Alfred Hayes (writer)

Alfred Hayes (18 April 1911 14 August 1985) was a British-born screenwriter, television writer, novelist, and poet, who worked in Italy and the United States. His well-known poem about "Joe Hill" ("I dreamed I saw Joe Hill last night") was set to music by Earl Robinson, and performed by Pete Seeger, Joan Baez and many other artists.

Life

Born in Whitechapel, London to a Jewish family that moved to the United States when he was three,[1] Hayes graduated from New York's City College (now part of City University of New York), worked briefly as a newspaper reporter, and began writing fiction and poetry in the 1930s. During World War II he served in Europe in the U.S. Army Special Services (the "morale division"). Afterwards, he stayed in Rome and became a screenwriter of Italian neorealist films. As a co-writer on Roberto Rossellini's Paisan (1946), he was nominated for an Academy Award; he received another Academy Award nomination for Teresa (1951). He adapted his own novel The Girl on the Via Flaminia into a play; in 1953 it was adapted into a French-language film Un acte d'amour.

He was an uncredited co-writer of Vittorio De Sica's neorealist film Bicycle Thieves (1948) for which he also wrote the English language subtitles.

Among his U.S. filmwriting credits are The Lusty Men (1952, directed by Nicholas Ray) and the film adaptation of the Maxwell Anderson/Kurt Weill musical Lost in the Stars (1974). His credits as a television scriptwriter included scripts for American series Alfred Hitchcock Presents, The Twilight Zone, Nero Wolfe and Mannix.

Bibliography

Poetry

  • The Big Time (1944)
  • Welcome to the Castle (1950)
  • Just Before the Divorce (1968)

Novels

  • All Thy Conquests (1946)
  • The Girl on the Via Flaminia (1949)
  • Shadow of Heaven (1947)
  • In Love (1953)
  • My Face for the World to See (1958)
  • The End of Me (1968)
  • The Stockbroker, the Bitter Young Man, and the Beautiful Girl (1973)

Short stories

  • The Temptations of Don Volpi (1960)

Notes

  1. Alfred Hayes at the New York Review Books site; accessed July 16, 2013

References

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