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Hollywood blacklist

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Members of the Hollywood Ten and their families in 1950, protesting the impending incarceration of the Ten

The Hollywood blacklist refers to the mid-20th century banning of suspected Communists from working in the United States entertainment industry. The blacklist began at the onset of the Cold War and Red Scare, and affected entertainment production in Hollywood, New York, and elsewhere. Actors, screenwriters, directors, musicians, and other professionals were barred from employment based on their present or past membership in, alleged membership in, or perceived sympathy with the Communist Party USA (CPUSA), or on the basis of their refusal to assist Congressional or FBI investigations into the Party's activities.

Even during the period of its strictest enforcement from the late 1940s to late 1950s, the blacklist was rarely made explicit nor was it easily verifiable. Instead, it was the result of numerous individual decisions implemented by studio executives and was not the result of formal legal statute. Nevertheless, the blacklist directly damaged or ended the careers and incomes of scores of persons working in film, television, and radio.

Although the blacklist had no official end date, it was generally recognized to have weakened by 1960, the year when Dalton Trumbo – a CPUSA member from 1943 to 1948[1] and one of the "Hollywood Ten" – was openly hired by director Otto Preminger to write the screenplay for Exodus (1960).[1] Several months later, actor Kirk Douglas publicly acknowledged that Trumbo wrote the screenplay for Spartacus (1960).[2] Despite Trumbo's breakthrough in 1960, other blacklisted film artists continued to have difficulty obtaining work for years afterward.

Initial blacklist of the Hollywood Ten

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The first systematic Hollywood blacklist was instituted on November 25, 1947, the day after ten left-wing screenwriters and directors were cited for contempt of Congress for refusing to answer questions before the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC). The ten men had been subpoenaed by the committee in late September to testify about their Communist affiliations and associates.[3] The contempt citation included a criminal charge, which led to a highly publicized trial and an eventual conviction with a maximum of one year in jail in addition to a $1,000 fine ($12,700 today).[4]

The Congressional action prompted a group of studio executives, acting under the aegis of the Association of Motion Picture Producers, to suspend without pay these ten film artists - the "Hollywood Ten" - and to pledge that "thereafter no Communists or other subversives would 'knowingly' be employed in Hollywood."[5]

It wasn't long before the list of ten grew into the hundreds. On June 22, 1950, a pamphlet-style book entitled Red Channels was published. Focused on the field of broadcasting, it identified 151 entertainment industry professionals as "Red Fascists and their sympathizers" who had infiltrated radio and television.[6][7] Soon, most of those named, along with a host of other artists, were barred from employment in the entertainment field.

History

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Background

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The Hollywood blacklist was rooted in events of the 1930s and early 1940s, encompassing the depths of the Great Depression, the Spanish Civil War, and the U.S.-Soviet alliance in World War II. The widespread economic hardships in the 1930s, as well as the rise of fascism in the world, caused a surge in Communist Party USA (CPUSA) membership. Levels had remained below 20,000 until 1933 and then steadily grew during the decade until reaching 66,000 in 1939.[8] Although the CPUSA lost substantial support after the Moscow show trials of 1936–1938 and the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact of 1939, the organization's membership was still well above its pre-1933 levels.

With this as a backdrop, the U.S. government began turning its attention to possible links between the CPUSA and Hollywood. Under then-chairman Martin Dies, Jr., the HUAC released a report in 1938 claiming that communism was pervasive in the movie industry. Two years later, Dies privately took testimony from a former Communist Party member, John L. Leech, who named forty-two movie professionals as Communists. After Leech repeated his charges in supposed confidence to a Los Angeles grand jury, many of the names were leaked to the press, including those of stars Humphrey Bogart, James Cagney, Katharine Hepburn, Melvyn Douglas and Fredric March, among other Hollywood figures. Dies said he would "clear" those who cooperated by meeting with him in what he called "executive session". Within two weeks of the grand jury leak, all those on the list except for actress Jean Muir had met with the HUAC chairman. Dies "cleared" everyone except actor Lionel Stander, who was fired by the movie studio, Republic Pictures, where he was under contract.[9]

Two major film industry strikes during the 1930s had exacerbated tensions between Hollywood producers and unionized employees, particularly the Screen Writers Guild, which formed in 1933.[10] In 1941, producer Walt Disney took out an ad in Variety, the industry trade magazine, declaring his conviction that "Communist agitation" was behind a cartoonists and animators' strike. According to historians Larry Ceplair and Steven Englund, "In actuality, the strike had resulted from Disney's overbearing paternalism, high-handedness, and insensitivity."[11] Inspired by Disney, California State Senator Jack Tenney, chairman of the state legislature's Joint Fact-Finding Committee on Un-American Activities, launched an investigation of "Reds in movies". The probe fell flat, and was mocked in Variety headlines.[11]

The wartime alliance between the United States and the Soviet Union brought the CPUSA newfound credibility. During the war, Party membership climbed back up to 50,000.[12] As World War II drew to a close, however, perceptions changed again, with communism increasingly becoming a focus of American fears and hatred. In 1945, Gerald L. K. Smith, founder of the neofascist America First Party, began giving speeches in Los Angeles assailing the "alien minded Russian Jews in Hollywood."[13] Mississippi congressman John E. Rankin, an HUAC member, held a press conference to declare that "one of the most dangerous plots ever instigated for the overthrow of this Government has its headquarters in Hollywood ... the greatest hotbed of subversive activities in the United States." Rankin promised, "We're on the trail of the tarantula now, and we're going to follow through."[14][15]

Reports of Soviet repression in Eastern and Central Europe in the war's aftermath added more fuel to what became known as the "Second Red Scare". The growth of conservative political influence and the Republican triumph in the 1946 midterm elections, which saw the GOP take control of both the House and Senate, led to a major revival of institutional anti-communist activity, publicly spearheaded by the HUAC but with an investigative push by J. Edgar Hoover and the FBI.[15] The following year, the Motion Picture Alliance for the Preservation of American Ideals (MPA), a political action group co-founded by Walt Disney, issued a pamphlet written by Ayn Rand and entitled "Screen Guide for Americans".[16] It advised film producers on the avoidance of "subtle communistic touches" in their films. The pamphlet's advice was encapsulated in a list of ideological prohibitions, such as "Don't Smear the Free Enterprise System", "Don't Smear Industrialists", "Don't Smear Wealth", "Don't Smear the Profit Motive", "Don't Deify 'the Common Man'", and "Don't Glorify the Collective."[17]

Beginning (1946–1947)

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On July 29, 1946, William R. Wilkerson, publisher and founder of The Hollywood Reporter (THR), titled his front-page "Tradeviews" column, "A Vote for Joe Stalin".[18] In the column, Wilkerson named as Communist sympathizers Dalton Trumbo, Maurice Rapf, Lester Cole, Howard Koch, Harold Buchman, John Wexley, Ring Lardner Jr., Harold Salemson, Henry Meyers, Theodore Strauss, and John Howard Lawson. Over the next two months, Wilkerson published more columns containing names of other suspected Communists and "fellow travelers" working in Hollywood. His daily column came to be known as "Billy's List" or "Billy's Blacklist".[19][20] When Wilkerson died in 1962, his THR obituary stated that he had "named names, pseudonyms and card numbers and was widely credited with being chiefly responsible for preventing communists from becoming entrenched in Hollywood production – something that foreign film unions have been unable to do."[19] In a 65th-anniversary article in 2012, Wilkerson's son apologized for THR's role in the blacklist and added that his father was motivated by revenge for his own thwarted ambition to own a film studio.[21]

In late September 1947, drawing upon the lists provided in The Hollywood Reporter, the House Un-American Activities Committee subpoenaed a number of persons working in the film industry to testify at hearings. The HUAC had declared its intention to investigate whether Communist agents had been planting propaganda in American films.[19][22]

The hearings began with appearances by "friendly witnesses" such as Walt Disney, Jack L. Warner, Gary Cooper, Ronald Reagan, Robert Taylor, and Adolphe Menjou. Disney testified that the threat of Communists in the film industry was a serious one, and he named specific people who had worked for him as probable Communists.[23] Reagan, who was then president of the Screen Actors Guild, testified that a small clique within his union was using "communist-like tactics" in attempting to steer union policy, but that he did not know if those (unnamed) members were Communists or not, and that in any case he thought the union had them under control.[24] Adolphe Menjou declared: "I am a witch hunter if the witches are Communists. I am a Red-baiter. I would like to see them all back in Russia."[25]

In contrast, other leading Hollywood figures, including directors John Huston and Billy Wilder and actors Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Bacall, Judy Garland and Danny Kaye, organized the Committee for the First Amendment and flew to Washington, D.C. to protest the government's political harassment of the film industry.[26] Members of this committee, such as Sterling Hayden, assured Bogart that they were not Communists. During the hearings, a local Washington paper reported that Hayden was in fact a Communist. After returning to Hollywood, Bogart shouted at Danny Kaye, "You fuckers sold me out."[27] The First Amendment Committee was attacked for being naïve. Under pressure from his Warner Bros. employer to distance himself from the purported Hollywood Reds, Bogart negotiated a statement that did not denounce the First Amendment Committee, but said his trip to D.C. had been "ill-advised, even foolish."[28] Billy Wilder told the other committee members that "we oughta fold." [29]

Many of the film industry professionals targeted by the HUAC were alleged to have been members of the CPUSA. Of the 43 people put on the witness list, 24 were "friendly", some of whom had previously appeared in closed HUAC sessions in Los Angeles.[15] But 19 were "unfriendly" or "hostile witnesses" who announced they would not give evidence to aid the investigation. When the hearings for the 19 commenced on Monday, October 27, the nation's attention was riveted, especially given the presence in Washington, D.C. of movie stars from the Committee for the First Amendment.[30]

Only eleven of the 19 were called to testify. One of them, émigré playwright Bertolt Brecht, ultimately decided to answer the HUAC's questions, although he did so evasively and fled the U.S. the very next day, never to return.[31][32] The other ten refused to cooperate, citing their First Amendment right to freedom of speech and assembly. Most of them challenged the legitimacy of the committee. John Howard Lawson said during his testimony: "I am not on trial here, Mr. Chairman. This committee is on trial here before the American people. Let us get that straight."[33] Among the questions they declined to answer was the one now generally rendered as, "Are you now, or have you ever been, a member of the Communist Party?".[34][35] The HUAC formally charged the ten men with contempt of Congress and began criminal proceedings against them in the full House of Representatives.[36]

In light of the Hollywood Ten's defiance of the HUAC – in addition to refusing to answer questions, they also tried unsuccessfully to read opening statements decrying the House committee's investigation as unconstitutional – political pressure mounted on the film industry to demonstrate its "anti-subversive" bona fides. Late in the hearings, Eric Johnston, president of the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA), vowed to the committee that he would never "employ any proven or admitted Communist because they are just a disruptive force, and I don't want them around."[31]

On November 17, the Screen Actors Guild voted to make its officers swear a loyalty pledge asserting each was not a Communist. On November 24, the House of Representatives voted 346 to 17 to approve citations against the Hollywood Ten for contempt of Congress. The next day, after a meeting of 50 film industry executives at New York City's Waldorf-Astoria hotel, MPAA President Johnston issued a press release that is today referred to as the Waldorf Statement.[b] The statement said the ten uncooperative witnesses would be fired or suspended without pay and not re-employed until they were cleared of contempt charges and had sworn that they were not Communists. The first Hollywood blacklist was in effect.

Growth (1948–1950)

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The HUAC hearings failed to turn up any proof that Hollywood was secretly disseminating Communist propaganda, but the industry was nonetheless transformed. The fallout from the inquiry was a factor in the decision by Floyd Odlum, the primary owner of RKO Pictures, to leave the industry.[37] As a result, the studio passed into the hands of Howard Hughes. Within weeks of taking over in May 1948, Hughes fired most of RKO's employees and virtually shut the studio down for six months while he had the political views of the remaining employees investigated. Then, just as RKO swung back into production, Hughes made the decision to settle a long-standing federal antitrust suit against the Big Five studios. This was one of the crucial steps in the collapse of the studio system that had governed Hollywood for a quarter-century.

In early 1948, all of the Hollywood Ten were convicted of contempt. Following a series of unsuccessful appeals, the cases arrived before the Supreme Court. Among the submissions filed in defense of the Ten was an amicus curiae brief signed by 204 Hollywood professionals. After the court denied review, the ten men began serving their prison sentences in 1950. One of them, screenwriter Dalton Trumbo, said during an interview for the documentary film Hollywood On Trial (1976):

As far as I was concerned, it was a completely just verdict. I had contempt for that Congress and have had contempt for several since. And on the basis of guilt or innocence, I could never really complain very much. That this was a crime or misdemeanor was the complaint, my complaint.[38]

Dmytryk cooperating with the HUAC

In September 1950, Hollywood Ten member Edward Dmytryk announced that he had once been a Communist and was prepared to give evidence against others who had been as well. He was released early from jail. Following his 1951 HUAC appearance in which he described his past Party membership and also named names, his directorial career recovered.[39]

The others remained silent and most were unable to obtain work in American film and television for many years. Adrian Scott, who had produced four of Dmytryk's films – Murder, My Sweet; Cornered; So Well Remembered; and Crossfire – was one of those named by his former friend. Scott's next screen credit did not come until 1972 and he never produced another feature film. Some blacklisted writers managed to work surreptitiously, using pseudonyms or the names of friends who posed as the actual writers (those who allowed their names to be used in this fashion were called "fronts").

Of the 204 who signed the amicus brief on behalf of the Hollywood Ten, 84 were themselves blacklisted.[40] There was a general chilling effect in the entertainment business. Humphrey Bogart, who had been a key member of the Committee for the First Amendment, felt compelled to write an article for Photoplay magazine denying he was a Communist sympathizer.[41] The Tenney Committee, which had continued its state-level investigations, summoned songwriter Ira Gershwin to explain his involvement with the First Amendment Committee because involvement alone was sufficient to arouse suspicion.[42]

The May 7, 1948, issue of the Counterattack newsletter warned readers about a radio talk show that had recently expanded its audience by moving from the Mutual network to ABC: "Communist Party members and fellow-travelers have often been guests on [Arthur] Gaeth's program."

A number of non-governmental organizations participated in enforcing and expanding the blacklist; in particular, the American Legion, the conservative war veterans' group, was instrumental in pressuring the studios to ban Communists and fellow travelers. In 1949, the Americanism Division of the Legion issued its own blacklist – a roster of 128 people who it claimed were part of the "Communist Conspiracy". Among the names on the Legion's list was that of playwright Lillian Hellman.[43] Hellman had written or contributed to the screenplays of approximately ten motion pictures up to that point; she was not employed again by a Hollywood studio until 1966.

Another influential group was American Business Consultants Inc., founded in 1947. In the subscription information for its weekly publication Counterattack, "The Newsletter of Facts to Combat Communism", it declared that it was run by "a group of former FBI men. It has no affiliation whatsoever with any government agency." Notwithstanding that claim, it seems the editors of Counterattack had direct access to the files of both the Federal Bureau of Investigation and HUAC; the results of that access became widely apparent with the June 1950 publication of Red Channels. This Counterattack spinoff listed 151 people in entertainment and broadcast journalism, along with records of their involvement in what the pamphlet meant to be taken as Communist or pro-Communist activities.[44] A few of those named, such as Hellman, were already being denied employment in the motion picture, TV, and radio fields; the publication of Red Channels meant that scores more were placed on the blacklist. That year, CBS instituted a loyalty oath which it required of all its employees.[45]

Jean Muir was the first performer to lose employment because of a listing in Red Channels. In 1950, Muir was named as a Communist sympathizer in the pamphlet, and was immediately removed from the cast of the television sitcom The Aldrich Family, in which she had been cast as Mrs. Aldrich. NBC had received between 20 and 30 phone calls protesting her being in the show. General Foods, the sponsor, said that it would not sponsor programs in which "controversial persons" were featured. Though the company later received thousands of calls protesting the decision, it was not reversed.[46]

HUAC return (1951–1952)

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In 1951, with the U.S. Congress now under Democratic control, HUAC launched a second investigation of communism in Hollywood. As actor Larry Parks said when called before the panel,

Don't present me with the choice of either being in contempt of this committee and going to jail or forcing me to really crawl through the mud to be an informer. For what purpose? I don't think it is a choice at all. I don't think this is really sportsmanlike. I don't think this is American. I don't think this is American justice.[47]

Parks ultimately testified, becoming, albeit reluctantly, a "friendly witness", and found himself blacklisted anyway.

The legal tactics of those refusing to testify had changed by this time. Instead of relying on the First Amendment, they invoked the Fifth Amendment's shield against self-incrimination (although, as before, Communist Party membership was not illegal). While this usually allowed a witness to avoid "naming names" without being indicted for contempt of Congress, "taking the Fifth" in one's HUAC testimony guaranteed membership on the industry blacklist.[48]

Historians sometimes distinguish between (a) the "official blacklist" – i.e., the names of those who were called by the HUAC and, in whatever manner, refused to cooperate or were identified as Communists in the hearings – and (b) the graylist – those who were denied work because of their political or personal affiliations, real or imagined. The consequences of being on either list were largely the same. The graylist also refers more specifically to those who were denied work by the major studios but could still find jobs on Poverty Row: Composer Elmer Bernstein, for instance, was called before the HUAC when it was discovered he had written some music reviews for a Communist newspaper. After he refused to name names, pointing out that he had never attended a Communist Party meeting, he found himself composing music for movies such as Cat Women of the Moon.[49]

Anti-communist tract from the 1950s, decrying the "REDS of Hollywood and Broadway"
Anti-communist tract from the 1950s, decrying the "REDS of Hollywood and Broadway"

While there were film artists like Parks and Dmytryk who eventually cooperated with the HUAC, other friendly witnesses gave damaging testimony with less apparent hesitation or reluctance, most notably director Elia Kazan and screenwriter Budd Schulberg. Their willingness to describe the political leanings of their friends and professional associates effectively brought a halt to dozens of careers and compelled a number of artists to depart for Mexico or Europe to find employment. Director Jules Dassin was among the best known of these. Briefly a Communist, he dropped out of the Party in 1939. He was blacklisted after Dmytryk and fellow filmmaker Frank Tuttle named him at HUAC hearings. Dassin left for France, and spent much of his remaining career in Greece.[50]

Scholar Thomas Doherty describes how the hearings swept onto the blacklist those who had never even been politically active, let alone suspected of being Communists:

[O]n March 21, 1951, the name of the actor Lionel Stander was uttered by the actor Larry Parks during testimony before HUAC. "Do you know Lionel Stander?" committee counsel Frank S. Tavenner inquired. Parks replied he knew the man, but had no knowledge of his political affiliations. No more was said about Stander either by Parks or the committee – no accusation, no insinuation. Yet Stander's phone stopped ringing. Prior to Parks's testimony, Stander had worked on ten television shows in the previous 100 days. Afterwards, nothing.[51]

When Stander himself appeared before the HUAC, he began by pledging his full support in the fight against "subversive" activities:

I know of a group of fanatics who are desperately trying to undermine the Constitution of the United States by depriving artists and others of Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness without due process of law ... I can tell names and cite instances and I am one of the first victims of it ... [This is] a group of ex-Fascists and America-Firsters and anti-Semites, people who hate everybody, including Negroes, minority groups, and most likely themselves ... [T]hese people are engaged in a conspiracy outside all the legal processes to undermine the very fundamental American concepts upon which our entire system of democracy exists.[52]

Stander was clearly speaking of the committee itself.[53]

The hunt for subversives extended into every branch of the entertainment industry. In the field of animation, two studios in particular were affected: United Productions of America (UPA) was purged of a large portion of its staff, while New York-based Tempo was entirely crushed.[54] HUAC investigations sometimes had the effect of destroying families. For example, screenwriter Richard Collins, after a brief period on the blacklist, became a friendly witness and abandoned his wife, actress Dorothy Comingore, who refused to name names. After divorcing Comingore, Collins gained custody of the couple's young son as well. The family's story was later dramatized in the film Guilty by Suspicion (1991), in which the character based on Comingore "commits suicide rather than endure a long mental collapse."[55] In real life, Comingore succumbed to alcoholism and died of a pulmonary disease at age 58. According to historians Paul Buhle and David Wagner, "premature strokes and heart attacks were fairly common [among blacklistees], along with heavy drinking as a form of suicide on the installment plan."[56]

For all that transpired in the HUAC hearings, the proof that Communists actually used Hollywood films as vehicles for subversion remained hard to come by. Schulberg reported how his manuscript for the novel What Makes Sammy Run? (later a screenplay also) had been subject to ideological critique by Hollywood Ten writer John Howard Lawson, whose comments he had solicited. But the significance of such interactions may have been exaggerated. As historian Gerald Horne notes, many Hollywood screenwriters had joined or associated with the local CPUSA chapter not because of allegiance to communism, but because the CPUSA chapter "offered a collective to a profession that was enmeshed in tremendous isolation at the typewriter. Their 'Writers' Clinic' had 'an informal "board" of respected screenwriters' – including Lawson and Ring Lardner Jr. – 'who read and commented upon any screenplay submitted to them. Although their criticism could be plentiful, stinging, and (sometimes) politically dogmatic, the author was entirely free to accept it or reject it as he or she pleased without incurring the slightest "consequence" or sanction.'"[57] Much of the onscreen evidence of Communist influence uncovered by the HUAC was flimsy at best. One witness remembered Stander, while performing in a film, whistling the left-wing "Internationale" as his character waited for an elevator. "Another noted that screenwriter Lester Cole had inserted lines from a famous pro-Loyalist speech by La Pasionaria about it being 'better to die on your feet than to live on your knees' into a pep talk delivered by a football coach."[53]

Others have argued that Communists did affect the film industry by suppressing production of works they politically opposed. In a Reason magazine article entitled "Hollywood's Missing Movies", Kenneth Billingsley cites a case where Trumbo "bragged" in the Daily Worker about quashing films with anti-Soviet content: among them were proposed adaptations of Arthur Koestler's anti-totalitarian books Darkness at Noon and The Yogi and the Commissar, which described the rise of communism in Russia, and Victor Kravchenko's I Chose Freedom.[58] Authors Ronald and Allis Radosh make a similar point in Red Star over Hollywood that prominent anti-Communist books were only influential "in the rare intellectual atmosphere of the East Coast" but were kept apart from Hollywood's consideration.[59]

Height (1952–1956)

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In 1952, the Screen Writers Guild – founded in 1933 by three future members of the Hollywood Ten – amended its screen credit rules to authorize the studios to omit the names of any individuals who had failed to clear themselves before Congress.[60] This agreement prevented a recurrence of what happened in 1950. That's when the blacklisted Dalton Trumbo inadvertently received screen credit for having written, years earlier, the story on which the screenplay for Columbia Pictures' Emergency Wedding was based. But "lapses" of that kind were not repeated. There were no more instances of film accrediting of blacklisted individuals until 1960. For example, the name of Albert Maltz, who had written the original screenplay for The Robe in the mid-1940s, was nowhere to be seen when the movie was released in 1953.[61]

As William O'Neill notes, pressure was maintained even on those who had ostensibly cleared themselves:

On December 27, 1952, the American Legion announced that it disapproved of a new film, Moulin Rouge, starring José Ferrer, who used to be no more progressive than hundreds of other actors and had already been grilled by HUAC. The picture itself was based on the life of Toulouse-Lautrec and was totally apolitical. Nine members of the Legion had picketed it anyway, giving rise to the controversy. By this time, people were not taking any chances. Ferrer immediately wired the Legion's national commander that he would be glad to join the veterans in their "fight against communism".[62]

The group's efforts dragged many others onto the blacklist: In 1954, "[s]creenwriter Louis Pollock, a man without any known political views or associations, suddenly had his career yanked out from under him because the American Legion confused him with Louis Pollack, a California clothier, who had refused to co-operate with HUAC."[63] Orson Bean recalled that he had briefly been placed on the blacklist after dating a member of the Party, despite his own politics being conservative.[64]

During this same period, a number of powerful newspaper columnists covering the entertainment industry, including Walter Winchell, Hedda Hopper, Victor Riesel, Jack O'Brian, and George Sokolsky, regularly suggested names that should be added to the blacklist.[65] Actor John Ireland received an out-of-court settlement to end a 1954 lawsuit against the Young & Rubicam advertising agency, which had ordered him dropped from the lead role in a TV series it sponsored. Variety described it as "the first industry admission of what has for some time been an open secret – that the threat of being labeled a political non-conformist, or worse, has been used against show business personalities, and that a screening system is at work determining these [actors'] availabilities for roles."[66]

Storm Center, the first Hollywood movie to overtly take on McCarthyism, was released in 1956. Bette Davis "plays a small-town librarian who refuses, on principle, to remove a book called The Communist Dream from the shelves when the local council deems it subversive."[67]

The Hollywood blacklist had long gone hand in hand with the Red-baiting activities of J. Edgar Hoover's FBI. Adversaries of HUAC such as lawyer Bartley Crum – who defended Hollywood Ten members in front of the committee – were themselves labeled as Communist sympathizers and targeted for investigation. The FBI tapped Crum's phones, opened his mail, and placed him under continuous surveillance. As a consequence, he lost most of his clients and, unable to cope with the stress of ceaseless harassment, committed suicide in 1959.[68] Intimidating and dividing the left is now seen as a central purpose of the HUAC hearings. Fund-raising for once-popular humanitarian efforts became difficult, and despite the sympathies of many in the industry there was little open support in Hollywood for causes such as the Civil Rights Movement and the opposition to nuclear weapons testing.[69][70]

The struggles attending the blacklist were played out metaphorically on the big screen in various ways. As described by film historian James Chapman, "Carl Foreman, who had refused to testify before the committee, wrote the western High Noon (1952), in which a town marshal (played, ironically, by friendly witness Gary Cooper) finds himself deserted by the good citizens of Hadleyville (read: Hollywood) when a gang of outlaws who had terrorized the town several years earlier (read: HUAC) returns."[71] Cooper's lawman cleaned up Hadleyville, but Foreman was forced to leave for Europe to find work. Meanwhile, Kazan and Schulberg collaborated on a movie widely seen as justifying their decision to name names. On the Waterfront (1954) became one of the most honored films in Hollywood history, winning eight Academy Awards, including Oscars for Best Film, Kazan's direction, and Schulberg's screenplay. The film featured Lee J. Cobb, one of the best known actors to name names. Time Out Film Guide argues that On the Waterfront is "undermined" by its "embarrassing special pleading on behalf of informers."[72]

After his release from prison, Herbert Biberman of the Hollywood Ten directed Salt of the Earth (1954). For this project, he and the newly formed Independent Productions Corporation worked in New Mexico, outside the studio system, with a group of blacklisted professionals: producer Paul Jarrico, writer Michael Wilson, and actor Will Geer. The film, which concerns a strike by Mexican-American mine workers – with an ahead-of-its-time subplot "about the growing feminist consciousness of the workers' wives"[73] – was denounced as Communist propaganda when it was completed in 1953. Distributors boycotted it, newspapers and radio stations rejected advertisements for it, and the projectionists' union refused to run it. In 1954, only about a dozen theaters in the U.S. exhibited Salt of the Earth.[74]

Break (1957–present)

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Jules Dassin was one of the first to successfully defy the blacklist. Although he was named by Edward Dmytryk and Frank Tuttle in spring 1951,[75] Dassin still managed to direct in December 1952 the Broadway play Two's Company with Bette Davis. In June 1956, his French-made film Rififi opened at the Fine Arts Theater in New York[76] and stayed for 20 weeks.

A key figure in bringing an end to blacklisting was John Henry Faulk. Host of an afternoon comedy radio show, Faulk was a leftist active in the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists union. He was scrutinized by AWARE, Inc., a private firm that examined individuals for signs of "disloyalty" and Communist sympathies. Marked by AWARE as unfit, Faulk was fired by CBS Radio. Almost alone among blacklisting's victims, he decided to sue AWARE.[77] Though his case which began in 1957 dragged through the courts for years, the suit itself was an important symbol of the building resistance to the status quo.[78]

The initial cracks in the blacklist were evident on television, specifically at CBS. In 1957, blacklisted actor Norman Lloyd was hired by Alfred Hitchcock as an associate producer for the anthology series Alfred Hitchcock Presents, then entering its third season on the network.[79] On November 30, 1958, a live CBS production of Wonderful Town, based on short stories written by then-Communist Ruth McKenney, appeared with the proper writing credit of blacklisted Edward Chodorov, along with his literary partner, Joseph Fields.[80] The following year, actress Betty Hutton insisted that blacklisted composer Jerry Fielding must be hired as musical director for her new series, also on CBS.[81]

The first big break in the Hollywood blacklist followed soon after. On January 20, 1960, director Otto Preminger publicly announced that Dalton Trumbo, one of the best known members of the Hollywood Ten, would be the screenwriter of Preminger's forthcoming film Exodus.[82] Six and a half months later, with Exodus still to debut, The New York Times reported that Universal Pictures would give Trumbo screen credit for his writing work on Spartacus, a decision now recognized as being largely made by the film's star/producer Kirk Douglas.[83] On October 6, Spartacus premiered – the first movie to bear Trumbo's name since he had received story credit on Emergency Wedding in 1950. In the period from 1947 to 1960, Trumbo had written or co-written approximately 17 motion pictures without credit. Exodus followed in December 1960, also bearing Trumbo's name. The blacklist was now clearly coming to an end, but its effects have continued to reverberate up until the present day.[84]

John Henry Faulk won his lawsuit in 1962. With this court decision, the private blacklisters and those who enforced entertainment industry blacklists were put on notice that they were legally liable for the professional and financial damage they caused, which helped bring a halt to "smear" publications like Counterattack.[85] However, a number of blacklistees, such as Adrian Scott and Lillian Hellman, remained personae non gratae for several more years. The character actor Lionel Stander could not find film work until 1965.[86] Hollywood Ten screenwriters John Howard Lawson and Lester Cole, who did not renounce communism in later life, were never "un-blacklisted".[87][88]

Some of those who named names, like Kazan and Schulberg, argued for decades afterward that they had made an ethically proper decision. Others, like actor Lee J. Cobb and director Michael Gordon, who gave friendly testimony to HUAC after suffering on the blacklist for a time, "concede[d] with remorse that their plan was to name their way back to work."[89] Several "informers" were haunted by the choice they made. In 1963, actor Sterling Hayden declared,

I was a rat, a stoolie, and the names I named of those close friends were blacklisted and deprived of their livelihood.[90]

Scholars Paul Buhle and Dave Wagner state that Hayden "was widely believed to have drunk himself into a near-suicidal depression decades before his 1986 death."[90]

Into the 21st century, the Writers Guild pursued the correction of screen credits in movies of the 1950s and early 1960s to properly reflect the contributions of blacklisted writers such as Carl Foreman and Hugo Butler.[91] On December 19, 2011, the guild, acting on a request for an investigation made by his dying son Christopher Trumbo, announced that Dalton Trumbo would get full credit for his work on the screenplay for the romantic comedy Roman Holiday (1953), almost sixty years after the fact.[92]

Blacklisted individuals

[edit]

Hollywood Ten

[edit]

On September 27, 1947, HUAC subpoenaed the following nineteen individuals in an effort to investigate "subversive" elements in the entertainment industry:[15][93]

  1. Alvah Bessie, screenwriter
  2. Herbert Biberman, screenwriter and director
  3. Lester Cole, screenwriter
  4. Edward Dmytryk, director
  5. Ring Lardner Jr., screenwriter
  6. John Howard Lawson, screenwriter
  7. Albert Maltz, screenwriter
  8. Samuel Ornitz, screenwriter
  9. Adrian Scott, producer and screenwriter
  10. Dalton Trumbo, screenwriter
  11. Bertolt Brecht, playwright and screenwriter
  12. Richard Collins, screenwriter
  13. Howard Koch, screenwriter
  14. Gordon Kahn, screenwriter
  15. Robert Rossen, screenwriter and director
  16. Waldo Salt, screenwriter
  17. Lewis Milestone, director
  18. Irving Pichel, actor and director
  19. Larry Parks, actor

The HUAC claimed these men were affiliated with the CPUSA and had injected Communist propaganda into their films. Although the claims were never substantiated, the investigators demanded the individuals admit their political beliefs and name names of other Communists. Due to illnesses, scheduling conflicts, and exhaustion from the chaotic hearings, only the first eleven in the list were called to testify in October 1947. Brecht, the one foreigner in the group, pretended to cooperate and then fled for Europe. The other ten refused to answer questions about their membership in the Screen Writers Guild and Communist Party. The HUAC charged them with contempt of Congress and they were immediately blacklisted. They became known as the Hollywood Ten.[94][95]

In 1947, belonging to the CPUSA did not yet constitute a crime, and the committee's right to investigate people's beliefs and affiliations was questionable from the outset. As their defense, the Ten relied on the First Amendment's guarantees of freedom of speech and freedom of thought (and the right to keep one's thoughts private), but the committee charged the men with contempt of Congress for refusing to answer questions. Later defendants – except Pete Seeger – tried different strategies.[96]

Acknowledging the potential for punishment, the Ten resisted the HUAC's authority. They yelled at the Chairman and treated the committee with open indignation. Upon receiving their contempt citations, they believed the Supreme Court would overturn the rulings, which did not turn out to be the case. As a result, they were convicted of contempt and fined $1,000 each, and served prison terms ranging from six months to one year.

Martin Redish suggests that the First Amendment's right of free expression in these cases was used more to protect the powers of the Congressional accusers than to protect the rights of the accused.[97] After seeing the ineffectiveness of the First Amendment-based defense strategy adopted by the Hollywood Ten, later defendants opted to plead the Fifth Amendment (against self-incrimination).

Public support for the Hollywood Ten wavered, as everyday citizen-observers were never really sure what to make of them. Some of the blacklistees wrote about their experiences. John Howard Lawson, the Hollywood Ten's unofficial leader, wrote a book attacking the film industry for its capitulation to the HUAC. While mostly blaming the studio executives, he also defended himself and his colleagues, and criticized Edward Dmytryk for being the only member of the Ten to recant and cooperate with the committee.[98]

In his 1981 autobiography, Hollywood Red, screenwriter Lester Cole affirmed that virtually all of the Hollywood Ten had been CPUSA members at some point.[99] Other members of the Hollywood Ten, such as Dalton Trumbo[100] and Edward Dmytryk,[101] publicly admitted to being Communists while testifying before the committee.

When Dmytryk wrote his memoir about the Hollywood blacklist, he denounced the Ten and defended his decision to work with the HUAC and name names. Characterizing himself as the "odd man out", he claimed to have left the Communist Party before he was subpoenaed. He condemned the Ten's legal tactic of defying Congress, and regretted staying with the group for as long as he did.[102]

Others in 1947

[edit]

Between January 1948 and June 1950

[edit]

(an asterisk after the entry indicates the person was also listed in Red Channels)

Red Channels list

[edit]

(see, e.g., Schrecker [2002], p. 244; Barnouw [1990], pp. 122–124)[118]

After June 1950

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]

Informational notes

  1. ^ The following transcript excerpt from the interrogation of screenwriter John Howard Lawson by HUAC chairman J. Parnell Thomas gives an example of the tenor of some of the exchanges:

    Thomas: Are you a member of the Communist Party, or have you ever been a member of the Communist Party?
    Lawson: It is unfortunate and tragic that I have to teach this committee the basic principles of American—
    Thomas: (pounding gavel) That is not the question. That is not the question. The question is: Have you ever been a member of the Communist Party?
    Lawson: I am framing my answer in the only way in which any American citizen can frame his answer to a question which absolutely invades his rights.
    Thomas: Then you refuse to answer that question; is that correct?
    Lawson: I have told you that I will offer my beliefs, affiliations, and everything else to the American public, and they will know where I stand.
    Thomas: (pounding gavel) Excuse the witness—
    Lawson: As they do from what I have written.
    Thomas: (pounding gavel) Stand away from the stand—
    Lawson: I have written Americanism for many years, and I shall continue to fight for the Bill of Rights, which you are trying to destroy.
    Thomas: Officer, take this man away from the stand—
    [Applause and boos.][254][255]

  2. ^ At least a couple of recent histories incorrectly give December 3 as the date of the Waldorf Statement: Ross (2002), p. 217; Stone (2004), p. 365. Among the many 1947 sources that establish the correct date, there is a New York Times article with the lengthy title, "Movies to Oust Ten Cited For Contempt of Congress; Major Companies Also Vote to Refuse Jobs to Communists – 'Hysteria, Surrender of Freedom' Charged by Defense Counsel; Movies Will Oust Ten Men Cited for Contempt of Congress After Voting to Refuse Employment to Communists", which appeared on the newspaper's front page on November 26.[256]
  3. ^ To illustrate how arbitrary the blacklist could be, Victor Navasky relates what happened to screenwriter Michael Blankfort. He had contributed to the Daily Worker and was named as a Communist by Louis Budenz. But because Blankfort insisted during his testimony that he never joined the CPUSA, he told the committee he had no names to give them. But he was friendly and cooperative in all other ways. He was excused without being thanked. His lawyer Martin Gang immediately went up to the chairman of the hearing, Francis Walter, and said he had forgotten to thank Blankfort. As Blankfort recalls, "Walter called the court reporter of the Committee over and told him to put in a thank you so that I could be clear of the blacklist, and that's what he put down." As a result of this one insertion in the Congressional Record, Blankfort was never blacklisted and in fact served as a "front" for Albert Maltz's Academy Award-nominated screenplay for Broken Arrow (1950).[257]
  4. ^ Madeline Lee – who was married to actor Jack Gilford, also listed by Red Channels – was frequently confused with another actress of the era named Madaline Lee.[258]
  5. ^ Four months after refusing to cooperate with HUAC, Dagget appeared again before the committee and named names.[259]
  6. ^ In 1951, Dare appeared before HUAC, lied about having never been a Communist, and continued to work in the entertainment industry. He was blacklisted two years later for his involvement in Meet the People, a 1939 theatrical production. Soon afterward, he recanted his earlier testimony and named names.[260]

Citations

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  2. ^ Kirk Douglas, "My Spartacus Broke All the Rules" Archived 2015-11-10 at the Wayback Machine, The Daily Telegraph
  3. ^ Gordon, Bernard (1999). Hollywood Exile, or How I Learned to Love the Blacklist. Austin, TX: University of Texas Press. pp. ix. ISBN 0292728271.
  4. ^ Pollard, Tom (2015). Sex and Violence: The Hollywood Censorship Wars. Oxon: Routledge. p. 95. ISBN 9781594516351.
  5. ^ Navasky, Victor S. (1980). Naming Names. New York: Viking. p. 83. ISBN 0670503932.
  6. ^ Red Channels: The Report of Communist Influence in Radio and Television. New York: Counterattack. 1950. p. 6.
  7. ^ "Red Smears: A Legacy". PRINT. December 11, 2012.
  8. ^ Gregory, James (2006). "Communist Party Membership by Districts 1922–1950". Civil Rights and Labor History Consortium, University of Washington.
  9. ^ Ceplair, Larry; Englund, Steven (1983). The Inquisition in Hollywood: Politics in the Film Community 1930–1960. University of California Press. pp. 156–157. ISBN 978-0520048867.
  10. ^ Murphy (2003), p. 16.
  11. ^ a b Ceplair & Englund 1983, pp. 157–158.
  12. ^ Johnpoll (1994), p. xv.
  13. ^ Horne 2006, p. 174.
  14. ^ Murphy (2003), p. 17.
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  24. ^ "Testimony of Ronald Reagan and Walter E. Disney". History Matters. Archived from the original on 30 June 2015. Reagan's first wife, actress Jane Wyman, later said – as reported by Joe Morella in his 1985 biography of Wyman – that Reagan's political accusations against colleagues and friends led to tension in their marriage, eventually resulting in their divorce.
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  36. ^ 1947 Congressional Record, Vol. 93, Page H10818 (October 27, 1947)
  37. ^ Lasky (1989), p. 204.
  38. ^ Ceplair, Larry (2015). Dalton Trumbo, Blacklisted Hollywood Radical. University Press of Kentucky. p. 228. ISBN 9780813146829. Archived from the original on February 2, 2024. Retrieved December 15, 2015.
  39. ^ Gevinson (1997), p. 234.
  40. ^ Stone (2004), p. 365.
  41. ^ Bogart (1948).
  42. ^ Jablonski (1998), p. 350.
  43. ^ Newman (1989), 140.
  44. ^ Red Channels (1950), pp. 6, 214.
  45. ^ Buhle, Paul; Wagner, David (2003a). Hide in Plain Sight: The Hollywood Blacklistees in Film and Television, 1950–2002. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 1-4039-6144-1.
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  51. ^ Doherty (2003), p. 31.
  52. ^ Quoted in Belton (1994), pp. 202–203.
  53. ^ a b Belton (1994), p. 203.
  54. ^ Cohen 2004, pp. 173–179.
  55. ^ a b Buhle and Wagner (2003b), p. 21.
  56. ^ a b c d Buhle & Wagner 2003a, p. 250.
  57. ^ Horne 2006, p. 134.
  58. ^ Kenneth Billingsley, "Hollywood's Missing Movies: Why American films have ignored life under communism" Archived 2008-03-12 at the Wayback Machine, Reason Magazine, June 2000
  59. ^ Radosh & Radosh 2005, p. 117.
  60. ^ McGilligan, Patrick; Buhle, Paul (1997). "Ring Lardner Jr.". Tender Comrades: A Backstory of the Hollywood Blacklist. New York: St. Martin's Press. p. 413. ISBN 0-312-17046-7.
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  62. ^ O'Neill (1990), p. 239.
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  223. ^ a b Buhle and Wagner (2003b), p. 11.
  224. ^ Buhle & Wagner 2003a, p. 247.
  225. ^ Buhle and Wagner (2003b), p. 163.
  226. ^ Buhle & Wagner 2003a, p. 253.
  227. ^ Buhle and Wagner (2003b), p. 1.
  228. ^ Buhle & Wagner 2003a, p. 18.
  229. ^ Buhle & Wagner 2003a, p. 88.
  230. ^ a b Lerner (2003), pp. 337–338.
  231. ^ Buhle & Wagner 2003a, p. 142.
  232. ^ Buhle and Wagner (2003b), p. 55.
  233. ^ Buhle & Wagner 2003a, p. 208.
  234. ^ Buhle and Wagner (2003b), p. 101.
  235. ^ Perebinossoff, Gross, and Gross (2005), p. 9; Kisseloff (1995), p. 416.
  236. ^ Buhle and Wagner (2003b), p. 218.
  237. ^ Buhle & Wagner 2003a, p. 63.
  238. ^ Buhle & Wagner 2003a, p. 36.
  239. ^ Buhle & Wagner 2003a, p. 91.
  240. ^ Buhle & Wagner 2003a, p. 175.
  241. ^ Fraser, C. Gerald (25 July 1983). "Shepard Traube, 76, Is Dead; Stage Producer and Director". The New York Times.
  242. ^ Buhle and Wagner (2003b), p. 47.
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  245. ^ Navasky 1980, pp. 93–94.
  246. ^ "Salka Viertel". IMDb.
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  248. ^ Buhle and Wagner (2003b), p. 209.
  249. ^ Buhle and Wagner (2003b), p. 66.
  250. ^ McNary, Dave (July 16, 2001). "Bid fails to remove IATSE blacklist rules". Variety.
  251. ^ Buhle & Wagner 2003a, p. 111.
  252. ^ Buhle & Wagner 2003a, p. vii.
  253. ^ Buhle & Wagner 2003a, p. 248.
  254. ^ "Testimony of John Howard Lawson". Hearings Regarding the Communist Infiltration of the Motion-Picture-Industry Activities in the United States (Second Week) (1947) (PDF). pp. 518–519 – via Sacramento State University.
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  256. ^ "Movies to Oust Ten Cited For Contempt of Congress". The New York Times. 26 November 1947.
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  258. ^ Cook (1971), p. 13.
  259. ^ Cohen 2004, p. 179.
  260. ^ Boyer (1996); Navasky (1980), p. 74; Cogley (1956), p. 124.

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Further reading

  • Berg, Sandra (2006). "When Noir Turned Black" (interview with Jules Dassin), Written By (November) (available online Archived version of May 2013).
  • Bernstein, Walter (2000). Inside Out: A Memoir of the Blacklist. New York: Da Capo. ISBN 0-306-80936-2
  • Briley, Ronald (1994). "Reel History and the Cold War", OAH Magazine of History 8 (winter) (available online Archived version of Jan.2003).
  • Caballero, Raymond. McCarthyism vs. Clinton Jencks. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2019. ISBN 978-0806163970
  • Georgakas, Dan (1992). "Hollywood Blacklist", in Encyclopedia of the American Left, ed. Mari Jo Buhle, Paul Buhle, and Dan Georgakas. Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press (available online). ISBN 0-252-06250-7
  • Kahn, Gordon (1948). Hollywood on Trial: The Story of the 10 Who Were Indicted. New York: Boni & Gaer. ISBN 0-405-03921-2
  • Leab, Daniel J., with guide by Robert E. Lester (1991). Communist Activity in the Entertainment Industry: FBI Surveillance Files on Hollywood, 1942–1958. Bethesda, Maryland: University Publications of America (available online). ISBN 1-55655-414-1
  • Murray, Lawrence L. (1975). "Monsters, Spys, and Subversives: The Film Industry Responds to the Cold War, 1945–1955", Jump Cut 9 (available online).
  • Nizer, Louis. (1966). The Jury Returns. New York: Doubleday & Co. ISBN 978-0-671-12505-9
  • "Seven-Year Justice", Time, July 6, 1962 (available online).
  • Stabile, Carol A. (2018). The Broadcast 41: Women and the Anti-Communist Blacklist. London: Goldsmiths Press. ISBN 978-1906897864
  • Vaughn, Robert. (2004). Only Victims: A Study of Show Business Blacklisting. New York: Limelight Editions. (Originally published New York: Putnam, 1972). ISBN 978-0-87910-081-0
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