Mick LaSalle, Chronicle Movie Critic
Thursday, March 3, 2005
At the 1956 Academy Awards, Deborah Kerr called out the winner of that year's Oscar for best original story -- Robert Rich, for "The Brave One. " But Rich was not present to accept the award, and for an original reason. No, he was not "on location" making another movie, and he was not ill. He did not have any philosophical problem with the notion of awards ceremonies. Nor was his wife at the hospital, about to give birth to a baby, which is what Jesse Lasky Jr. of the Writers Guild claimed upon accepting the award.
Rich had the best possible reason of all not to be present: He did not exist. He was a pseudonym, one of many, for Dalton Trumbo, a blacklisted writer. One of the Hollywood Ten, Trumbo had gone to prison in 1950 for refusing to answer questions by the House Un-American Activities Committee, which was trying to root out communism in the motion picture industry. Upon his release 10 months later, he could find no work under his own name, but scratched together a living by turning out scripts either under fake names or for fellow writers, who fronted for him and funneled the money to him.
Hollywood is never at a loss for writers. But Trumbo, even stigmatized, was worth working with because he was good, reliable and fast. He could write in any genre, though his films tended, above all, to celebrate restless spirits and individualists. He had flair and a voice, and he was also a gifted novelist. His anti-war novel, "Johnny Got His Gun," written in 1939, is still in print. A mainstay of junior high school English courses, it is often the first novel that students read all the way through. Trumbo is the subject of a play ("Trumbo: Red, White and Blacklisted") starring Brian Dennehy, opening Tuesday at the Post Street Theatre ...
The career that Trumbo was willing to give up on principle had been hard- earned ...
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2005/03/03/DDGOCBI5HV19.DTL