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Ben Barzman

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Name
  
Ben Barzman

Role
  
Journalist

Children
  
Paolo Barzman



Died
  
December 15, 1989, Santa Monica, California, United States

Spouse
  
Norma Barzman (m. 1942–1989)

Nominations
  
BAFTA Award for Best British Screenplay

Movies
  
El Cid, 55 Days at Peking, Time Without Pity, The Blue Max, The Visit

Similar People
  
Norma Barzman, Basilio Franchina, Philip Yordan, Samuel Bronston, Paolo Barzman

Ben Barzman (October 12, 1910 – December 15, 1989) was a Canadian journalist, screenwriter, and novelist, blacklisted during the McCarthy Era and best known for his screenplays for the films Back to Bataan (1945), El Cid (1961), and The Blue Max (1966).

Contents

Career

He was born in Toronto, Ontario. He was the screenwriter or co-writer of more than 20 films, from You're a Lucky Fellow, Mr. Smith (1943) to The Head of Normande St. Onge (1975).

Blacklisting

Like many of his colleagues in the movie business, Barzman was blacklisted by the House Un-American Activities Committee.

Norma Barzman, at least, was a CPUSA member during 1943-1949. In 2014, she told the Los Angeles Times, "one should be proud to have been a member of the American Communist Party during those years. Hitler was invading the Soviet Union, so there was no reason to be anti-Russian, they were our allies."

The couple moved to England so Barzman could work on the film Give Us This Day (aka, Christ in Concrete, 1949). Following his return to the United States after directing Give Us This Day, Edward Dmytryk, one of the Hollywood Ten, testified about the Barzmans to HUAC in 1951. "To get out of prison he named us and a lot of other people," said Norma Barzman in 2014. In the 1950s, the family moved to Paris, where friends included Pablo Picasso, Yves Montand, and Simone Signoret, and later southern France). Barzman did not receive credit for some films because of the Hollywood Blacklist.

His U.S. citizenship was revoked from 1954 to 1963. His wife Norma had her passport revoked from 1951 for seven years. The family remained abroad until 1976, during which time he wrote his novels and screenplays for French and Italian films.

Death

Barzman died in Santa Monica, California, United States.

Surviving him was his wife, Norma Barzman, and seven children (including director Paolo Barzman, screenwriter Aaron Barzman, visual artist Luli Barzman, and French university professor John Barzman) and five grandchildren.

Filmography

  • 1943: You're a Lucky Fellow, Mr. Smith
  • 1945: Back to Bataan
  • 1946: Never Say Goodbye
  • 1948: The Boy with Green Hair
  • 1949: Give Us This Day
  • 1952: Stranger on the Prowl (it: Imbarco a mezzanotte)
  • 1952: The Faithful City
  • 1952: Young Man with Ideas
  • 1955: Oasis
  • 1957: Time Without Pity
  • 1957: He Who Must Die (fr: Celui qui doit mourir)
  • 1959: Blind Date (US: Chance Meeting)
  • 1961: El Cid
  • 1963: 55 Days at Peking
  • 1963: The Ceremony
  • 1964: The Fall of the Roman Empire
  • 1964: The Visit
  • 1965: The Heroes of Telemark
  • 1966: The Blue Max
  • 1969: Z—uncredited
  • 1972: Plot (fr: L'Attentat, with Jean-Pierre Bastid)
  • 1975: The Martyr (ger: Sie sind frei, Doktor Korczak)
  • 1975: Normande (fr; La Tête de Normande St-Onge
  • Bibliography

    In 1960, Barzman emerged as a science fiction author, with his novel Out of This World. It dealt with the idea of a twin, parallel planet for Earth in the same orbit, hidden from our view by the sun. The two planets have developed almost identically from creation—but World War II never happens on the twin Earth.

  • Out of This World (London: Collins, 1960) - published in the U.S. as Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star (G.P. Putnam's Sons) and subsequently in various paperback editions as Echo X; also published in Sweden as Från en annan värld
  • Rich Dreams (Warner Books, 1982) - novel, written with Norma Barzman; published as a paperback original
  • Awards

  • 1985: Order of Arts and Letters
  • Legacy

    In addition to having several children follow him in the Arts, he received a retrospecitve showing of his films at the Cinematheque in 1982.

    References

    Ben Barzman Wikipedia


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