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Elliot Paul
Elliot Paul
from Wikipedia

Elliot Harold Paul (February 10, 1891 – April 7, 1958) was an American journalist and writer.

Key Information

Biography

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Paul was born in Linden, a part of Malden, Massachusetts, the son of Harold Henry Paul and Lucy Greenleaf Doucette.[1] He graduated from Malden High School then worked in the U.S. West on the government Reclamation projects for several years until 1914 when he returned home and took a job as a reporter covering legislative events at the State House in Boston. In 1917, he joined the U.S. Army Signals Corps to fight in World War I.[1] Paul served in France where he fought in the Battle of Saint-Mihiel and in the Meuse-Argonne offensive. Following the war's end, he returned home and to a job as a journalist. At this time, he began writing books, inspired in part by his military experiences.

By 1925 Elliot Paul had already seen three of his novels published when he left America to join many of his literary compatriots in the Montparnasse Quarter of Paris, France. There, he worked for a time at the Chicago Tribune's International Edition (so-called Paris Edition), before joining Eugene and Maria Jolas as co-editor of the literary journal, transition. A friend of both James Joyce and Gertrude Stein, Paul defied Ernest Hemingway's maxim that "if you mentioned Joyce twice to Stein, you were dead." Paul was a great enthusiast of Stein's work, equating its "feeling for a continuous present" with jazz.

Paul returned to the newspaper business, to the Paris Herald and to write more novels in his spare time. He had completed three more books when he suffered from a nervous breakdown and abruptly left Paris to recuperate in the Spanish village of Santa Eulalia on the island of Ibiza. With virtually no one in the literary community knowing where he was, in her 1933 The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas, Stein mused over his "disappearance."

Caught in the middle of the Spanish Civil War, he was inspired to write the well-received Life and Death of a Spanish Town. Forced to flee Spain, he returned to Paris and produced detective fiction featuring the amateur sleuth Homer Evans, as well as crafting what is considered as one of his best works, The Last Time I Saw Paris.

Back in the United States following the outbreak of World War II, Elliot Paul turned to screenwriting where in Hollywood, between 1941 and 1953, he participated in the writing of ten screenplays, the most remembered of which is the 1945 production, Rhapsody in Blue; he also wrote the screenplay for the Poverty Row production of New Orleans, a fictional history of Storyville jazz featuring Billie Holiday in her only acting role. He also contributed to London Town (1946), one of the most infamous flops in British cinema history. In 1949 he provided subtitles for the US release of Claude Autant-Lara's film Devil in the Flesh (Le Diable au corps).

Contemptuous of the censorship imposed on the studios by the Hays Code, Paul mocked Hollywood's hypocritical puritanism in his satiric book from 1942, With a Hays Nonny Nonny, where he reworked Bible stories so that they complied with the Code. The Book of Esther, for example, becomes a vehicle for Don Ameche, with Groucho Marx as Mordecai.

A talented pianist, he frequently supplemented his income by playing at local clubs in the Los Angeles area.

Paul married and divorced five times - Rosa Gertrude Brown (1919-1925), Camille Haynes (1925-1937), Flora Thompson (1937-1940), Barbara Mayock (1940-1949), and Nancy Dolan McMahon (1950-1957). He had one son with Camille Haynes. He died in 1958 at the Veterans' Hospital in Providence, Rhode Island.

Partial list of screenwriting credits

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Bibliography

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References

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from Grokipedia
Elliot Paul is an American journalist, novelist, and screenwriter known for his memoirs chronicling expatriate life in interwar Europe, most notably The Last Time I Saw Paris (1942), which captured the cultural and social milieu of Paris before and during the early stages of World War II, as well as his contributions to modernist literature through co-founding the experimental journal transition and his writings on Spain during the lead-up to the Spanish Civil War. Born in Malden, Massachusetts, on February 13, 1891, Paul grew up in modest circumstances, worked in construction and on government reclamation projects in the western United States, and briefly studied engineering before beginning a career in journalism in Boston. He served in the U.S. Army Signal Corps in France during World War I. After the war, he resumed journalism and began publishing novels, but his move to Paris in 1925 placed him at the heart of the expatriate literary community. There, he worked for the Paris editions of the Chicago Tribune and New York Herald while co-founding transition in 1927 with Eugene Jolas, a publication that featured groundbreaking work by writers such as James Joyce, Samuel Beckett, Gertrude Stein, and others. A nervous breakdown led him to relocate to Ibiza in 1931, where he lived until the Spanish Civil War forced his evacuation in 1936. Returning to Paris briefly before World War II prompted his return to the United States, he found commercial success with The Last Time I Saw Paris, which brought him to Hollywood as a screenwriter. In his later years, he produced additional memoirs and other works, including a book on jazz music, while living in Rhode Island and contributing to local newspapers with liberal commentary. Paul died on April 7, 1958, in Providence, Rhode Island.

Early Life

Birth and Family Background

Elliot Paul was born on February 10, 1891, in Linden, a neighborhood within Malden, Massachusetts. He was the son of Harold Henry Paul and Lucy Greenleaf Doucette. His father died in 1895 when Paul was four years old, after which he and his brother were raised by their mother. Paul grew up in the Malden area, a suburban environment near Boston that shaped his early years and later served as the setting for his autobiographical work Linden on the Saugus Branch, which reflects his childhood experiences in the region. The family resided in this Massachusetts community during his formative period.

Education

Elliot Paul attended Malden High School in Malden, Massachusetts. He briefly attended the University of Maine to study engineering for one year around 1908-1909 but did not complete a degree. After high school, he did not immediately pursue further higher education and instead moved west, joining his older brother to work on U.S. government Reclamation Service projects. His initial assignment was on the Lower Yellowstone project in Montana, where he performed various labor and engineering tasks, and he continued with similar dam-building and irrigation initiatives in Wyoming and Idaho through 1914. In 1914, he returned to Boston, marking the beginning of his transition into journalism.

Early Work Experience

After returning to Boston in 1914, Elliot Paul began his professional career as a reporter covering legislative events at the Massachusetts State House. He worked in this capacity as a political reporter for three years, focusing on state legislative proceedings and marking the start of his journalism work. This role provided his initial experience in political reporting before he transitioned to military service in 1917.

Military Service

World War I Enlistment

Elliot Paul enlisted in the U.S. Army Signal Corps in 1917 following the United States' declaration of war against Germany in April of that year. He joined the 317th Field Signal Battalion, which prepared for overseas service as part of the American Expeditionary Forces. Paul was deployed to France, where he served with the Signal Corps throughout the war, attaining the rank of sergeant while focusing on communications duties in support of American forces.

Service in France

Elliot Paul served in France with the U.S. Army Signal Corps during World War I, providing communications support to American forces. Following the Armistice in November 1918, Paul returned to the United States and resumed his writing pursuits, drawing partial inspiration from his wartime experiences for his early novels.

Journalism Career

Early Reporting in Boston

After his service in France with the 317th Field Signal Battalion during World War I, Elliot Paul returned to Boston and resumed his journalism career. He took up again his role as a political reporter covering legislative events at the Massachusetts State House, a position he had held before the war and continued for approximately seven years in the postwar period. This work focused on state politics and provided him steady employment in the Boston area through the early 1920s. During this time, Paul began transitioning toward literary pursuits while maintaining his reporting duties. His first novel, Indelible, appeared in 1922, followed by Impromptu in 1923 and Imperturbe in 1924, forming an early series of semi-autobiographical works informed by his Massachusetts background, wartime experiences, and personal life. These publications marked his initial steps as a novelist alongside his ongoing journalism in Boston.

Move to Paris and Chicago Tribune

In 1925, Elliot Paul relocated to Paris, settling among the expatriate literary community in the Montparnasse Quarter, which served as a central hub for American writers and artists in the 1920s. He soon joined the staff of the Chicago Tribune's Paris Edition (also known as its International or European edition), an English-language newspaper aimed at American expatriates and other English-speaking readers in Europe. Paul worked for the Tribune for approximately the first two years of his time in Paris, from 1925 until the spring of 1927, contributing to its daily operations during a period when the paper employed several notable American journalists. His colleagues at the Tribune included cartoonist and writer James Thurber, future war correspondent William L. Shirer, and poet Eugene Jolas. In the spring of 1927, Paul left the Tribune to co-edit the experimental literary magazine transition.

Co-Editing transition Magazine

Elliot Paul co-edited the avant-garde literary magazine transition with Eugene Jolas, beginning in 1927. The journal, also shaped by Maria Jolas's contributions as co-founder and printer, promoted experimental literature and featured manifestos on creative innovation. Paul's editorial role placed him at the center of Paris's modernist scene during the magazine's early years, where it published groundbreaking works by key figures. Through transition, Paul developed associations with prominent writers including James Joyce, whose Work in Progress appeared in its pages, and Gertrude Stein, whose pieces were prominently featured. He expressed particular admiration for Stein's distinctive and innovative style, which aligned with the magazine's emphasis on radical literary experimentation. Paul's work on transition ended after about a year, after which he returned to journalism with the Paris Herald.

Later Paris Herald Work

After leaving his co-editing role at transition magazine in 1928, Elliot Paul joined the Paris edition of the New York Herald, known as the Paris Herald, a more mainstream and conventional newspaper compared to the avant-garde literary magazine. This shift occurred around the time of his marriage to American journalist Camille Haynes in 1928, and the position at the Paris Herald allowed him greater flexibility to pursue creative writing alongside his reporting duties. The newspaper's relatively staid environment provided stability and time for Paul to complete three additional novels in 1929 and 1930 while continuing his journalistic work in the expatriate community of Paris. He contributed as a reporter and was part of the newsroom alongside other notable figures in the American press corps abroad. This phase of combined journalism and literary output ended when Paul suffered a nervous breakdown.

Literary Career

Early Novels (1920s)

Elliot Paul commenced his career as a novelist in the early 1920s with a series of experimental works that often reflected his personal experiences, including the impact of his World War I service. His debut novel, Indelible: A Story of Life, Love and Music in Five Movements, was published in 1922. This was followed by Impromptu: A Novel in Four Movements in 1923, issued by Alfred A. Knopf. Impromptu incorporates substantial elements drawn from World War I military life, portraying soldiers' routines in barracks, the emotional toll of service, disillusionment, and incidents such as a comrade's death and burial. In 1924, Paul released Imperturbe: A Novel of Peace Without Victory, whose subtitle suggests an exploration of pacifist or anti-war sentiments in the postwar context. His final novels of the decade appeared together in a single volume, Low Run Tide and Lava Rock, published by Horace Liveright in 1929. These early fictional efforts, structured innovatively with musical analogies in some cases, marked Paul's initial contributions to literature before his later turn toward non-fiction.

Non-Fiction on Spain and Paris

Elliot Paul produced several notable non-fiction works drawing from his expatriate years in Europe, particularly his observations of life in Spain and Paris amid rising political tensions and war. His book Life and Death of a Spanish Town, published in 1937, provides an eyewitness account of the Spanish Civil War's arrival and impact on the small island community of Santa Eulària des Riu on Ibiza, where Paul had lived since 1931. The work describes the peaceful daily life of local fishermen, hoteliers, store owners, farmers, and artists before the conflict, then chronicles how divisions, violence, and hatred disrupted the town as the war began. This firsthand perspective highlights the explosive transformation of a serene locale into one affected by the broader civil strife. Paul later reflected on his long residence in Paris with The Last Time I Saw Paris, published in 1942 (released as A Narrow Street in the UK), a memoir centered on his experiences in the rue de la Huchette starting in 1923. The book offers a nostalgic portrait of interwar Paris, capturing the bohemian atmosphere, neighbors, and cultural vibrancy of the Latin Quarter neighborhood he called home. It recounts the city as he knew it before World War II overtook Europe. In 1950, Paul returned to the subject of Paris with Springtime in Paris, a companion volume recounting his postwar visit to rediscover the city and its people. The work presents a warm, humorous, and tender account of renewal amid the recovery from occupation, maintaining the charm of his earlier Paris memoir. Around the same period as these memoirs, Paul began his Homer Evans detective series.

Homer Evans Detective Series

Elliot Paul authored a series of humorous detective novels featuring Homer Evans, a debonair, cerebral American amateur sleuth often surrounded by zany, eccentric characters. The series is distinguished by its screwball comedy, fast-paced plots, abundant satire, and deliberate rejection of dry, mechanical mystery conventions in favor of light-hearted farce and social commentary. The early books are particularly noted for their frolicsome tone and Paris settings, drawing on Paul's own expatriate experiences. The series launched with The Mysterious Mickey Finn (1939), set in the vibrant "gay Paris" of the interwar period and introducing Evans alongside recurring figures such as sharp-shooting Miriam Leonard, hard-drinking Norwegian artist Hjalmar Jansen, and Paris police Sergeant Frémont. This was quickly followed by Hugger Mugger in the Louvre (1940), which revolves around the theft of a Watteau painting from the Louvre and sends the group on chaotic escapades across cafés, the Seine, and other Parisian locales, and Mayhem in B-Flat (1940), involving the theft of a priceless violin amid cabarets, brothels, rival gangs, and Evans's characteristically calm demeanor. These initial installments emphasize farcical humor, sparkling characters, and distinctly Parisian backdrops. Later entries in the series shifted locations and introduced subtle tonal variations while retaining core comedic elements; notable examples include Murder on the Left Bank (1951), set in post-war Paris and bringing in Boston-Irish detective Finke Maguire as a foil to Evans, and Waylaid in Boston (1953), which takes place in Boston and centers on private detective work escalating from a bet to murder and shady dealings. The series extended into the 1950s with additional titles.

Later Works and Autobiography

In his later years, Elliot Paul shifted toward autobiographical works and regional American themes, producing several notable books in the post-war period. Linden on the Saugus Branch (1947) is a nostalgic memoir of his boyhood in the Massachusetts mill town of Linden, depicting it as an obscure horse-car community on the edge of everything and in the middle of nothing, with vivid recollections of turn-of-the-century New England life. The book places the town itself at the center rather than solely the author's youth, charming readers with its detailed portraits of small-town scenes and characters. It reflects Paul's conviction that those earlier days held particular value, contrasting with the present. A Ghost Town on the Yellowstone (1948) continued this regional focus, offering an account of a now-vanished settlement in the Yellowstone area, blending personal observation with historical elements in a style consistent with his earlier narrative nonfiction. The work stands as one of the earlier fictionalized treatments of Yellowstone locales, drawing on Paul's experiences in the American West. In the mid-1950s, Paul returned to his long-standing interest in French culture with Understanding the French (1954/55), a light-hearted and sprightly excursion through the country's cities and provinces that evokes fond memories of the land while providing an accessible overview for readers. His final major publication, That Crazy American Music (1957), surveyed the development of music in America from pre-Revolutionary days through to the emergence of rock 'n' roll, presenting a broad cultural history in his characteristic engaging style. These later books marked a turn toward American subjects and autobiography, complementing his earlier European-focused writings.

Screenwriting Career

Relocation to Hollywood

Following the outbreak of World War II, Elliot Paul returned to the United States from Europe. This relocation was prompted by the escalating conflict that disrupted expatriate life abroad and shifted his professional focus. Paul subsequently moved to Hollywood, where he embarked on a screenwriting career from 1941 to 1947. During this period he contributed to numerous film projects, marking a transition from his earlier journalistic and literary pursuits in Paris to work within the American motion picture industry.

Key Film Credits

Elliot Paul received a small number of screenwriting credits in Hollywood during the 1940s, with no known contributions to television. His work focused on adaptations, biographical material, and musicals. He co-wrote the screenplay for A Woman's Face (1941), directed by George Cukor and starring Joan Crawford, collaborating with Donald Ogden Stewart on this adaptation of a Swedish play. In 1945 he contributed to the screenplay for Rhapsody in Blue, the Warner Bros. biographical film about George Gershwin, sharing credit with Howard Koch. That same year he co-authored the screenplay with Lynn Starling for It's a Pleasure (1945), an ice-skating musical starring Sonja Henie. Paul shared screenplay credit with Sig Herzig on the British Technicolor musical London Town (1946), known in the U.S. as My Heart Goes Crazy. In 1947 he received credit for the screenplay with Dick Irving Hyland and for the original story with Herbert J. Biberman on New Orleans (1947), a musical directed by Arthur Lubin that featured performances by Louis Armstrong and Billie Holiday. In 1949 he wrote the English subtitles for the U.S. release of the French film Devil in the Flesh (Le Diable au corps, 1947), directed by Claude Autant-Lara. These remain his principal verified contributions to cinema.

Hays Code Satire

In 1942, Elliot Paul published the satirical book With a Hays Nonny Nonny in collaboration with Spanish illustrator Luis Quintanilla, offering a pointed critique of Hollywood's Motion Picture Production Code, commonly known as the Hays Code. The work, released by Random House with 65 drawings by Quintanilla, rewrote several biblical stories to demonstrate the absurd alterations required for compliance with the Code's strict moral and content restrictions enforced by the Hays Office. The book is structured as a series of conversations between Paul and Quintanilla (referred to as P and Q), in which they discuss the necessary changes to make narratives such as Noah and the Ark, Samson and Delilah, Ruth and Naomi, and Jonah and the Whale acceptable under censorship rules, often incorporating a fictional Hollywood director named Hauptman Himmelkopf who embodies industry absurdities. In the preface, Paul contrasted the Bible's direct portrayal of human realities—including sex, violence, and conflict—with the Hays Code's insistence on softening or eliminating such elements, arguing that the Code treated audiences as incapable of handling unfiltered facts. The satire extended to broader Hollywood conventions, including the avoidance of controversial subjects; one example suggested reworking the story of Esther as a tale of Nazi oppression of Czechs to sidestep any depiction of Jewish persecution. Through this humorous yet incisive approach, Paul mocked the Code's role as the arbiter of taste and morality in American film production during his time as a screenwriter in Hollywood.

Personal Life

Marriages and Divorce History

Elliot Paul was married five times, with each union ending in divorce. His first marriage was to Rosa Gertrude Brown, lasting from 1919 to 1925. He subsequently married Camille Haynes in 1925, and the couple had one son before their divorce in 1937. Paul's third marriage was to Flora Thompson from 1937 to 1940. His fourth wife was Barbara Mayock, whom he married in 1940 during his time in Hollywood, with the marriage ending in 1949. His fifth and final marriage was to Nancy Dolan McMahon from 1950 to 1957. These relationships coincided with various periods in his professional life, including his time in Paris, Ibiza, and Hollywood, though they remained distinct from his literary friendships.

Friendships and Interests

Elliot Paul formed notable friendships with leading literary figures during his expatriate years in Paris, including James Joyce and Gertrude Stein. His association with Stein placed him within her influential salon circle, where he encountered modernist writers and artists, while his acquaintance with Joyce reflected the interconnected world of 1920s Paris literary life. These relationships provided Paul with direct exposure to innovative literary styles that shaped his own satirical and observational approach to writing. Beyond literature, Paul was an accomplished pianist who performed in nightclubs and venues in Los Angeles after his move to Hollywood. His musical skills allowed him to earn a living playing piano during periods when writing opportunities were limited, highlighting a significant non-literary interest that complemented his creative pursuits.

Death and Legacy

Final Years and Passing

Elliot Paul passed away on April 6, 1958, at the age of 66 at the Veterans' Hospital in Providence, Rhode Island, after a series of heart attacks, where he received care as a U.S. military veteran.

Posthumous Recognition

Elliot Paul's posthumous recognition has been modest, with his memoir The Last Time I Saw Paris remaining his most enduring work and occasionally referenced in discussions of interwar expatriate literature. His Spanish Civil War account The Life and Death of a Spanish Town is sometimes noted as an early and vivid eyewitness narrative of the conflict's effects on civilian life, though it has not attracted substantial modern scholarship. In contrast, his screenwriting contributions receive little attention in contemporary film studies, reflecting a broader gap in coverage of his Hollywood period. While his Paris memoir invites occasional comparison to the works of contemporaries such as Gertrude Stein, Paul's overall legacy has not undergone significant rediscovery or revival.

References

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