About the Author:
James O. Kemm, born in 1921, is a retired newspaperman and public relations executive (petroleum) who lives in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Kemm, a University of Missouri journalism graduate, taught journalism at Rider College and worked as a newspaperman in Springfield, Missouri. He is a past president of the the Oklahoma Historical Society. He conducted extensive research for this book at the University of Southern California, Yale, Princeton, the University of Iowa, and has interviewed scores of persons who knew Rupert Hughes. He and his wife, Betty Ann, have raised three daughters in Tulsa.
Review:
A solidly researched biography of one of the most popular literary figures of his time. -- Rudy Behlmer, author of Memo From David O. Selznick; Inside Warner Bros., and Behind the Scenes: The Making of . . .
It's very different, now, in what used to be known as the Film Colony. The pioneers have all gone to that great movie studio in the sky, and enduring legends attach only to players (Pickford, Valentine,) and directors (Griffith, Lubitsch) and producers (Goldwyn, Thalberg), and never to authors, particularly to those who "wrote" for the silent screen. However, Rupert Hughes in his own time was a legend, deservingly so. He is now so thoroughly forgotten that a full-scale biography of his arrives as a major surprise. . . He was a self-described "poor uncle of a rich nephew" and the nephew by the name of Howard Hughes was rich indeed, but Rupert Hughes never was poor. He cut a gaudy figure, not only in formative movieland but on the national literary scene. Rupert of the Hughes clas was a popular novelist, secured by Sam Goldwyn as one of his "Famous Authors for Famous Pictures" . . . Hughes' nonfiction may not deserve its present neglect. City of Angels is a captivating portrait of Los Angeles in 1941, and his three-volume biography of George Washington is far more readable that Douglas Southall Freeman's celebrated five-volume account, and it may be more valuable. The Hughes study of Washington was a literary controversy of the Roaring '20s. Rather than viewing the father of our country as an icon, Hughes depicted him as a human being with discernible flaws who married the widow Martha Custis for her money. James Kemm's reportage on "the Washington furor" is the most interesting aspect . . . -- Larry Swindell, Books Editor; Fort Worth Star-Telegram
Rupert Hughes helped invent the movies as we know them . . . In his glory days from the 'teens through the 1920s, 30s and into the 40s, Rupert Hughes was a name to conjure with: a prodigiously prolific writer of fiction, later a producer-director . . . Now he has been largely forgotten--until James Kemm's well-researched and admiring biography arrived to remind us of his creative achievements. -- Charles Champlin, Author of George Lucas: The Creative Impulse
Rupert Hughes' life has been far too little appreciated. . . Any new biography which sheds light on his life is well worth careful scrutiny. (Samuel Goldwyn, Jr.) -- Samuel Goldwyn, Jr.
The rediscovery of Rupert Hughes is long overdue! -- John Ahouse, Curator, American Literature University of Southern California
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