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- for others with the same name, see John Collier
John Collier (3 May 1901 - 6 April 1980) was a
British-born author and screenplay writer best known for his short stories, many of
which appeared in The New Yorker from the 1930s to
the 1950s. They were collected in a 1951 volume, Fancies and
Goodnights, which is still in print. Individual stories are
frequently anthologized in fantasy collections. John Collier's
writing has been praised by authors such as Anthony
Burgess, Ray
Bradbury, Neil
Gaiman and Paul
Theroux. He was married to early silent film actress Shirley Palmer. His second marriage in
1942 was to New York actress Beth Kay (Margaret Elizabeth Eke).
They divorced about 10 years later. He has one child, a son, from
his 3rd marriage.
Born in London in 1901, John Collier was privately educated by
his uncle Vincent Collier, a novelist.[1]
When, at the age of 18 or 19, Collier was asked by his father what
he had chosen as a vocation, his reply was, "I want to be a poet."
His father indulged him: over the course of the next ten years,
Collier lived on an allowance of two pounds a week, plus whatever
he could pick up by writing book reviews and acting as a cultural
correspondent for a Japanese newspaper.[1]
During this time, being not overly burdened by any financial
responsibilities, he developed a penchant for games of chance,
conversation in cafes and visits to picture galleries.[2]
He never attended a university. [3]
Poetry to novels and short
stories
For ten years Collier attempted to reconcile the intensely
visual experience opened to him by the Sitwells and the modern painters, with
the austerer preoccupations of those classical authors who were
fashionable in the 1920s.[2]
He felt that his poetry was unsuccessful, however: he was not able
to make his two selves (whom he oddly described as the "archaic,
uncouth, and even barbarous" Olsen and the "hysterically
self-conscious dandy" Valentine) speak with one voice.[3]
Being an admirer of James Joyce, Collier found a solution in
Joyce's Ulysses: "On going for my next
lesson to Ulysses, that city of modern
prose," he wrote, "I was struck by the great number of magnificent
passages in which words are used as they are used in poetry, and in
which the emotion which is originally aesthetic, and the emotion
which has its origin in intellect, are fused in higher proportions
of extreme forms than I had believed was possible."[3]
The few poems he wrote during this time were afterwards published
in a volume under the title Gemini.[2]
While he had written some short stories during the period in which
he was trying to find success as a poet, his career did not take
shape until the publication of His Monkey Wife in 1930. It
enjoyed a certain small popularity and critical approval that
helped to sell his short stories.[1] As
a private joke, Collier wrote a decidedly cool four-page review of
His Monkey Wife, describing it as an attempt "to combine
the qualities of the thriller with those of what might be called
the decorative novel," and concluding with the following appraisal
of the talents of its author: "From the classical standpoint his
consciousness is too crammed for harmony, too neurasthenic for
proportion, and his humor is too hysterical, too greedy, and too
crude." [4]
His stories may be broadly classified as fantasies, but are
really sui
generis. They feature an acerbic wit and are usually
ironic or dark in tone. Like the stories of P. G.
Wodehouse, they are perfectly constructed and feature a
brilliant literary craftsmanship that can easily escape notice. His
stories are memorable; people who cannot recall title or author
will nevertheless remember "the story about the people who lived in
the department store" ("Evening Primrose") or "the story in which
the famous beauties that the man magically summons all say 'Here I
am on a tiger-skin again'" ("Bottle Party").
A characteristic point of his style is that the titles of many
of his stories reveal (or at least telegraph) what would otherwise
be a surprise ending.
Two examples, both from "Over Insurance," may illustrate his
style. The story opens:
- Alice and Irwin were as simple and as happy as any young couple
in a family-style motion picture. In fact, they were even happier,
for people were not looking at them all the time and their joys
were not restricted by the censorship code. It is therefore
impossible to describe the transports with which Alice flew to
embrace Irwin on his return from work, or the rapture with which
Irwin returned her caresses.... It was at least two hours before
they even thought about dinner.... Whatever was best on his plate,
he found time to put it on hers, and she was no slower in picking
out some dainty tidbit to put between his eager and rather rubbery
lips.
They become distressed at the possibility of each others' death,
and agree that their only consolation would be to cry. However,
they decide that it would be better to cry in luxury. Irwin
observes:
- "I would rather cry on a yacht," said he, "where my tears could
be ascribed to the salt spray, and I should not be thought unmanly.
Let us insure one another, darling, so that if the worst happens we
can cry without interruption. Let us put nine-tenths of our money
into insurance...."
- "And let us," cried she, "insure our dear bird also," pointing
to the feathered cageling, whom they always left uncovered at
night, in order that his impassioned trills might grace their
diviner raptures.
- "You are right," said he, "I will put ten bucks on the
bird."
Other
media
In the succeeding years, Collier traveled between England,
France and Hollywood.[1]
While he did continue to write short stories, as time went on he
would turn his attention more and more towards writing
screenplays.
Having moved to Hollywood in 1935, Collier wrote most
prolifically for film and television. He contributed notably to the
screenplays of The African Queen along
with James Agee and John Huston, the Elephant Boy,
The War
Lord, I Am A Camera originally Goodbye to
Berlin remade later as Cabaret, Sylvia Scarlett, Her
Cardboard Lover, Deception and Roseanna
McCoy. He received the Edgar Award in 1952 (for the story "Fancies
and Goodnights") and the International Fantasy Award
in 1952. His short story "Evening Primrose" was the subject of a 1966 television musical by
Stephen
Sondheim, and it was also adapted for the radio series Escape and by BBC Radio. Several of his
stories were adapted for the television series Alfred Hitchcock
Presents.
Death
John Collier died in 1980 in Pacific
Palisades, Los Angeles, California. Near the end of his life,
he wrote, "I sometimes marvel that a third-rate writer like me has
been able to palm himself off as a second-rate writer."[4]
Bibliography
Novels
- His Monkey Wife: or Married to a Chimp (1930)
(currently in print, ISBN 0-9664913-3-5)
- No Traveller Returns (1931)
- Tom's a-Cold (1933) (published in the U.S. as Full
Circle)
- Defy the Foul Fiend: or The Misadventures of a Heart
(1934)
Short
story collections
- Green Thoughts (1932)
- The Devil and All (1934)
- Variations on a Theme (1934)
- Presenting Moonshine (1941)
- The Touch of Nutmeg (1943)
- Fancies and Goodnights (1951) (paperback reprint
currently in print, ISBN 1-59017-051-2) (Note: later editions have
more stories than earlier ones. The one presently in print is the
latest version including all later additions. (The John Collier
Reader and The Best of John Collier contain a few
stories not in any edition of Fancies and
Goodnights.)
- Pictures in the Fire (1958)
- The John Collier Reader (1972) (includes His
Monkey Wife in its entirety, chapters 8 and 9 of Defy the
Foul Fiend, and selected stories)
- The Best of John Collier (1975) (precisely the same as
The John Collier Reader, except that His Monkey
Wife is not included)
Other
works
- Gemini (1931) Poetry collection
- Paradise Lost: Screenplay for Cinema of the Mind
(1973) An adaptation from Milton that was never produced as a film.
Collier changed the format slightly to make it more readable in
book form.
- Sleeping Beauty: This short story was used as the
basis for James B.Harris' 1973 fantasy film Some Call It
Loving AKA Dream Castle, the screenplay written by
Zalman King.
Selected
short stories
- "Another American Tragedy" — A man murders an aged rich
relative and impersonates him to change the will in his own favor-
only to discover he isn't the only one who wants the old man
dead.
- "Back for Christmas" — originally published in the 13 December
1939 issue of The Tattler[5]
this story has been dramatised many times: once for Alfred Hitchcock
Presents,[5]
three times for the Suspense radio series[6] (Peter Lorre portrayed
the main character in the first broadcast in 1943, the 1948, and
1956 broadcasts both starred Herbert Marshall), as well as once for
an episode of Tales of the
Unexpected.
- "Bottle Party" — A jinn
(genie) tricks a man into taking his place in the bottle.
- "The Chaser" — A young man buying a genuine love potion cannot
understand why the seller sells love potions for a dollar, but also
offers a colorless, tasteless, undetectable poison at a much, much
higher price.
- "Cancel All I Said" — A couple's young daughter takes a screen
test. The couple's lives are torn apart by the studio head's verbal
offer to make the child a star.
- "Evening Primrose" — Probably his most famous; about people who
live in a department store, hiding during the day and coming out at
night.
- "Interpretation of a Dream" — A man experiences disturbing and
serial dreams of falling from the thirty-ninth story of the
skyscraper in which he works, passing one story every night. In his
dreams he looks through the window and makes detailed and veridical
observations of the real-life inhabitants as he passes.
- "Over Insurance" — A loving couple puts nine-tenths of their
money into life insurance and becomes so impoverished that each
decides to poison the other, unaware that the other has made the
same decision.
- "Special Delivery" — A man falls into love with a
department-store mannequin. This was later adapted for an episode
of the 1960s TV series Journey to the Unknown,
retitled "Eve", which starred Dennis Waterman and Carol Lynley.
- "The Steel Cat" — Inventor uses his pet mouse to demonstrate
his better mousetrap to an insensitive prospect who insists on
seeing the mouse actually die.
- "Three Bears Cottage" — A man tries unsuccessfully to poison
his wife with a mushroom as retaliation for serving him a smaller
egg than the one she served herself.
- "The Touch of Nutmeg Makes It" — A man tried for murder and
acquitted for lack of motive tells his story to sympathetic
friends.
- "Youth from Vienna" — A couple, whose careers (tennis player
and actress) depend on youth, are forced to deal with a gift of a
single dose of rejuvenating medicine that cannot be divided or
shared. This story was the basis for The Fountain of Youth
a 1956 TV pilot for a proposed anthology series, produced by Desilu and
written, directed, and hosted by Orson Welles.
- "Thus I Refute Beelzy" — An odiously rational father is
confounded by the imagination of his small son.
- ^ a
b
c
d
The Editors of Time Life: "Editors' Preface", Fancies and
Goodnights, pages viv-xii. Time Life Books, 1965
- ^ a
b
c
Editor: jacket blurb, Defy the Foul Fiend, back cover.
Penguin Books UK, 1948.
- ^ a
b
c
Hoyle, Fred: "Time Reading Program Introduction",
Fancies and Goodnights, page xv-xix. Time Life Books,
1965
- ^ a
b
Paul Theroux,
Sunrise with Seamonsters. Houghton Mifflin Books (1986):
303.
- ^ a
b
Martin Grams, Jr. and Patrik Wikstrom (2001). The Alfred
Hitchcock Presents Companion. OTR Publsihing, 135. ISBN
0970331010
- ^ Back for Christmas
References
External
links