufman (born March 12, 1917) is an American screenwriter and novelist. His works include the Academy Award-nominated Bad Day at Black Rock (1955). He was also one of the creators of Mr. Magoo.
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[edit] Life
Kaufman grew up in Baltimore, and eventually graduated from Johns Hopkins University. After that, he moved to New York City, taking a job as copyboy for the New York Daily News. At some point he married Lorraine Dritz. He enlisted in the Marines at the outbreak of World War II, and participated in the Guadalcanal campaign, and landed at Guam and Okinawa.
While serving in the Pacific, Kaufman had contracted malaria and dengue fever, and upon his return to the United States felt he could no longer deal with the extremes of the New York City climate. He and his wife moved to California where he took up screenwriting. In 1949, Kaufman wrote the screenplay for the short film Ragtime Bear, which was the first appearance of Mr. Magoo. He followed this up in 1950 with another Mr. Magoo film, Punchy de Leon.
In 1950, Kaufman lent his name to screenwriter Dalton Trumbo, who had been blacklisted after investigation by the House Un-American Activities Committee, for the screenplay for Gun Crazy.
In 1953 he received an Oscar nomination for his screenplay for Take the High Ground!. In 1955 he received another nomination for his screenplay for Bad Day at Black Rock. Although he usually worked as a writer, he also directed Convicts 4 (1962) and served as associate producer for Raintree Country (1957).
McSweeney's published Kaufman's first novel, titled Bowl of Cherries, in October 2007. Kaufman was 86 years old when he began work on the novel.
[edit] Work
[edit] Films
- The Big Blow (1948)
- Ragtime Bear (1949)
- Punchy de Leon (1950)
- Unknown World (1951)
- Aladdin and His Lamp (1952)
- Take the High Ground! (1953)
- Bad Day at Black Rock (1955)
- Raintree County (1957) (also associate producer)
- Never So Few (1959)
- Convicts 4 (1962) (also directed)
- The War Lord (1965)
- Living Free (1972)
- The Klansman (1974)
[edit] Television
- "Police Story" (1973)
- The Nativity (1978)
- Enola Gay: The Men, the Mission, the Atomic Bomb (1980)
[edit] Novels
- Bowl of Cherries (2007)
[edit] Image
[edit] References
- Rebecca Mead, "The Literary Life: First at Ninety", The New Yorker, September 17, 2007
- Millard Kaufman at the Internet Movie Database
- McSweeney's Internet Tendency: Bowl of Cherries: A Novel by Millard Kaufman.