Jules Eckert Goodman

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Jules Eckert Goodman

Jules Eckert Goodman circa 1916
Born (1876-11-02)November 2, 1876
Gervais, Oregon
Died July 10, 1962(1962-07-10) (aged 85)
Peekskill, New York
Occupation Playwright and author

Jules Eckert Goodman (November 2, 1876 - July 10, 1962) was an American playwright and author. He was best known for his plays The Man Who Came Back (1916), The Silent Voice (1914), Chains (1923), and a series of plays featuring Potash and Permutter written with Montague Glass.

Life and career

Goodman was born in Gervais, Oregon in 1876. He received an undergraduate degree from Harvard University in 1899 and master's degree from Columbia University in 1901. He was managing editor for four years of Current Literature and also wrote for Outing and the Dramatic Mirror.[1][2] He had his first success on Broadway with 1910's Mother.

The successful The Silent Voice (1914) (derived from a short story by Gouverneur Morris[3]) was adapted to film four times; first in 1915, then again in 1922 under the title The Man Who Played God (the title of the original Morris story). A talking-movie version also called The Man Who Played God appeared in 1932, starring George Arliss (who was also in the 1922 silent film) and Bette Davis, a role she credited as her big "break" in Hollywood. Lastly, and least appealingly, it appeared as a campy 1955 star vehicle for Liberace called Sincerely Yours.[4][5]

Among other film adaptions of Goodman's work, The Man Who Came Back appeared in 1931. Goodman's reported last play Many Mansions (1937) was written with his son Eckert Goodman.[6]

Goodman died of pneumonia in Peekskill, New York, where he had resided for forty years, on July 10, 1962. His wife died in 1959, and he was survived by one son (Jules Eckert Goodman, Jr.), and two daughters, Helen Goodman and Anna Freedgood.[7]

Selected Bibliography

Plays

  • The Man Who Stood Still (1908)[8]
  • The Right to Live (1908)
  • The Test (1908)
  • Mother (1910)
  • The Point of View (1912)[9]
  • The Silent Voice (1914)[10]
  • The Trap (1915)
  • Just Outside the Door (1915)
  • Treasure Island (1915) (adaption of Robert Louis Stevenson novel)
  • The Man Who Came Back (1916)
  • Object - Matrimony (1916) (written with Montague Glass))
  • Business Before Pleasure (1917) (written with Montague Glass)
  • Why Worry? (1918)(written with Montague Glass)
  • His Honor: Abe Potash (1919) (written with Montague Glass)
  • Pietro (1920) (written with Maud Skinner)
  • The Law Breaker (1922)
  • Partners Again (1922) (written with Montague Glass)
  • Chains (1923)
  • Simon Called Peter (1924) (written with Edward Knoblock)
  • Potash and Permutter, Detectives (1926) (with Montague Glass)
  • The Great Romancer (1937)[11]
  • Many Mansions (1937) (written with his son)
  • George Worthing, American (debuted 1948, written earlier)[12]

Novels

  • Mother (1911) (adapted from the play)

References

  1. Chronicle and Comment, The Bookman (New York), April 1911, p. 129
  2. Vicissitudes of a Playwright, Theatre Magazine, January 1916, at p. 17
  3. Morris, Gouverneur. The Man Who Played God, in Cosmopolitan (magazine), Vol. 52, No. 2, January 1912, at p. 278-89
  4. Wilson, John. The Official Razzie Movie Guide, p. 92-94 (2005)
  5. Schuchman, John S. Hollywood Speaks: Deafness and the Film Entertainment Industry, p. 111 (1988)
  6. Bordman, Gerald & Thomas S. Hischak. The Oxford Companion to American Theatre, p. 270 (3d ed. 2004)
  7. (11 July 1962). Jules E. Goodman, Playwright, Dies; Works Were Presented on Broadway and as Movie, The New York Times
  8. (16 October 1908). Louis Mann Seen In A Melodrama, The New York Times
  9. New York Times Oct. 26, 1912
  10. The New Plays, Theatre Magazine, February 1915, Vol. XXI, No. 168, p. 56, 59
  11. (16 June 1937). Play on Dumas In London, The New York Times
  12. (3 November 1948). Premiere Tonight of Heyward Play, The New York Times

External links

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