Henry Slesar

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

Henry Slesar
Born (1927-06-12)June 12, 1927
Brooklyn, New York, United States
Died Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.
New York City, U.S.
Pen name O. H. Leslie
Jay Street
Nationality American
Genre Dark fantasy
Detective fiction
Science fiction
Mysteries
Thrillers
File:Fantastic 195703.jpg
Slesar's novella "The Goddess of World 21" was cover-featured on the March 1957 issue of Fantastic Science Fiction
File:Fantastic 195704.jpg
The next month, his novelette "Bottle Baby" also took the cover of Fantastic
File:Super science fiction 195706.jpg
Slesar's short story "Desire Woman" was cover-festured on the June 1957 issue of Super-Science Fiction
File:Fantastic 195707.jpg
Slesar's novella "The Secret of Marracott Deep" was the cover story of the July 1957 issue of Fantastic
File:Fantastic 195803.jpg
Slesar's novelette "The Genie Takes a Wife" was cover-featured on the March 1958 issue of Fantastic Stories
File:Amazing science fiction stories 195805.jpg
Slesar's novella "Brother Robot" was cover-featured on the May 1958 issue of Amazing Stories
File:Fantastic 195805.jpg
Slesar's novelette "The Invisible Man Murder Case" took the cover of the May 1958 issue of Fantastic Stories
File:Amazing science fiction stories 195810.jpg
Slesar's "The Delegate from Venus" was the cover story of the October 1958 issue of Amazing Stories
File:Fantastic 195812.jpg
Slesar's novelette "The Eleventh Plague" took the cover of the December 1958 issue of Fantastic
File:Amazing science fiction stories 195901.jpg
Slesar's "The Blonde from Space" was the cover story of the January 1959 issue of Amazing Stories
File:Amazing stories 196305.jpg
Slesar's novella "Jobo" took the cover of the May 1963 issue of Amazing Stories

Henry Slesar (June 12, 1927 – April 2, 2002) was an American author, playwright, and copywriter. He is famous for his use of irony and twist endings. After reading Slesar's "M Is for the Many" in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, Alfred Hitchcock bought it for adaptation and they began many successful collaborations. Slesar wrote hundreds of scripts for television series and soap operas, leading TV Guide to call him "the writer with the largest audience in America."[1]

Life

Henry Slesar was born in Brooklyn, New York City. His parents were Jewish immigrants from Ukraine, and he had two sisters named Doris and Lillian. After graduating from the School of Industrial Art, he found he had a talent for ad copy and design, which launched his twenty-year career as a copywriter at the age of 17.[2] He was hired right out of school to work for the prominent advertising agency Young & Rubicam.[1]

It has been claimed that the term "coffee break" was coined by Slesar and that he was also the person behind McGraw-Hill's massively popular "The Man in the Chair"[3] advertising campaign.[4]

During World War II, for some years[5] he served in the United States Air Force,[6] which influenced his story "The Delegate from Venus".[7] Afterwards, he opened his own agency.

Slesar was married three times: to Oenone Scott, 1953-1969; to Jan Maakestad, 1970-1974; and to Manuela[4] Jone in 1974.[5] He had one daughter and one son.

Pseudonyms

In addition to writing chiefly under his own name, Slesar published under several pseudonyms, particularly on early short stories. These included:

  • O. H. Leslie - Slesar chose this name, which he used from 1956 to 1964, again for Paul Fairman as well as other magazines.
In Amazing Stories he published such stories as "Marriages Are Made in Detroit" (December 1956), "Reluctant Genius"[8] (January 1957), "No Room in Heaven" (June 1957), and "The Anonymous Man" (July 1957), "The Seven Eyes of Jonathan Dark" (January 1959).
In Fantastic he published such stories as "Death Rattle" (December 1956), "My Robot" (February 1957), "Abe Lincoln—Android" (April 1957), "The Marriage Machine" (July 1957), and "Inheritance" (August 1957).
  • Ivar Jorgensen - This pseudonym, a house name, was also used by Robert Silverberg, Randall Garrett, Harlan Ellison, Howard Browne, and Paul Fairman himself. Slesar's use of the name appeared in Fantastic for "Coward's Death" (December 1956) and "Tailor-Made Killers" (August 1957).
  • Lawrence Chandler - Another Ziff Davis house name, shared by Howard Browne, Slesar used it for "Tool of the Gods" in Fantastic (November 1957).
  • Sley Harson - Nearly an anagram of Slesar's name, he used it in collaboration with his friend Harlan Ellison. Together they published "Sob Story" in The Deadly Streets (Ace Books, 1958).
  • Gerald Vance - Another Ziff Davis house name; shared by William P. McGivern, Rog Phillips, Robert Silverberg and Randall Garrett. Slesar sold the story "The Lavender Talent" to Paul Fairman at Fantastic (March 1958).
  • Jeff Heller - A pen name he used when collaborating with his friend, M*A*S*H writer Jay Folb.[1]

Other house names Slesar employed were Jay Street, John Murray, and Lee Saber.

After 1958, he wrote chiefly under his own name.

Career

In 1955, he published his first short story, "The Brat" (Imaginative Tales, September, 1955). While working as a copywriter, he published hundreds of short stories—over forty in 1957 alone—including detective fiction, science fiction, criminal stories, mysteries, and thrillers in such publications as Playboy, Imaginative Tales, and Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine; he was writing, on average, a story per week.[1] Alfred Hitchcock hired him to write a number of the scenarios for Alfred Hitchcock Presents.

He wrote a series of stories about a criminal named Ruby Martinson for Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine—"The First Crime of Ruby Martinson" (September, 1957), "Ruby Martinson, Ex-Con" (June, 1958), "Ruby Martinson, Cat Burglar" (June, 1959), "Ruby Martinson’s Great Fur Robbery" (May, 1962)—and later worked on Rod Serling's Twilight Zone series. He also penned the screenplay for the 1965 film Two on a Guillotine, which was based on one of his stories. His short story "Examination Day" was used in the 1980s Twilight Zone revival.

His first novel-length work was 20 Million Miles to Earth, a 1957 novelization of the film. In 1960, his first novel, The Gray Flannel Shroud (1958), a murder mystery set in an advertising agency, earned the Edgar Allan Poe Award.

In 1974, he won an Emmy Award as the head writer for CBS Daytime's The Edge of Night. His term as head writer (1968–84) was considered lengthy.[10] Chris Schemering writes in The Soap Opera Encyclopedia, "Slesar proved a master of the serial format, creating a series of bizarre, intricate plots of offbeat characters in the spirit of the irreverent detective movies of the '40s."[2] During that time, he was also head writer for the Procter & Gamble soap operas Somerset (on NBC Daytime) and Search for Tomorrow until John William Corrington replaced him on the latter. During the 1974-75 television season, he was the creator and head writer for Executive Suite, a CBS primetime series.

He wrote mainly science-fiction scripts for the CBS Radio Mystery Theater during the 1970s.[11]

In 1983, Procter & Gamble wanted to replace him as the head writer for The Edge of Night, but ABC/ABC Daytime kept him. After his eventual replacement as head writer by Lee Sheldon, the network named him and Sam Hall the new head writers of its soap opera One Life to Live, but he left that show after only one year. He was later the head writer of the CBS Daytime series Capitol.

His last novel was Murder at Heartbreak Hospital (ISBN 0-897-33463-9). It is based on his experiences as a writer for soaps. A homicide detective investigates murders on the set of a soap opera and meets a variety of amusing characters, including the bland leading man, a rapacious starlet, a couple of gay teleplay writers, and some executives. As so many of his works did, it features a twist ending. It was originally published in Europe in 1990[12] and the American version retains British spellings and some errors (possibly Slesar's, as when the detective's name is wrongly given in chapter three). The novel was adapted into a film, Heartbreak Hospital, by Ruedi Gerber in 2002; it starred John Shea as Milo, the leading man, Diane Venora as his wife, and Patricia Clarkson as Lottie.[13]

Other late works included "interactive mystery serial" stories for MysteryNet.com, which invited readers to contribute their ideas.

Novels

  • The Gray Flannel Shroud. New York: Random House, 1959. (Series: A Random House mystery)
  • Enter Murderers. New York: Random House, 1960. (Series: A Random House mystery)
  • The Bridge of Lions. New York: Macmillan, 1963.
  • The Thing at the Door. New York: Random House, 1974. (ISBN 0-394-49007-X)
  • Murder at Heartbreak Hospital. Chicago, Ill.: Academy Chicago Publishers, 1998.

Plays

Teleplays

Most of the teleplays written for Alfred Hitchcock Presents were based on Slesar's own stories.

  • "A Crime for Mothers", for Alfred Hitchcock Presents, January 24, 1961 (Season 6, Episode 16), starring Claire Trevor and Patricia Smith.
  • "A Woman's Help", for Alfred Hitchcock Presents, 28 March 1961 (Season 6, Episode 24), starring Antoinette Bower.
  • "Blood Bargain", for The Alfred Hitchcock Hour, 25 Oct. 1963 (Season 2, Episode 5), starring Richard Kiley.
  • "Burglar Proof", for Alfred Hitchcock Presents, 27 Feb. 1962 (Season 7, Episode 21), starring Paul Hartman.
  • "Cop for a Day", for Alfred Hitchcock Presents, October 31, 1961 (Season 7, Episode 4), starring Walter Matthau and Glenn Cannon.
  • "Final Vow" for, The Alfred Hitchcock Hour, 25 Oct. 1962 (Season 1, Episode 6), starring Carol Lynley.
  • "I Saw the Whole Thing", for The Alfred Hitchcock Hour, 11 Oct. 1962 (Season 1, Episode 4), starring John Forsythe.
  • "Laurie Marie", for The Name of the Game, 19 December 1969 (Season 2, Episode 13). Teleplay written with David P. Harmon.
  • "Ma Parker", for Batman, 6 Oct. 1966 (Season 2, Episode 10).
  • "Most Likely to Succeed", for Alfred Hitchcock Presents, 8 May 1962 (Season 7, Episode 31).
  • "The Greatest Mother of Them All", for Batman, 5 Oct. 1966 (Season 2, Episode 9).
  • "The Horse Player", for Alfred Hitchcock Presents, 14 March 1961 (Season 6, Episode 22), starring Claude Rains.
  • "The Last Escape", for Alfred Hitchcock Presents, January 31, 1961 (Season 6, Episode 17), starring Keenan Wynn and Jan Sterling.
  • "The Last Remains", for Alfred Hitchcock Presents, 27 March 1962 (Season 7, Episode 25), starring John Fiedler.
  • "The Man in the Mirror", for 77 Sunset Strip, January 13, 1961 (Season 3, Episode 18).
  • "The Man with Two Faces", for Alfred Hitchcock Presents, 13 Dec. 1960 (Season 6, Episode 11), starring Spring Byington.
  • "The Old Man in the Cave", based on his 1962 story "The Old Man," for Twilight Zone, 8 November 1963 (Season 5, Episode 7) Teleplay written by Rod Serling.
  • "The Test", for Alfred Hitchcock Presents, 20 February 1962 (Season 7, Episode 20), starring Brian Keith and Rod Lauren.
  • "The Throwback", for Alfred Hitchcock Presents, February 28, 1961 (Season 6, Episode 20), starring Murray Matheson.

Short stories

Much of Slesar's short fiction appears in collections and anthologies. He collaborated a few times with Harlan Ellison. His collections are:

  • Clean Crimes and Neat Murders: Alfred Hitchcock's Hand Picked Selection of Stories by Henry Slesar. Introduction by Alfred Hitchcock. New York: Avon, 1960.
Cover title: A Bouquet of Clean Crimes and Neat Murders.
Spine title: Alfred Hitchcock Presents Clean Crimes and Neat Murders.

Many stories were later made available as downloadable and online audio versions, such as 1957's "Dream Town"[14] and "Heart."[15]

Selected short stories

Selected adaptations

Awards and nominations

In 1960, he was awarded the Edgar Award for Best First Novel.

Death

In 2002, he died of complications due to minor elective surgery.[1]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  3. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  4. 4.0 4.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  5. 5.0 5.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  6. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  7. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  8. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  9. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  10. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  11. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  12. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  13. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  14. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  15. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  16. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  17. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

External links