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Hollywood Bohemia: The Roots of Progressive Politics in Rob Wagner's Script

von Rob Leicester Wagner

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Rob Wagner's Script, the film literary magazine published between 1929 and 1949, was Hollywood's only left-leaning, rabble-rousing movie publication that provided its readers with a regular dose of progressive politics, open love letters to the Soviet Union and a forum for such leftists as Dalton Trumbo and Charlie Chaplin. Rob Wagner founded the magazine on socialist principles. Its remarkable success in a company town ruled by conservative studio moguls is testament to Wagner's humorous but sophisticated approach to Depression-era radical politics. Author Rob Leicester Wagner, the great-grandson of Wagner, traces the birth of Script 'to the Red Scare of 1918-1919. The US government spied on Wagner and used his friends to inform on him for his antiwar activities and alleged German sympathies. The government ultimately attempted, but failed, to indict him on sedition charges. In Hollywood Bohemia: The Roots of Progressive Politics in Rob Wagner's Script, the author uses declassified War Department and FBI files and Rob Wagner's own personal diaries to deliver a portrait of a man driven to extol the virtues of socialism in an industry that best illustrates the unstoppable engine of capitalism. Illus., Notes, Index.… (mehr)
Kürzlich hinzugefügt vonCoryMac, Leicester1711, kipen
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So much of what we read about Hollywood's past is familiar to us that we fail to recognize the hundreds of players who contributed to the film industry but were lost to time. Rob Wagner was a popular Hollywood journalist and contributor to films in the 1910s and '20s. He went on to found Rob Wagner's Script and remained an industry insider until his death. He has pretty much been forgotten, but the reality is that he was one of the few antiwar activists and socialists who successfully published a magazine with a leftist view of Hollywood motion pictures. Wagner's great-grandson's book, Hollywood Bohemia, covers the origins, rise and decline of this unusual, but important, publication from the 1920s until it folded in 1949. How and why a magazine that rejected national advertising and refused to pay its writers succeeded is uncovered in this excellent and scholarly examination of progressive politics in the motion picture industry. We learn that unlike the sensational movie magazines of film celebrities, Script was a serious publication devoted to the purity of this new art form and how it uncovered the exploitation of writers by film studios, animal cruelty during filming, unionization and the Russian cinematic influence of Western films. This is truly an extraordinary book. ( )
  CoryMac | Dec 24, 2018 |
“The only problem with film biographies is that they’re usually of the wrong people. Alfred Hitchcock lived a legendary life, and his new Boswell, Peter Ackroyd, has already written doorstops on Shakespeare, Dickens and others. Still, did the Master need yet another close-up? In Alfred Hitchcock, Ackroyd ably follows Hitch from pudgy young PA (motto: “I’ll do it”) to sad, dying Bel Air recluse with nothing to do. But think of all the fascinating figures from cinema still waiting for booklength treatment. Where are the memoirs of L.A.’s Robert Towne and Walter Hill? Where’s the saga of Achmed Abdullah, born of supposedly royal Russian-Afghan parentage, rumored a British spy, and ultimately an Oscar-nominated Muslim screenwriter? Ackroyd’s graceful retread will prove catnip to Hitchcock completists, but for something fresher, check out Hollywood Bohemia, Rob Wagner’s captivating, crude, crackerjack account of his namesake great-grandfather. This 1930s L.A. radical edited Script, a magazine some called a West Coast New Yorker, and befriended everybody from Chaplin to the unsung L.A. classical music writer Jose Rodríguez. Despite its low-profile June publication — by a Santa Maria genealogy publisher! – here’s the rare film bio where we didn’t already know too much.”
hinzugefügt von CoryMac | bearbeitenLos Angeles Magazine, David Kipen (Nov 1, 2017)
 
A fascinating journal that came on like a cross between a west coast version of The New Yorker and a Hollywood lit-zine, Script was published weekly out of Beverly Hills by Rob Wagner, a writer, artist, activist and film colony insider. It featured contributions by Tom Mix, Charlie Chaplin, Upton Sinclair and Eddie Cantor, along with early short stories by William Saroyan, Ray Bradbury, and Louis L’Amour. The magazine’s unapologetic socialist leanings were noteworthy as well, and serve as the subject of Hollywood Bohemia, a recent book by Wagner’s great-grandson, Rob Leicester Wagner.

Mr. Wagner has graciously allowed China Film Insider to reprint Howe’s essay, and we’re proud to do so, as he fits right in. In language that may seem altogether familiar to CFI readers and industry watchers of recent years, Howe discusses the myriad of Chinese stories waiting to be told, the educational and social benefits of a robust Chinese film industry, the commercial potential of China’s population, and ways in which Chinese filmmakers and Hollywood might work together. The piece also contains a fascinating capsule account of the Shanghai film studios’ migration to Chungking during the Sino-Japanese War and the hardships faced there. (He also tips his hat to the egalitarian ideals of Mao’s Communist insurgents, at the time based in Yan’an, then called “Yenan.”).
hinzugefügt von CoryMac | bearbeitenChina Film Insider, Jaime Wolf (Dec 1, 2016)
 
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Rob Wagner's Script, the film literary magazine published between 1929 and 1949, was Hollywood's only left-leaning, rabble-rousing movie publication that provided its readers with a regular dose of progressive politics, open love letters to the Soviet Union and a forum for such leftists as Dalton Trumbo and Charlie Chaplin. Rob Wagner founded the magazine on socialist principles. Its remarkable success in a company town ruled by conservative studio moguls is testament to Wagner's humorous but sophisticated approach to Depression-era radical politics. Author Rob Leicester Wagner, the great-grandson of Wagner, traces the birth of Script 'to the Red Scare of 1918-1919. The US government spied on Wagner and used his friends to inform on him for his antiwar activities and alleged German sympathies. The government ultimately attempted, but failed, to indict him on sedition charges. In Hollywood Bohemia: The Roots of Progressive Politics in Rob Wagner's Script, the author uses declassified War Department and FBI files and Rob Wagner's own personal diaries to deliver a portrait of a man driven to extol the virtues of socialism in an industry that best illustrates the unstoppable engine of capitalism. Illus., Notes, Index.

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