Alvah Cecil Bessie (June 4, 1904 – July 21, 1985) was an American novelist, screenwriter and journalist. He was one of nearly 3,000 American volunteers who joined the Abraham Lincoln Brigade and fought in the Spanish Civil War. He is perhaps best known as a member of the "Hollywood Ten", the group of film artists blacklisted by the entertainment industry for refusing to cooperate with the House Un-American Activities Committee.
Early life
Alvah Bessie was the younger of two sons of Daniel Nathan Cohen Bessie and Adeline Schlesinger Bessie. They were a middle-class Jewish family living in the prosperous section of Harlem in New York City. In a 1983 interview, Bessie remembered his stern father as a successful businessman, inventor, and "hard-ribbed Republican, completely sold on the free-enterprise system." Alvah attended public schools, including DeWitt Clinton High School in the Bronx where he had the reputation of being rebellious. He subsequently enrolled in Columbia University in 1920, graduating in 1924 with a B.A. in English. Daniel Bessie died in 1921 and the family finances took a serious downturn. However, this reversal of fortunes also freed Alvah to pursue his artistic ambitions without the opposition of his father. He was employed for three months as a rewriteman for the daily newspaper Le Temps. His first published short story, "Redbird", was written in Paris and appeared in the French literary journal, transition. But Bessie's stay in France was brief, and he returned to New York in 1929. He sold a few stories, essays and reviews to The New Republic, Scribner's, Collier's, Atlantic Monthly, and Saturday Review of Literature. and Batouala by René Maran.
In 1935, Bessie won a Guggenheim Fellowship for his first novel, Dwell in the Wilderness. The book earned critical praise but sold poorly. According to reviewer Gabriel Miller, Dwell in the Wilderness introduced a recurring motif in Bessie's fiction: "human isolation and the resultant painful loneliness." In Anthony Slide's reference guide, Lost Gay Novels, about little-known English-language novels with gay themes and/or gay characters, he singles out Dwell in the Wilderness for its sensitive portrayal of the gay character Dewey.
Spanish Civil War
thumb|left|Bessie in [[Spanish Civil War|Spain, April 1938]]
From 1935 to 1937, Bessie was the drama and book editor for the Brooklyn Eagle. He was further radicalized by his conversations with fellow Brooklyn Eagle reporter Nat Einhorn who was a founder of the Newspaper Guild's New York local. In 1936, Bessie joined the Communist Party (CPUSA). He participated in the Ebro offensive from July to September 1938, eventually attaining the rank of sergeant-adjutant. He also served as a correspondent for Volunteer for Liberty, an International Brigade publication. Upon his return to the U.S. in December 1938, he used the notebooks to write Men in Battle, which was praised by Ernest Hemingway as "[a] true, honest, fine book. Bessie writes truly and finely of all that he could see ... and he saw enough."
Screenwriting
After the Spanish Civil War, Bessie pursued his longtime wish to work in the film industry. In 1939, he landed a job as film reviewer for the left-wing magazine The New Masses. Based on a recommendation from the playwright Kyle Crichton, a Hollywood agent shopped around Bessie's published writings. Finally, in the winter of 1942, Bessie signed a contract with Warner Bros. He was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Story for the patriotic WWII film Objective, Burma! (1945).
Blacklisted
thumb|right|upright=1.2|"The [[Hollywood Ten" stand with their attorneys outside district court in Washington, D.C. before arraignment on contempt of Congress charges. The ten were charged for refusing to cooperate with the House Un-American Activities Committee.<br /><small>(Front row, L-R): Herbert Biberman, attorney Martin Popper, attorney Robert W. Kenny, Albert Maltz and Lester Cole.<br />(Second row, L-R): Dalton Trumbo, John Howard Lawson, Alvah Bessie and Samuel Ornitz.<br />(Top row, L-R): Ring Lardner Jr., Edward Dmytryk and Adrian Scott.</small>]]
Bessie's screenwriting career came to a halt in October 1947 when he was summoned by the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC). He was one of the first ten "unfriendly" screenwriters and directors to testify before the HUAC, and who were soon labeled the "Hollywood Ten". They were deemed "unfriendly" for refusing to deny or confirm their involvement in the CPUSA, or to name names of Communist associates. They were cited for contempt of Congress, sentenced to a year in prison, and blacklisted from working in movies, television or radio. Bessie served his prison term—which began in 1950 and lasted ten months—at the federal correctional facility in Texarkana, Texas. but further film assignments dried up. He moved to San Francisco in 1951 and worked for a while with the International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU). After that job folded, he learned from Lou Gottlieb of the Gateway Singers that there might be an opening at the hungry i nightclub. With an assist from comedian and fellow blacklistee Irwin Corey, Bessie was hired as the club's "light and sound man". He stayed at the hungry i for over seven years (an experience depicted in his novel One for My Baby Bessie befriended Bruce and helped revise several of the comic's screenplays.
Bessie dropped out of the Communist Party in 1954. In 1957, he published The Un-Americans, a fictionalized rendering of his struggles with the HUAC. He followed this with a non-fiction account entitled Inquisition in Eden.
Later years
thumb|right|Bessie 1952
Once the blacklist period ended, Bessie co-wrote and acted in the 1969 Spanish film España otra vez about a doctor returning to Spain for the first time since the Spanish Civil War. He offered reminiscences of the film production in his 1975 non-fiction book, Spain Again. His biggest post-blacklist commercial success was the satirical novel The Symbol (1966) about the exploitation by Hollywood of an unhappy actress who resembles Marilyn Monroe. He adapted the novel for the 1974 TV movie The Sex Symbol.
He remained active in the Bay Area Chapter of the Veterans of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade and was honored at the 39th Anniversary Dinner in 1975.
On 21 July 1985, Alvah Bessie died of a heart attack in Terra Linda, California. He was 81.
In 2001, Dan Bessie published some of his father's previously uncollected work, notably his Spanish Civil War Notebooks. In that same year, Dan wrote a memoir entitled Rare Birds (University Press of Kentucky, 2001), which listed the diverse accomplishments of the extended Bessie family that included 1960s poster artist Wes Wilson (husband of Alvah's daughter Eva) and the prominent advertising executive Leo Burnett (brother of Alvah's first wife Mary).
Books
Fiction
- Dwell in the Wilderness (1935)
- Bread and a Stone (1941)
- (1957)
- The Symbol (1966)
- One for My Baby (1980)
- Alvah Bessie's Short Fictions (1982); Introduction by Gabriel Miller.
Non-fiction
- Men in Battle: A Story of Americans in Spain (1939)
- Soviet People at War (1942)
- This Is Your Enemy: A Documentary Record of the Nazi Atrocities Against Citizens and Soldiers of Our Soviet Ally (1942)
- The Heart of Spain: anthology of fiction, non-fiction, and poetry (editor) (1952)
- Inquisition in Eden (1965)
- Spain Again (1975)
- Our Fight: Writings by Veterans of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade: Spain, 1936–1939 (editor) (1987)
- Alvah Bessie's Spanish Civil War Notebooks, edited by Dan Bessie (2001)
See also
- Lost Gay Novels
- Abraham Lincoln Brigade
- Hollywood blacklist
References
Further reading
External links
- Alvah Cecil Bessie Papers at the Wisconsin Center for Film and Theater Research
- "Sneak Preview of a Hollywood Flashback" – Full scans of article by Alvah Bessie on his experience as one of The Hollywood Ten (The Realist No. 68, pgs August 1, 19–23, 1966)
- Finding aid to Alvah Cecil Bessie letters at Columbia University. Rare Book & Manuscript Library.
- Subversives: Stories from the Red Scare. Lesson by Ursula Wolfe-Rocca (Alvah Bessie is featured in this lesson).
