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Donald Windham
Donald Windham
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Carl Van Vechten (1880-1964)/LOC cph.3c31415. Donald Windham and Sandy Campbell, 1955

Donald Windham (July 2, 1920 – May 31, 2010) was an American novelist and memoirist. He is perhaps best known for his close friendships with Truman Capote and Tennessee Williams. Born in Atlanta, Georgia, Windham moved with his then-boyfriend Fred Melton, an artist, to New York City in 1939. In 1942 Windham collaborated with Williams on the play, You Touched Me!,[1] which is based on a D. H. Lawrence short story with the same title. Windham received a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1960.[2]

Windham became estranged from Williams after Williams published his book Memoirs (1975).[3] Windham later published a volume of their correspondence, which Williams claimed was done without his permission. Windham remained a friend of Capote until Capote's death. Windham also met and befriended such diverse figures as Lincoln Kirstein, Pavel Tchelitchew, Paul Cadmus, Gore Vidal, Christopher Isherwood and Montgomery Clift, who became a lover of Windham's during the 1940s.[4][5]

In 1943, Windham met Sandy Campbell, an undergraduate student at Princeton University. In 1943 they began a relationship that would last until Campbell's death in 1988. Campbell frequently helped Windham publish books through the Stamperia Valdonega in Verona, Italy. Partially because Windham was influenced by his own life, homosexuality is one of many themes treated in his work.

Windham's novels include The Dog Star (1950),[6] which was praised by André Gide and Thomas Mann, The Hero Continues (1960), which is likely based on Williams, Two People (1965) which is about a love affair between a New York stockbroker whose wife has left him and a 17-year-old Italian boy in Rome, and Tanaquil (1972), which is based on the life of George Platt Lynes. In the 1960s, Windham published a series of recollections about his childhood in the New Yorker. These were collected in the autobiography Emblems of Conduct, published in 1964. The book was warmly received.[7][8] Lost Friendships, a memoir of his friendship with Capote and Williams, was published in 1987. It is regarded by some as his best book.

In June 2011 it was announced that Yale University would administer the Donald Windham-Sandy M. Campbell Literature Prizes.

References

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from Grokipedia
Donald Windham (July 2, 1920 – May 31, 2010) was an American novelist, playwright, and memoirist whose works chronicled mid-20th-century literary circles in , often drawing on his personal experiences and relationships with prominent figures like and . Born in Atlanta, Georgia, Windham grew up in a modest household with his mother, who worked as a receptionist at , and his aunt; after high school, he briefly labored in a factory before moving to in 1939 at age 19, aspiring to a writing career. There, he quickly immersed himself in the city's artistic scene, forming a close friendship with the young , with whom he co-authored the play You Touched Me!, a adaptation of a story that premiered on Broadway in 1945. In 1943, Windham began working as an editor for Lincoln Kirstein's influential journal Dance Index, a role that connected him further to the worlds of and . Windham's literary output included novels such as The Dog Star (1950), which depicted youthful longing and artistic ambition, and Two People (1965), a poignant exploration of a gay relationship between an American and a young Italian set in Rome, which drew critical contempt for its themes. His memoirs, notably Emblems of Conduct (1964), offered introspective accounts of his Southern childhood, while Lost Friendships (1987) and the published correspondence Tennessee Williams' Letters to Donald Windham, 1940–1965 (1977) provided vivid, firsthand portraits of his friendships with Capote, Williams, and others in New York's bohemian elite. Though his work received critical praise for its elegance and emotional depth, Windham's career was marked by modest commercial success and a deliberate withdrawal from the spotlight later in life. In his , Windham shared a 45-year with Sandy M. Campbell, whom he met in 1943; after Campbell's death in 1988, Windham honored their bond by using Campbell's estate to establish the Windham-Campbell Prizes, one of the world's most generous literary awards, administered by and supporting writers across , , , and . Windham spent his final decades in , quietly preserving archives of his correspondences and continuing to write until his death at age 89. His legacy endures through his subtle, autobiographical explorations of identity, friendship, and the artistic milieu of his era, as well as the enduring impact of the prizes bearing his and Campbell's names.

Early life

Childhood in Atlanta

Donald Windham was born on July 2, 1920, in , Georgia, into a once-prominent family experiencing the decline of Southern amid economic shifts in the early 20th century. His father left the family when Windham was six years old, leaving him and his younger brother to be raised by their mother and aunt in a spacious on historic . This home, once a symbol of the family's earlier wealth and status, became a poignant reminder of their fading fortunes as the deepened. Windham's mother, facing financial necessity, took a position as a at the Coca-Cola Company headquarters, where she worked for over two decades. The family eventually relinquished the grand residence, relocating to more modest surroundings that underscored their reduced circumstances. These years of hardship shaped Windham's early worldview, exposing him to the contrasts between Atlanta's lingering antebellum elegance and the stark realities of economic survival during the 1930s. After graduating from high school at age 18, Windham secured a brief job at a barrel factory through his mother's connections, an experience that highlighted the pervasive and labor challenges of the Depression era. During this period, he developed an early fascination with , drawing inspiration from personal reading and the traditions passed down in his family, which later informed his own writing about Southern life. This formative upbringing ultimately fueled his desire to escape the constraints of his environment, leading him northward in search of new opportunities.

Education and move to New York

Windham completed his formal education at a local high school in , graduating in the late before taking a job at the barrel factory to support himself amid his family's financial decline. Lacking the means or inclination for higher education, he pursued no college studies, relying instead on independent learning through immersion in , which fueled his early literary ambitions. In 1939, at the age of 19, Windham left for , traveling by bus alongside his lover, the artist Fred Melton. This relocation represented a deliberate break from his Southern roots, driven by a desire to immerse himself in the vibrant cultural landscape of the North and pursue writing professionally. Upon arrival, Windham and Melton shared modest apartments in the late 1930s and early 1940s, scraping by with odd jobs as Windham navigated the challenges of financial instability and cultural adjustment. Practically penniless, he sought entry into New York's literary circles through persistence and chance connections, gradually encountering the city's artistic community and laying the groundwork for future opportunities in publishing and theater.

Literary career

Early writings and collaboration with Tennessee Williams

Donald Windham met in in January 1940, when Windham was a 19-year-old aspiring who had recently left , and Williams was a 28-year-old from the South. Their friendship quickly deepened, forged by shared Southern backgrounds—Windham from Georgia and Williams from —and mutual literary aspirations amid the vibrant New York scene. This bond provided Windham with encouragement and exposure to the theater world, as the two frequently discussed writing and collaborated on ideas. In 1942, Windham and Williams co-authored the play You Touched Me!, adapting D.H. Lawrence's of the same name into a comedy-drama about an elderly sea captain's romantic pursuit of his landlady's daughter, clashing with her stern spinster sister. The script, refined through multiple drafts including a version dated February 1943, premiered on Broadway at the on September 25, 1945, starring and , and ran for 165 performances. This collaboration marked Windham's professional debut in theater and highlighted their complementary styles, with Williams contributing poetic dialogue and Windham focusing on character development. During the early 1940s, Windham also pursued his own prose writing, producing short stories that captured his Atlanta youth and appeared in literary magazines such as View ("Night," 1944) and Horizon ("The Warm Country," 1947). Concurrently, he worked on his debut novel, The Dog Star, a semi-autobiographical tale of a troubled adolescent in Depression-era , which he began in 1942 and completed during his first in the late 1940s before its publication in 1950. Williams's influence on Windham's emerging style was profound, evident in their shared exploration of themes like unfulfilled desire, familial repression, and the gothic undercurrents of Southern life, as seen in You Touched Me!'s tensions between passion and propriety. Windham later reflected on this period in editing Williams's letters to him, noting how their correspondence from 1940 onward revealed mutual inspirations drawn from personal vulnerabilities and regional decay.

Major novels and memoirs

Windham's major novels and memoirs, spanning the to the , often explored themes of personal loss, identity, and same-sex desire within intimate relationships, drawing from his Southern roots and experiences in literary circles. These works marked his transition to independent authorship after early collaborations, earning particular admiration in despite mixed U.S. reception. His writing emphasized emotional depth over explicit narrative, reflecting a restrained yet poignant style influenced by mid-century . His debut novel, The Dog Star (1950), centers on a young Southern man grappling with grief and longing following the suicide of his closest friend from , evoking the stifling heat and isolation of the American South. The narrative delves into themes of youthful despair and unspoken emotional bonds, portraying the protagonist's internal turmoil without overt resolution. Critically acclaimed in Europe, it was hailed by as the finest American novel of 1950 and praised by for its subtlety; contributed an introduction to the British edition, underscoring its international appeal, though it achieved limited success in the United States. In 1960, the same year Windham received a for fiction, he published The Hero Continues, a examining artistic ambition through the story of a successful Broadway whose fame erodes personal integrity and relationships. Often interpreted as a veiled portrait of , the work critiques the seductive perils of celebrity and creative compromise in New York's theater world. While it continued Windham's exploration of identity amid societal pressures, the received modest attention in the U.S. and aligned with his broader European favor. Windham's Two People (1965) boldly depicts an interracial same-sex romance between a middle-aged American , Forrest, and a 17-year-old Italian , Marcello, during a summer in , highlighting themes of cross-cultural desire, age disparity, and against the city's vibrant chaos. The novel alternates perspectives to convey the lovers' evolving emotional intimacy, presenting with unapologetic warmth and humanity, as noted by . Despite savage U.S. reviews and commercial failure due to its frank portrayal of gay themes, it gained popularity abroad, particularly in , for its sensitive rendering of forbidden love. The memoir Emblems of Conduct (1964), warmly received upon publication, offers an autobiographical reflection on Windham's Depression-era childhood in Atlanta, drawing from personal recollections originally published in The New Yorker. It chronicles his early family life, Southern upbringing, and nascent literary aspirations amid economic hardship, evoking a sense of quiet resilience and formative influences without sensationalism. Praised for its simplicity and emotional authenticity, the work subtly weaves in emerging themes of identity and friendship that would recur in his fiction. Windham's later novel (1972), privately published in a limited edition, serves as a inspired by the life of photographer , a key figure in New York's mid-century scene known for his images of ballet dancers and male nudes. Set against the cultural vibrancy of 1950s , it reflects on themes of artistic dedication, homoerotic beauty, and profound personal loss following Lynes's death from cancer in 1955. The narrative meditates on the intersections of creativity and mortality, contributing to Windham's oeuvre of introspective portraits of cultural icons.

Later publications and editorial work

In the later decades of his career, Donald Windham turned increasingly to reflective memoirs and editorial projects that drew on his extensive personal correspondences and experiences within literary circles. His 1987 memoir Lost Friendships offered an intimate examination of his relationships with figures like and , drawing from journals to explore the emotional complexities and eventual estrangements that marked these bonds, including quarrels with Williams that Windham presented as a form of personal . Published by William Morrow, the book spanned forty years of American literary life, emphasizing Windham's non-physical but profound affection for Williams while critiquing the playwright's later struggles with alcohol and jealousy. A significant editorial contribution came in 1977 with Windham's publication of Tennessee Williams’ Letters to Donald Windham, 1940-1965, a collection he edited and annotated to chronicle their early friendship and collaborative years. Issued by Holt, Rinehart and Winston, the volume included over 300 letters that illuminated Williams's creative process, insights into theater and publishing, and glimpses into the personal sources of his dramas, covering the period from their meeting in 1940 until the early 1960s. This project not only preserved their correspondence but also highlighted Windham's role as a of literary history, providing context through his own commentary on the evolving dynamics of their relationship. Windham's publishing expertise was shaped earlier by his editorial role at Dance Index, a magazine founded by in 1942, where Windham served as an assistant and later editor after Kirstein's military service in 1943. This experience under Kirstein honed Windham's skills in literary and artistic curation, influencing his approach to subsequent projects. In the 1960s and beyond, he collaborated with the Italian publisher Stamperia Valdonega in for limited-edition printings of his works, producing finely crafted volumes such as a private press edition of the Williams letters in 1976, which emphasized high-quality design and exclusivity. Among Windham's lesser-known output were collections and essays that delved into literary personalities and personal reflections. His 1962 collection The Warm Country, featuring stories that defied conventional plotting to capture subtle emotional undercurrents, received praise for its originality, with an introduction by underscoring its departure from standard fiction formulas. Later essays, often embedded in his memoirs, provided analytical portraits of figures like Capote and Williams, blending personal anecdote with critical observation to illuminate their artistic declines and interpersonal tensions.

Personal life

Relationship with Sandy M. Campbell

Donald Windham met Sandy M. Campbell in 1943 at the New York studio of artist , where the 21-year-old Princeton undergraduate was modeling for one of Cadmus's paintings. Their encounter quickly blossomed into a romantic partnership that would endure for the next 45 years. Campbell, born on April 22, 1922, in to the owner of a chemical manufacturing company, had attended the before Princeton, where he developed interests in acting and literature. He pursued a career on Broadway in the 1940s and 1950s, appearing in notable productions such as a 1956 revival of A Streetcar Named Desire. Over time, Campbell transitioned from acting to writing and editing, contributing profiles to , fact-checking for , and eventually focusing on editing and publishing Windham's works through the Italian press Stamperia Valdonega starting in the 1960s. The couple shared a home in a rent-controlled on Central Park South in from the onward, building a life centered on , book collecting, and mutual encouragement amid the challenges of a closeted era for . Campbell provided essential financial and editorial support to Windham's literary career, using his to fund the private publication of several of Windham's books when mainstream interest had diminished. In his will, Campbell directed his entire estate to Windham with the explicit intention of supporting writers in perpetuity, a bequest that later formed the basis for the Windham-Campbell Prizes. Their partnership ended with Campbell's sudden death from a heart attack on June 26, 1988, at the age of 66, while vacationing on .

Key friendships and social circle

Windham's social circle in mid-20th-century New York encompassed a vibrant network of writers, artists, and performers within the city's literary and gay communities. He formed a close, lifelong friendship with beginning in the late or early , when both navigated the same artistic milieu; their bond endured until Capote's death in , as detailed in Windham's memoir Lost Friendships. This period of shared social engagements in the and highlighted Windham's immersion in elite cultural scenes, where personal and professional ties often intertwined. His associations extended to key figures in the arts, including ballet impresario , under whom Windham served as an editorial assistant at Dance Index in 1942; when Kirstein was drafted into the following year, he entrusted Windham with the magazine's editorship, fostering ongoing professional and social connections. Windham also moved in literary circles that included novelist , with whom he shared overlapping gay social networks alongside figures like Capote during the postwar years. An early romantic involvement in the 1940s linked him to actor , who originated a role in the 1945 play You Touched Me! co-authored by Windham and —an extension of their initial friendship that began in New York around 1940. Windham's interactions reached prominent international writers, including composer and author , with whom he exchanged letters preserved in archival collections. In Europe, his work garnered significant acclaim that contrasted with more muted U.S. reception, influencing his transatlantic reputation; contributed a foreword to Windham's 1962 short story collection The Warm Country and corresponded with him, while praised The Dog Star (1950)—first published in the UK—as the finest American novel of the decade in a 1950 interview, a commendation echoed by . This European endorsement, including Mann's rare public approval, helped elevate Windham's standing abroad and indirectly bolstered interest in his writing back home. By the 1970s, Windham's once-close friendship with soured into estrangement, triggered by Williams's Memoirs (1975), which included disclosures from their private correspondence that Windham viewed as betrayals; the rift escalated through public exchanges in , marking a painful end to their decades-long association.

Death and legacy

Final years and death

Following the death of his longtime partner, Sandy M. Campbell, in 1988, with whom he had lived for over four decades, Donald Windham resided alone in his apartment for the next 22 years. With no immediate surviving family, he drew support from his longstanding circle of literary friends and the broader New York literary community. Windham continued his writing during these years, maintaining his commitment to literature despite his personal loss. He died on May 31, 2010, at the age of 89 in his home in . His funeral was a private affair attended by close friends from the literary world, who offered tributes highlighting his wit, loyalty, and contributions to American letters.

Philanthropic contributions and honors

In 2011, announced the establishment of the Donald Windham-Sandy M. Campbell Literature Prizes, funded by Windham's estate to honor his longtime partner Sandy M. Campbell, whose own estate Windham had inherited following Campbell's death in 1988. Windham's will directed the bulk of his remaining assets to sustain these prizes indefinitely, administered by Yale's Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, with the first awards presented in 2013. The prizes award eight writers annually with unrestricted grants of $175,000 each across four categories—, , , and —open to English-language authors from anywhere in the world at any stage of their careers, provided they have published at least one or produced one play. This structure emphasizes support for literary innovation without genre, age, nationality, or thematic restrictions, enabling recipients to dedicate time to their craft free from financial pressures. As of 2025, the prizes have awarded more than $19 million to over 100 writers worldwide, continuing to support literary innovation. The initiative draws from Windham's deep partnership with Campbell, which formed the emotional and financial foundation for this enduring legacy. Windham himself received notable honors during his lifetime, including a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1960 for fiction, recognizing his contributions to creative writing. His work garnered international acclaim, with praise from literary figures such as , who provided an introduction to Windham's 1960 collection The Warm Country, and , who lauded his 1950 novel The Dog Star as a significant American achievement in a contemporary interview. This recognition extended to European publications of his books, reflecting broad transatlantic appreciation for his prose.

References

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