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Arthur Kober
Arthur Kober
from Wikipedia

Arthur Kober (August 25, 1900 – June 12, 1975) was an American humorist, author, press agent, and screenwriter. He was married to the dramatist Lillian Hellman.

Key Information

Biography

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Early life

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Kober was born into a Jewish family in Brody, Galicia, in what was then the Austro-Hungarian Empire (now part of western Ukraine). His family emigrated to the United States when he was 4. They first moved to Harlem before settling in The Bronx.[1]

He attended the High School Of Commerce (later known as Louis D. Brandeis High School) for one semester before working at a series of jobs, including as a stock clerk at Gimbels. He then found work as a theatrical press agent for the Shubert brothers, Jed Harris, Herman Shumlin, and Ruth Draper.[1]

His grandnephew is actor Andrew Kober.

Kober married Lillian Hellman on December 31, 1925. During their marriage, they often lived apart. They divorced in 1932, after Hellman had started a relationship with Dashiell Hammett.[2] He later married Margaret Frohnknecht in 1941, who died in 1951. They had one daughter, Catherine.[1]

Writing career

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Kober began writing humorous short fiction for The New Yorker in 1926 and became a prolific contributor. Many of his characters, such as the husband-hunter Bella Gross, were based on his Jewish upbringing in the Bronx.[3] His New Yorker stories were later collected in the anthologies Thunder Over the Bronx (1935), Pardon Me for Pointing (1939), My Dear Bella (1941), Parm Me (1945), Bella, Bella Kissed a Fella (1951), and Oooh, What You Said! (1958).[4]

He became a screenwriter in Hollywood, working on about 30 films in the 1930s and 1940s, including The Little Foxes (1938), based on Hellman's semi-autobiographical play.[1]

Kober wrote the Broadway play Having Wonderful Time, a comedy set in a Jewish resort in the Catskills.[5] It was staged in 1937 and the following year it was made into a Hollywood film, though the Jewish ethnic humor was sanitized.[5] It was adapted as a stage musical, Wish You Were Here, in 1952.[5]

Kober died of cancer in New York on June 12, 1975, at the age of 74.[1] He was portrayed by David Paymer in the 1999 film, Dash and Lilly.[6]

Works

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Screenwriting

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Playwriting

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Television writing

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Books

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  • Thunder Over the Bronx (1935)
  • Pardon Me for Pointing (1939)
  • My Dear Bella (1941)
  • Parm Me (1945)
  • That Man is Here Again: The Adventures of a Hollywood Agent (1946)
  • Bella, Bella Kissed a Fella (1951)
  • Oooh, What You Said! (1958)

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
''Arthur Kober'' is an American humorist, playwright, and screenwriter known for his satirical short stories depicting Bronx Jewish life through the memorable character Bella Gross and her dialect-speaking family, as well as for his Broadway plays and Hollywood screenwriting credits. Born in Brody in the Austro-Hungarian Empire (present-day Ukraine), Kober immigrated to the United States at age four, settling in New York City where he grew up in Harlem and the Bronx. After early jobs as a stock clerk and stenographer, he worked as a press agent for prominent theatrical figures including the Shubert brothers and Jed Harris before turning to writing. His humorous pieces began appearing in The New Yorker in 1926, featuring the character Bella Gross—a young woman focused on finding a husband—and her outspoken mother, Mrs. Gross, whose malapropism-filled speech became iconic; these stories were later collected in volumes including Thunder Over the Bronx and My Dear Bella. Kober's Broadway career included the successful comedy Having Wonderful Time and the musical Wish You Were Here, co-written with Joshua Logan. In Hollywood from the 1930s to the mid-1940s, he contributed to numerous films as a screenwriter, including The Little Foxes (based on Lillian Hellman's play), Wintertime, and others. He was married to playwright Lillian Hellman from 1925 to 1932, remaining close friends after their divorce, and later had a daughter with his second wife, Margaret Frohnknecht. Kober, who also wrote for television and continued creating stories into his later years, died of cancer in New York City in 1975.

Early life

Early life and early career

Arthur Kober was born on August 25, 1900, in Brody, Galicia, Austria-Hungary (now in western Ukraine), into a Jewish family. His family emigrated to the United States when he was four years old, settling initially in Harlem before moving to the Bronx. Kober attended the High School of Commerce for only one semester before leaving to enter the workforce. Among his early jobs was working as a stock clerk at Gimbels department store. He later shifted to a career as a theatrical press agent, representing producers including the Shubert brothers, Jed Harris, Herman Shumlin, and Ruth Draper. This press work immersed him in New York's theater scene and paved the way for his later creative pursuits.

Literary career

Humorous fiction and published works

Arthur Kober established himself as a notable humorist through his contributions to The New Yorker, where he began publishing short fiction in 1926 and remained a frequent contributor for decades. His stories characteristically drew upon the lives of Jewish residents in the Bronx, capturing their speech patterns, social customs, and everyday aspirations with affectionate satire. A central figure in much of his work was Bella Gross, a young Bronx woman relentlessly pursuing “Mr. Right” amid constant maternal prodding and romantic mishaps. Kober rendered Bella and her circle in a distinctive comic dialect—phonetically spelling the inflected, Yinglish-inflected speech of first-generation and second-generation Jewish New Yorkers, with phrases like “unnastann,” “pickcha show,” and maternal laments such as “Such a nice girl can't catch a fine, steady boy who knows how to put by a dolleh?” This approach blended broad belly laughs with poignancy and gentle mockery of class pretensions and romantic ideals, as seen in stories like “Bronx Belle” (1935), where Bella's refined sensibilities clash with the boisterous behavior of her social club companions. Kober gathered many of these New Yorker pieces into collected volumes, including Thunder Over the Bronx (1935), Pardon Me for Pointing (1939), My Dear Bella (1941), Parm Me (1945), Bella, Bella Kissed a Fella (1951), and Oooh, What You Said! (1958). He also published That Man is Here Again: The Adventures of a Hollywood Agent (1946), which applied similar sharp-eyed humor to the character Benny Greenspan and the absurdities of Hollywood life. His prose humor, rooted in Bronx experiences, earned recognition for transforming regional dialect into a widely appreciated comic idiom.

Theatrical career

Playwriting

Arthur Kober's most notable contribution to playwriting was the Broadway comedy Having Wonderful Time, which premiered on February 20, 1937, at the Lyceum Theatre in New York City. The play is set in a Jewish summer resort in the Catskills and centers on the humorous romantic and social experiences of young vacationers during their holiday stay. It ran for 372 performances before closing on January 8, 1938, marking a solid success for its lighthearted portrayal of resort life. The play was subsequently adapted into a 1938 film of the same name and the 1952 musical Wish You Were Here, for which Kober co-wrote the book with Joshua Logan. Later in his career, Kober co-wrote the comedy A Mighty Man Is He with George Oppenheimer, which opened on Broadway on January 6, 1960, at the Cort Theatre. The production had a short run, closing after 5 performances on January 9, 1960.

Film career

Screenwriting

Arthur Kober established a substantial career as a Hollywood screenwriter from the early 1930s through the 1940s, contributing to approximately 30 films, many of which involved uncredited work or minor contributions such as additional dialogue or scenes. His involvement in the industry reflected the era when studios employed numerous writers to develop scripts, often collaboratively and without individual credit. Among his more notable credited contributions were early works like Make Me a Star (1932) and Palooka (1934), as well as the story for The Big Broadcast of 1937 (1936). He adapted his own successful Broadway play into the screenplay for Having Wonderful Time (1938). In 1941, Kober provided additional scenes and dialogue for The Little Foxes, the film adaptation of Lillian Hellman's play, collaborating with his former wife Hellman. Later in his film career, he handled the adaptation for My Own True Love (1949). While many of his screenwriting efforts remained behind the scenes, these credits highlight his versatility in adapting material and contributing to both original stories and established plays.

Television career

Television writing

In the early 1960s, Arthur Kober contributed scripts to several situation comedies during a brief period of television writing. He wrote for Leave It to Beaver in 1960, Harrigan and Son in 1960, and My Three Sons in 1960. This limited output followed his earlier Hollywood screenwriting career and marked his final known work in scripted episodic television.

Personal life

Marriages and family

Arthur Kober married the playwright Lillian Hellman on December 31, 1925. Their marriage was marked by frequent long separations due to career demands and often long-distance arrangements, eventually ending in divorce in 1932. Despite the divorce, Kober and Hellman remained close friends, with Hellman serving as matron of honor at Kober's second wedding. On January 11, 1941, Kober married Margaret Frohnknecht. The couple had one daughter, Catherine. Margaret died in 1951. Kober's grandnephew is the actor Andrew Kober.

Death

Death

Arthur Kober died of cancer on June 12, 1975, at the age of 74. He passed away at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City, where he had been receiving treatment. Kober had undergone a second operation for cancer the previous summer. A memorial service was held on June 17, 1975, at 1 p.m. at the Riverside Memorial Chapel, located at 76th Street and Amsterdam Avenue in Manhattan. He was survived by his daughter, Katherine, and two sisters, Mildred Mendelsohn and Kitty Ostrow.
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