John Howard Lawson

John Howard Lawson

  • Birthday: 1894-09-24
  • Deathday: 1977-08-11
  • Place of birth: New York City, New York, USA
  • Also know as: Edward Lewis

Biography

John Howard Lawson (September 25, 1894 – August 11, 1977) was an American writer. He was for several years head of the Hollywood division of the Communist Party USA. He was also the organization's cultural manager and answered directly to V.J. Jerome, the Party's New York-based cultural chief. He was the first president of the Writers Guild of America, West after the Screen Writers Guild divided into two regional organizations. Lawson was one of the Hollywood Ten, the first group of American film industry professionals to be blacklisted during the 1950s McCarthy era. Before going to Hollywood, Lawson wrote several minor pieces before World War I. After the war he wrote a few more pieces and was drawn to European cubist, futurist and constructivist plays. In 1928, Lawson moved to Hollywood where he wrote scripts for films such as The Ship for Shanghai, Bachelor Apartment, and Goodbye Love. In the winter of 1930-1931, it was at this time during the Great Depression that Lawson wrote Success Story. The Theater Guild rejected the script, but Harold Clurman, a reader for them, had recently just formed the Group Theater and needed new scripts. Clurman and Lawson reworked the play during the summer of 1932, and Success Story opened on September 26, 1932 for 121 performances. Lawson would also pen the screenplay based on the play, Success at Any Price in 1934. During the 1930s, leftists accused Lawson of having a lack of ideological and political commitment. New Playwrights Theater associate Mike Gold attacked him in The New Masses on April 10, 1934, calling him a "A Bourgeois Hamlet of Our Time" who wrote adolescent works that lacked moral fiber or clear ideas. Lawson responded a week later in The New Masses in the article "'Inner Conflict' and Proletarian Art" he cited his middle-class childhood as the reason why he could not fully understand the working people. He also recognized that his prosperity and Hollywood connections were suspect in the fight for workers' rights. Due to the criticism, he joined the Communist Party and began a program of educating himself about the proletarian cause. He would soon travel throughout the poverty-stricken South to study bloody labor conflicts in Alabama and Georgia. While in the South, he would submit articles to the Daily Worker, which got him arrested numerous times. These experiences would inspire his next play, Marching Song. It was put on by the radical Theater Union and it opened on February 17, 1937 and ran for sixty-one performances. Lawson, who joined the American Communist Party in 1934, made several films that were political, including Blockade (1938), which starred Henry Fonda. It was a film on the Spanish Civil War for which he received a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Story. Lawson also wrote Counter-Attack (1945), a tribute to the Soviet-USA alliance during the Second World War. He also wrote more innocuous films, such as the critically acclaimed Algiers (1938) and the Humphrey Bogart vehicles Sahara and Action in the North Atlantic in 1943.

Filmography

The Hollywood Ten

1950

As Self

Red Hollywood

1996

As Himself (archive footage)

Hollywood, la vie rêvée de Lana Turner

2019

As Self (archive footage)

Marlon Brando: An Actor Named Desire

2014

As Self - Screenwriter (archive footage)

Arthur Miller: Writer

2017

As Self (archive footage)

Production

Algiers

1938

As Screenplay

Action in the North Atlantic

1943

As Screenplay

Sahara

1943

As Screenplay

Bachelor Apartment

1931

As Writer

Four Sons

1940

As Screenplay

Blockade

1938

As Writer

They Shall Have Music

1939

As Screenplay

Our Blushing Brides

1930

As Dialogue

Our Blushing Brides

1930

As Writer

The Careless Years

1957

As Screenplay

Party Wire

1935

As Screenplay

Dynamite

1929

As Dialogue

Success at Any Price

1934

As Screenplay

Success at Any Price

1934

As Theatre Play

Earthbound

1940

As Writer

The Sea Bat

1930

As Writer

Adventure in Manhattan

1936

As Adaptation

Good-bye Love

1933

As Writer

The Ship from Shanghai

1930

As Screenplay

Counter-Attack

1945

As Screenplay

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