Howard Thompson | |
---|---|
Born | 1919 Natchez, Mississippi |
Died | March 10, 2002 Cape Canaveral, Florida |
Occupation | journalist and film critic |
Notable credit(s) | The New York Times |
Howard Thompson (1919 - March 10, 2002) was an US journalist and film critic whose career of forty-one years was spent at the New York Times.
Thompson was born in Natchez, Mississippi. He began his college studies at Louisiana State University but left to serve as a paratrooper in the United States Army during World War II. He was captured and spent six months in a German prisoner of war camp. After the war he continued his studies at Columbia University. In 1947, he joined the New York Times as an office boy in the personnel department, and soon moved to the movie section as a clerk to Bosley Crowther, the venerable film critic at the Times.[1] He later advanced to a reporter who frequently interviewed film personalities and finally became a critic in the late 1950s. He also served as chairman of the New York Film Critics.[2]
Thompson gained a reputation for his pithy comments about films for the television listings. The Village Voice called him "the Virgil of TV guides," and his capsule reviews were labeled "Tiny Thompsons." He retired from full-time work in 1988 but continued to write the Critic's Choice column and his famous one-liners for the movie listings.
Thompson had a stroke in 1996. He died of pneumonia in Cape Canaveral, Florida.