Clifford Odets (1906 - 1963)
Clifford Odets was born to Jewish immigrant parents
in Philadelphia, PA, on July 18, 1906. He was raised
in New York City, but dropped out of school at 17 to
become an actor. He worked in small repertory
companies throughout the 1920s before becoming one
of the original members of the New York City-based,
avant-garde, left-wing ensemble Group Theatre,
founded by Harold Clurman, Cheryl Crawford and
method-acting guru Lee Strasberg. The group, now
considered the most influential American theater
troupe, was committed to radical revolutions in
theater; they would focus on, and possibly effect
pressing social issues of the day while ridding
their original productions of the artificiality that
had consumed Broadway. They also shunned celebrity
and made their productions true collaborations,
following the views espoused in their plays.
In the midst of the Great Depression, the group
found no shortage of pressing social issues, but
they would have to wait until Odets discovered his
true calling as a playwright before exploding on to
the theatrical scene. After joining the American
Communist Party in 1934, Odets used a taxi drivers'
strike from that year as the inspiration for his
first play, "Waiting for Lefty," produced in 1935.
The play borrows heavily from Communist ideology and
promotes unionization as the only means to tip the
scales of power away from big business and toward
the worker. The play, starring future legendary film
director Elia Kazan, was a huge success, thrilling
its audience to the point of pandemonium. Odets also
perfected the group's ambition to write plays in the
authentic language of its working-class characters;
his crackling, pitch-perfect dialogue brought an
unprecedented level of social realism to the
theater.
Odets quickly followed the success of "Waiting
for Lefty" in 1935 with what many consider his
masterpiece, "Awake and Sing!" and also "Till the
Day I Die," one of the first anti-Nazi plays
produced on Broadway. With the production of
"Paradise Lost" that same year, Odets was hired to
write screenplays in Hollywood, where he met and
married actress Luise Rainer. He had numerous
affairs with such actresses as Frances Farmer and
Fay Wray before he and Rainer divorced in 1940. He
later married theater actress Bette Grayson.
Odets's romantic dalliances did not prevent him
from writing. "Golden Boy," produced in 1937,
which became
his and Group Theatre's biggest success. It turned
out they would need it, as the ensemble was
hemorrhaging money and decided to take on Hollywood
actors as a last-ditch resort to attract audiences.
Nevertheless, it dissolved in 1941, but not before Odets was able to put on "Rocket to the Moon"
(1938), "Night Music" (1940), and the group's last
production, "Clash By Night" (1941).
Odets's radical politics made him an obvious
target for Senator Joseph McCarthy and the House
Un-American Activities Committee's Communist
witch-hunt in 1953. However, Odets maintained that
he was never directly influenced by the American
Communist Party, but that his plays stemmed from his
sympathy with the working class. Not blacklisted
like many of his fellow Communist artists, Odets
wrote more screenplays, including the adaptation of
the novel "The Sweet Smell of Success," a classic
investigation into the cutthroat world of fame. He
also found time to write the stage plays "The Big
Knife" (1949) and "The Country Girl" (1950).
Odets died from cancer on Aug. 18, 1963, shortly
after leaving the television show "The Richard Boone
Repertory Theater," for which he had signed on to be
executive story editor. The model for the idealistic
titular playwright in the Coen brothers' 1991 film
"Barton Fink," Odets is considered the defining
American playwright of the 1930s and revered as one
of drama's greatest crusaders for social justice.
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