Robert Emmet Sherwood

views updated May 18 2018

Robert Emmet Sherwood

Robert Emmet Sherwood (1896-1955) was an American playwright whose penetrating dramas often showed an idealistic hero confronted with war.

Robert E. Sherwood was born in New Rochelle, N.Y., on April 4, 1896. He graduated from Milton Academy (1914) and from Harvard (1917). Rejected for service in World War I, he enlisted in the Canadian Black Watch; he was wounded and gassed. He worked for Vanity Fair magazine in 1919 and a year later joined the staff of Life magazine, becoming its film editor. In 1922 he married Mary Brandon, an actress. Their daughter was born in 1923. He edited The Best Moving Pictures of 1922-23 and in 1924 became editor of Life. The first of his many film credits was Oh, What a Nurse! (1926). Sherwood made his stage debut with The Road to Rome (1927), a humorous, sophisticated treatment of Hannibal. Reunion in Vienna (1931) charmed audiences with its urbane comedy about an old love newly ignited. While publishing a novel, The Virtuous Knight (1931), he worked in Hollywood as a dialogue writer and scenarist on his own plays. Acropolis (1933), dealing with the problems of Athens and Sparta, was a quick failure. From this time, however, his works became serious.

In 1934 Sherwood was divorced; he married Madeline Hurlock Connelly in 1935. During the next few years, he reached his peak as a dramatist. The Petrified Forest (1935), a pertinent assessment of romanticism and reality in American culture, was followed by Idiot's Delight (1936). This uncanny prediction of World War II won a Pulitzer Prize. An adaptation, Tovarich (1936), preceded the brilliant Abe Lincoln in Illinois (1938), another Pulitzer Prize play and the first production of the Play-wrights Company, which Sherwood helped organize. There Shall Be No Night (1940), a compelling depiction of the Finish involvement in the war, won Sherwood his third Pulitzer Prize. Abe Lincoln in Illinois led to an association with Eleanor Roosevelt.

At the outbreak of World War II Sherwood entered public service as special assistant to the secretary of war (1940), director of the overseas branch of the Office of War Information (1942), and special assistant to the secretary of the Navy (1945). His film play The Best Years of Our Lives (1946) won many Academy Awards, and his historical work Roosevelt and Hopkins (1948) earned him several awards. He died in New York City on Nov. 14, 1955.

Further Reading

The major works on Sherwood are R. Baird Shuman, Robert E. Sherwood (1964), which contains biographical information and a good critical discussion of the plays, and John Mason Brown, The Worlds of Robert E. Sherwood: Mirror to His Times, 1896-1939 (1965), an excellent biography of Sherwood's life up to the time of his public service in 1940. Recommended for background reading are John Howard Lawson, Theory and Technique of Playwriting (1936; rev. ed. 1949); Winifred L. Dusenbury, The Theme of Loneliness inModern American Drama (1960); and Casper H. Nannes, Politics in the American Drama (1960).

Additional Sources

Brown, John Mason, The worlds of Robert E. Sherwood: mirror to his times, 1896-1939, Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1979, 1965. □

Sherwood, Robert Emmet

views updated May 29 2018

Sherwood, Robert Emmet (1896–1955) US dramatist. Sherwood won four Pulitzer Prizes: Idiot's Delight (1936), Abe Lincoln in Illinois (1938), There Shall be No Night (1940), and his memoir Roosevelt and Hopkins (1948). He was a speechwriter for President Franklin D. Roosevelt. He won an Oscar for best screenplay for The Best Years of Our Lives (1946).