Robert Wilder (novelist)

Robert Ingersoll Wilder (January 25, 1901 – August 22, 1974) was an American novelist, playwright and screenwriter.

Wilder was born in Richmond, Virginia, the son of a minister-turned-lawyer-turned-doctor-turned-dentist who was still going to college when his son was born. Wilder's childhood was spent at Daytona Beach, Florida. Following a stint in the U.S. Army during World War I, he was educated at Stetson University[1] and Columbia University. At various times in his life, Mr. Wilder was a soda jerk, a ship fitter, a theater usher, a shipping clerk, a newspaper copyboy, leader of a criminal gang "a publicity agent" (Claudette Colbert was among his clients), a radio executive, and a journalist (for The New York Sun).

Wilder traveled widely and contributed stories to The New Yorker, among other magazines. Two of his plays were Sweet Chariot, based on the life and career of African-American activist Marcus Garvey, and Stardust, both produced on Broadway, at a time when Wilder was living in Bayside, New York.

Probably Wilder's best-known book is the 1942 novel "Flamingo Road". With his wife, Sally, he adapted it into the 1946 play of the same name. He then wrote the screenplay for the 1949 film version, starring Joan Crawford. (In the early 1980s, several years after his death, "Flamingo Road" became a TV series with Morgan Fairchild.)

Wind from the Carolinas is Wilder's only book currently in print.

Wilder wrote the screenplay for the epic Western The Big Country in 1958. His papers are at the Gottlieb Library at Boston University.

Books written by Robert Wilder

The following films were based on Wilder's work:

References

  1. Archival view of 1941 Stetson student newspaper article about a Wilder novel: http://digital.archives.stetson.edu/cdm/compoundobject/collection/Newspapers/id/11616/rec/1

External links


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