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James Thurber

From CartoonWiki

Template:Short description Template:For Template:Use American English Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox writer

James Grover Thurber (December 8, 1894 – November 2, 1961) was an American cartoonist, writer, humorist, journalist, and playwright. He was best known for his cartoons and short stories, published mainly in The New Yorker and collected in his numerous books.

Thurber was one of the most popular humorists of his time and celebrated the comic frustrations and eccentricities of ordinary people. His works have frequently been adapted into films, including The Male Animal (1942), The Battle of the Sexes (1959, based on Thurber's "The Catbird Seat"), and "The Secret Life of Walter Mitty" (adapted twice, in 1947 and in 2013).

Life

Thurber was born in Columbus, Ohio, to Charles L. Thurber and Mary Agnes "Mame" (née Fisher) Thurber on December 8, 1894. Both of his parents greatly influenced his work. His father was a sporadically employed clerk and minor politician who dreamed of being a lawyer or an actor. Thurber described his mother as a "born comedian" and "one of the finest comic talents I think I have ever known". She was a practical joker and on one occasion pretended to be disabled, and attended a faith healer revival only to jump up and proclaim herself healed.[1]

Due to overcrowding in his grandfather's house, where his family had moved while his father recovered from an illness, Thurber often stayed at the home of his aunt, Margery Albright. Albright lived in Downtown Columbus near Holy Cross Church, the clock and bell of which Thurber would reference in later writing.[2][3]

Thurber at age 14

When Thurber was seven years old, he and one of his brothers were playing a game of William Tell, when his brother shot James in the eye with an arrow.[4] He lost that eye, and the injury later caused him to become almost entirely blind. He was unable to participate in sports and other activities in his childhood because of this injury, but he developed a creative mind, which he used to express himself in writings.[1] Neurologist V. S. Ramachandran suggests that Thurber's imagination may be partly explained by Charles Bonnet syndrome, a neurological condition that causes complex visual hallucinations in people who have had some level of visual loss.[5] (This was the basis for the piece "The Admiral on the Wheel".)

High school graduation photo, East High School
Thurber family portrait taken in Columbus, Ohio, in 1915. From left to right: seated: Robert and Charles. Back row: William, James, and Mame

From 1913 to 1918, Thurber attended Ohio State University where he was a member of the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity and editor of the student magazine, the Sundial. It was during this time that he rented the house on 77 Jefferson Avenue,[6] which became Thurber House in 1984. He never graduated from the university because his poor eyesight prevented him from taking a mandatory Reserve Officers' Training Corps (ROTC) course.[7] In 1995 he was posthumously awarded a degree.[8]

The Thurber House[9] in Columbus, Ohio

From 1918 to 1920, Thurber worked as a code clerk for the United States Department of State, first in Washington, D.C., and then at the embassy in Paris. On returning to Columbus, he began his career as a reporter for The Columbus Dispatch from 1921 to 1924. During part of this time, he reviewed books, films, and plays in a weekly column called "Credos and Curios", a title that was given to a posthumous collection of his work. Thurber returned to Paris during this period, where he wrote for the Chicago Tribune and other newspapers.[8]

Move to New York

In 1925, Thurber moved to Greenwich Village in New York City, obtaining a job as a reporter with the New York Evening Post. He joined the staff of The New Yorker in 1927 as an editor, with the help of E. B. White, his friend and fellow New Yorker contributor. His career as a cartoonist began in 1930 after White found some of Thurber's drawings in a trash can and submitted them for publication; White inked-in some of these earlier drawings to make them reproduce better for the magazine, and years later expressed deep regret he had done such a thing. Thurber contributed both his writings and his drawings to The New Yorker until the 1950s.Template:Cn

Marriage and family

Thurber married Althea Adams in 1922, although the marriage, as he later wrote to a friend, devolved into "a relationship charming, fine, and hurting".[10] They lived in the Sanford–Curtis–Thurber House, in Fairfield County, Connecticut, with their daughter Rosemary[11] (b. 1931).[12][13][14] The marriage ended in divorce in May 1935, and Althea kept[15] Sanford–Curtis–Thurber House.[1] He married his editor, Helen Muriel Wismer (1902–1986) in June 1935.[16] After meeting Mark Van Doren on a ferry to Martha's Vineyard, Thurber began summering in Cornwall, Connecticut, along with many other prominent artists and authors of the time. After three years of renting, Thurber found a home, which he referred to as "The Great Good Place", in Cornwall, Connecticut.[17][18]

Death

Thurber's behavior became erratic in his last year. Thurber was stricken with a blood clot on the brain on October 4, 1961, and underwent emergency surgery, drifting in and out of consciousness. Although the operation was initially successful, Thurber died a few weeks later, on November 2, aged 66, due to complications from pneumonia. The doctors said his brain was senescent from several small strokes and hardening of the arteries. His last words, aside from the repeated word "God", were "God bless... God damn", according to his wife, Helen.[19]

Legacy and honors

Career

Thurber also became well known for his simple, outlandish drawings and cartoons. Both his literary and his drawing skills were helped along by the support of, and collaboration with, fellow New Yorker staff member E. B. White, who insisted that Thurber's sketches could stand on their own as artistic expressions. Thurber drew six covers and numerous classic illustrations for The New Yorker.[24]

Writer

Many of Thurber's short stories are humorous fictional memoirs from his life, but he also wrote darker material, such as "The Whip-Poor-Will", a story of madness and murder. His best-known short stories are "The Dog That Bit People" and "The Night the Bed Fell"; they can be found in My Life and Hard Times, which was his "break-out" book. Among his other classics are "The Secret Life of Walter Mitty", "The Catbird Seat", "The Night the Ghost Got In", "A Couple of Hamburgers", "The Greatest Man in the World", and "If Grant Had Been Drinking at Appomattox". The Middle-Aged Man on the Flying Trapeze has several short stories with a tense undercurrent of marital discord. The book was published the year of his divorce and remarriage.

Template:AnchorAlthough his 1941 story "You Could Look It Up",[25] about a three-foot adult being brought in to take a walk in a baseball game, has been said[26] to have inspired Bill Veeck's stunt with Eddie Gaedel with the St. Louis Browns in 1951, Veeck claimed an older provenance for the stunt.[27]

In addition to his other fiction, Thurber wrote more than seventy-five fables, some of which were first published in The New Yorker (1939), then collected in Fables for Our Time and Famous Poems Illustrated (1940) and Further Fables for Our Time (1956). These were short stories that featured anthropomorphic animals (e.g. "The Little Girl and the Wolf", his version of Little Red Riding Hood) as main characters, and ended with a moral as a tagline. An exception to this format was his most famous fable, "The Unicorn in the Garden", which featured an all-human cast except for the unicorn, which does not speak. Thurber's fables were satirical, and the morals served as punch lines as well as advice to the reader, demonstrating "the complexity of life by depicting the world as an uncertain, precarious place, where few reliable guidelines exist."[28] His stories also included several book-length fairy tales, such as The White Deer (1945), The 13 Clocks (1950) and The Wonderful O (1957). The latter two were among several of Thurber's works illustrated by Marc Simont.

Thurber's prose for The New Yorker and other venues included numerous humorous essays. A favorite subject, especially toward the end of his life, was the English language. Pieces on this subject included "The Spreading 'You Know'," which decried the overuse of that pair of words in conversation, "The New Vocabularianism", and "What Do You Mean It Was Brillig?". His short pieces – whether stories, essays or something in between – were referred to as "casuals" by Thurber and the staff of The New Yorker.[29]

Thurber wrote a five-part New Yorker series, between 1947 and 1948, examining in depth the radio soap opera phenomenon, based on near-constant listening and researching over the same period. Leaving nearly no element of these programs unexamined, including their writers, producers, sponsors, performers, and listeners alike, Thurber republished the series in his anthology, The Beast in Me and Other Animals (1948), under the section title "Soapland." The series was one of the first to examine such a pop-culture phenomenon in depth.[30]

The last twenty years of Thurber's life were filled with material and professional success in spite of his blindness. He published at least fourteen books in that era, including The Thurber Carnival (1945), Thurber Country (1953), and the extremely popular book about New Yorker founder/editor Harold Ross, The Years with Ross (1959). A number of Thurber's short stories were made into movies, including The Secret Life of Walter Mitty in 1947.

Cartoonist

While Thurber drew his cartoons in the usual fashion in the 1920s and 1930s, his failing eyesight later required changes. He drew them on very large sheets of paper using a thick black crayon (or on black paper using white chalk, from which they were photographed and the colors reversed for publication). Regardless of method, his cartoons became as noted as his writings; they possessed an eerie, wobbly feel that seems to mirror his idiosyncratic view on life. He once wrote that people said it looked like he drew them under water. Dorothy Parker, a contemporary and friend of Thurber, referred to his cartoons as having the "semblance of unbaked cookies". The last drawing Thurber completed was a self-portrait in yellow crayon on black paper, which was featured as the cover of Time magazine on July 9, 1951.[31] The same drawing was used for the dust jacket of The Thurber Album (1952).

Adaptations

In popular culture

  • In Season Nine, Episode 13 of Seinfeld, titled “The Cartoon”, Elaine mentions learning of gossip about Thurber while interviewing for a job at The New Yorker.[38]
  • Beginning during his own father's terminal illness, television broadcaster Keith Olbermann read excerpts from Thurber's short stories during the closing segment of his MSNBC program Countdown with Keith Olbermann on Fridays, which he called "Fridays with Thurber".[39] He reintroduced this during the COVID-19 pandemic of 2020, reading Thurber stories daily at 8:00 p.m. EDT on Twitter, and continued on his podcast, also called Countdown with Keith Olbermann.
  • On an episode of Norm Macdonald's video podcast, Norm Macdonald Live, Norm tells a story in which comedian Larry Miller acknowledges that his biggest influence in comedy was Thurber.
  • In 2021 film The French Dispatch by Wes Anderson, he was mentioned in the end title credits as inspiration.

Bibliography

Books

75th anniv. edition (2004) with foreword by John Updike,
(Modern Library Edition)
  • The Beast in Me and Other Animals, 1948,
  • The Thurber Album, 1952
  • Thurber Country, 1953
  • Thurber's Dogs, 1955
  • Further Fables for Our Time, 1956
  • Alarms and Diversions (anthology), 1957
  • The Years with Ross, 1959,
  • Lanterns and Lances, 1961

Children's books

Plays

Posthumous books

  • Credos and Curios, 1962 (ed. Helen W. Thurber)
  • Thurber & Company, 1966 (ed. Helen W. Thurber)
  • Selected Letters of James Thurber, 1981 (ed. Helen W. Thurber & Edward Weeks)
  • Collecting Himself: James Thurber on Writing and Writers, Humor and Himself, 1989 (ed. Michael J. Rosen)
  • Thurber on Crime, 1991 (ed. Robert Lopresti)
  • People Have More Fun Than Anybody: A Centennial Celebration of Drawings and Writings by James Thurber, 1994 (ed. Michael J. Rosen) [40]
  • James Thurber: Writings and Drawings (anthology), 1996, (ed. Garrison Keillor), Library of America,
  • The Dog Department: James Thurber on Hounds, Scotties, and Talking Poodles, 2001 (ed. Michael J. Rosen)
  • The Thurber Letters: The Wit, Wisdom, and Surprising Life of James Thurber, 2002 (ed. Harrison Kinney, with Rosemary A. Thurber)
  • Collected Fables, 2019 (ed. Michael J. Rosen), ISBN
  • A Mile and a Half of Lines: The Art of James Thurber, 2019 (ed. Michael J. Rosen)

Short stories

Template:Incomplete list Template:Div col

  • “A Box to Hide In”
  • "The Admiral on the Wheel"
  • "A Couple of Hamburgers"
  • "A Ride with Olympy"
  • "A Sequence of Servants"
  • "The Bear Who Let it Alone"
  • "The Black Magic of Barney Haller"
  • "The Breaking Up of the Winships", 1945
  • "The Cane in the Corridor"
  • "The Car We Had to Push"
  • "The Catbird Seat", 1942
  • "The Crow and the Oriole"
  • "The Curb in the Sky"[41]
  • "The Day the Dam Broke"
  • "The Departure of Emma Inch"
  • "Destructive Forces Life"
  • "Doc Marlowe"
  • "Draft Board Nights"
  • "File and Forget"[42]
  • "If Grant had been Drinking at Appomattox"
  • "More Alarms at Night"
  • "Mr. Preble Gets Rid of His Wife"
  • "Oh When I Was..."
  • "One is a Wanderer"
  • "Sex Ex Machina"
  • "Snapshot of a Dog"
  • "The Dog That Bit People"
  • "The Evening's at Seven"
  • "The Figgerin' Of Aunt Wilma"[43][44]
  • “A Friend to Alexander”
  • "The Glass in the Field"
  • "The Greatest Man in the World"
  • "The Lady on 142"
  • "The Little Girl and the Wolf"
  • "The Macbeth Murder Mystery", 1937
  • "The Man Who Hated Moonbaum"
  • "The Moth and the Star"
  • "The Night the Bed Fell"
  • "The Night the Ghost Got In"
  • "The Owl Who Was God"
  • "The Peacelike Mongoose"
  • "The Princess and the Tin Box"
  • "The Rabbits Who Caused All the Trouble"
  • "The Remarkable Case of Mr.Bruhl"
  • "The Scotty Who Knew Too Much"
  • "The Seal Who Became Famous"
  • "The Secret Life of James Thurber", 1943
  • "The Secret Life of Walter Mitty"
  • "The Sheep in Wolf's Clothing", 1939
  • "The Subjunctive Mood", 1929
  • "The Tiger Who Was to Be King"
  • "The Topaz Cuff Links Mystery"
  • "The Unicorn in the Garden"
  • "The Whip-Poor-Will"
  • "The Wood Duck"
  • "University Days"
  • "What Do You Mean It Was Brillig?"
  • "You Could Look It Up", 1941

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See also

References

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Further reading

Interviews

Transcript of Alistair CookeTemplate:'s Interview With James Thurber on Omnibus (U.S. TV series)[45]

Biographies of Thurber

  • Bernstein, Burton. 1975. Thurber. William Morrow & Co.
  • Fensch, Thomas. 2001. The Man Who Was Walter Mitty: The Life and Work of James Thurber.
  • Grauer, Neil A. 1994. Remember Laughter: A Life of James Thurber. University of Nebraska Press.
  • Kinney, Harrison. 1995. James Thurber: His Life and Times. Henry Holt & Co.

Literature review

  • Holmes, Charles S. 1972. The Clocks Of Columbus: The Literary Career of James Thurber Atheneum.

External links

Template:Wikiquote Template:Wikisource author Template:Commons category

Provided to YouTube by Masterworks Broadway; ℗ Originally released 1960 Sony Music Entertainment
The Ohio State University Libraries Rare Books and Manuscripts Collection
Works

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  25. Thurber, James, "You Could Look It Up" Template:Webarchive, The Saturday Evening Post, April 5, 1941, pp. 9–11, 114, 116.
  26. Kinney, Harrison (1995). James Thurber: His Life and Times. Henry Holt & Co., p. 672. ISBN 9780805039665
  27. Template:Cite book
  28. Maharg, Ruth A. (Summer 1984), "The Modern Fable: James Thurber's Social Criticisms"; Template:Webarchive, Children's Literature Association Quarterly, Volume 9, Number 2, pp. 72–73.
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  34. Kovner, Leo (1958). "Television Reviews: One Is a Wanderer"; Template:Webarchive. The Hollywood Reporter. p. 9. "A moving tale of lonely despair in a big city, admittedly it's not everybody's meat. Yet the atmosphere of gentle melancholy was compelling, and the sensitive, intelligent performance of Fred MacMurray and the direction of Herschel Daugherty command attention and respect." Retrieved March 14, 2022.
  35. "CBS Noses Out NBC in Emmy Nominations Race". The Hollywood Reporter. April 14, 1959. p. 6. Retrieved March 14, 2022.
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