|
Eugene Luther Gore Vidal,
known better simply as Gore Vidal , (born October 3,
1925) is a well-known American "man
of letters", a writer of novels,
plays and essays, and a public figure for over fifty
years.
Biography
- He was born
Eugene Luther Vidal in West Point, New York, the son
of Eugene Vidal and Nina Gore. His birth took place at the United States
Military Academy where his father was an
aeronautics instructor. Vidal later adopted as his first name the
surname of his maternal grandfather,
Thomas P. Gore, Democratic Senator from
Oklahoma.
Vidal was brought up in
the Washington, D.C., area. It was there that he attended St.
Albans School. His grandfather Gore was blind, and the young Vidal both
read aloud to him and frequently acted as his guide, thereby gaining unusual
access for a child to the corridors of power. Senator Gore's
isolationism has been one of the guiding beliefs of Vidal's
political philosophy, which has always been unwaveringly critical of what he
perceives to be American imperialism.
After graduating
from Phillips Exeter Academy, Gore joined the US Army
Reserve in 1943.
For much of the late 20th
century, Vidal divided his time between Ravello, Italy, on
the Amalfi Coast, and Los Angeles,
California. He sold his home in Ravello in 2003 and
spends most of his time living in Los Angeles. In November, 2003,
Howard Auster, Vidal's life partner, passed away. In February,
2005, Vidal buried Auster's remains in a tomb maintained for the two of them at
Rock Creek Cemetery in Washington, DC.
Writing
Career - At age 21, he wrote his
first novel, Williwaw, based upon his
military experiences in the Alaskan Harbor
Detachment. The book was well received. A few years later, his
novel The City and the Pillar, which dealt candidly
with gay themes, caused a furor, to the extent that the New
York Times refused to review a number of his later books. The book was
dedicated to "J.T." who, after rumors were published in a magazine, Vidal was
eventually forced to confirm was his St. Albans love Jimmy
Trimble and who the book clearly involved. Trimble died in the
Battle of Iwo Jima June 1, 1945, and
Vidal would later claim that he was the only person he ever loved.
Subsequently, as sales of his novels slipped, Vidal worked on
plays, films, and television series as a scriptwriter. Two of his
plays, The Best Man and Visit to a Small
Planet, were Broadway hits and, adapted, successful movies.
In the
early 1950s, using the pseudonym Edgar Box, he wrote three
mystery novels about a fictional detective named
Peter Sergeant.
Vidal was
hired as a contract writer for MGM in 1956. In 1959, Director William
Wyler needed work done on the script of Ben-Hur, written by
Karl Tunberg. Vidal agreed to work with Christopher Fry
to rework the screenplay on the condition that MGM let him out of the
last two years of his contract. The death of the producer, Sam
Zimbalist, however, led to complications in allotting the credit. The
Screenwriters Guild resolved the issue by listing Tunberg as the sole
screenwriter, denying credit to both Vidal and Fry. Charlton Heston
was less than pleased with the (carefully and deliberately veiled) homosexuality of
a scene Vidal claims to have written and has denied that Vidal had significant
involvement in the script.http://www.isebrand.beliefnet.com/page4.html
In the
1960s, Vidal wrote three highly successful novels. The meticulously researched
Julian (1964) dealt with the apostate Roman Emperor, while
Washington, D.C. (1967) focused on a political family during the
FDR era. The third novel was unexpected–the satirical
transsexual comedy Myra Breckinridge (1968).
After two
unsuccessful plays, Weekend (1968) and An Evening With Richard Nixon (1972), and
the strange semi-autobiographical novel Two Sisters, Vidal would focus mainly on
his essays and two distinct strains of his novels: historical novels dealing with
American history such as Burr (1973), 1876
(1976), Lincoln (1984), Empire (1987),
Hollywood (1989), The Golden Age (2000) and another excursion into the ancient
world Creation (1981, published in expanded form 2002); and the
funny and often merciless "satirical inventions": Myron (1975,
a sequel to Myra Breckinridge), Kalki
(1978), Duluth (1983), Live From Golgotha
Vidal also
occasionally returned to write for cinema and television including a TV movie
of Billy the Kid with Val Kilmer and a mini-series of
Lincoln. Although he wrote the original script for the controversial film
Caligula, he tried to have his name removed from the final
result.
Perhaps
contrary to his own wishes, Vidal is more respected as an essayist than novelist.
He writes chiefly on political, historical, and literary themes. He won the
National Book Award in 1993 for United States (1952-1992). A subsequent
collection to 2000 is The Last Empire. Since then he has
published "pamphlets" highly critical of the present Bush-Cheney administration as
well as the text on America's founding fathers, Inventing A
Nation. He published a well-received memoir, Palimpsest
in 1995, and according to recent reports is working on the follow-up.
In the
1960s, Vidal moved to Italy and was cast as himself in Federico
Fellini's film Roma. His liberal politics are well-documented
and in 1987 he wrote a series of essays entitled
Armageddon, exploring the intricacies of power in contemporary
America, and ruthlessly pillorying the presidential incumbent Ronald
Reagan, whom he once famously described as a "triumph of the embalmer's
art". Besides his politician grandfather, Vidal has other connections to the
Democratic Party; his mother, Nina, married Hugh D. Auchincloss,
Jr., who later became the stepfather of Jacqueline Bouvier
Kennedy. Vidal is a 5th cousin of Jimmy Carter. He was also an
unsuccessful Democratic candidate for Congress in 1960, losing a very
close election in a traditionally Republican district on the
Hudson River. He lost a second attempt in 1982, despite
the backing of such liberal celebrities as Paul Newman and
Joanne Woodward. Vidal has said that he and Al Gore, the
former U.S. vice president, are distant cousins, but genealogical research has
uncovered no such family link.
He co-starred
in the 1994 film, Bob Roberts, with Tim Robbins, as well as
other films, notably Gattaca , With Honors
and Igby Goes Down.
Vidal is
noted as a self-publicist and if a more accurate definition of his view on things
were required, it is neatly summed up in the tongue-in-cheek assertion from a
magazine interview: "There is not one human problem that could not be solved if
people would simply do as I advise."
In August
2004, the New York Times reported that Vidal, now 79, was selling his 5,000 square
foot (460 m²) cliff-side villa in Italy, which had been his principal residence for
30 years, for health reasons and was moving permanently to his other home in Los
Angeles.
Source : Some of the information on this page came
from a Wikipedia article and is licensed under the GNU Documentation
License. ©2008 www.geneticmatrix.com.
|