Los Angeles Times

‘The Graduate’ author dies at 81

CHARLES WEBB, 1939 – 2020

- By Steve Marble

Charles Webb, right, gave away his earnings and possession­s to live in poverty.

The first $20,000 went quickly. Charles Webb simply just gave it all away, along with the VIP passes for the premiere of “The Graduate,” the soon-to-be Hollywood classic based on his book.

Though Webb kept on writing — sometimes to acclaim, sometimes not — he lived in poverty, a life choice he made by giving away his earnings, his inheritanc­e and the occasional house he bought. After giving away the $20,000 he received for the film rights to “The Graduate,” he gave the copyright for the novel to the Anti-Defamation League, only because he admired the group’s work.

“When you run out of money, it’s a purifying experience,” he told the Times of London after he abruptly left Los Angeles and moved to Brighton, England, with his wife, Eve.

Rather than conform to the expectatio­ns of the publishing world — book signings, speaking engagement­s, talk shows — he worked stocking shelves at a Kmart, cleaned hotel rooms, cooked late-night meals at a diner and managed a nudist colony. He lived in campground­s and shelters and once spent three years at a Motel 6 in Carpinteri­a.

An enigma to the end, Webb died June 16 in Eastbourne, a seaside town in southeaste­rn England. He was 81. The Times of London first reported his death. Jack Malvern, a friend and journalist, told the Washington Post that Webb’s death was related to complicati­ons from a blood disorder.

Translated to film, “The Graduate” was an immediate box office success when it was released in 1967, with Dustin Hoffman — then an emerging star — cast as Benjamin Braddock, a newly minted college graduate who returns home filled with disillusio­nment and uncertaint­y. Already hollowed out by his family’s expectatio­ns, he embarks on an affair with the wife of his father’s law partner. Anne Bancroft was nominated for an Oscar for her portrayal of the seductive wife — Mrs. Robinson.

Buck Henry, who helped write the screenplay, told the Los Angeles Times in 2002 that the dialogue in Webb’s novel was so crispy and spoton that 85% of the script was lifted straight from the book. And the laconic, world-weary protagonis­t in Webb’s story was a perfect fit for Hoffman. Henry, however, said he did add the now-famous piece of advice from a family friend as Braddock is being pumped about his future: “I just want to say one word to you: plastics.”

Morris Dickstein, an English professor at City University of New York, told The Times in 2002 that Benjamin Braddock became “part of a long line of naive, confused, innocent heroes in the coming-of-age tradition of Holden Caulfield,” the angstfille­d teen in “The Catcher in the Rye.”

While the film earned more than $100 million at the box office, Webb walked away penniless. He wrote six more novels, then took an unexplaine­d 26-year hiatus before publishing “New Cardiff ” in 2002. The book, praised by critics, was adapted into the 2012 film “Hope Springs” with Meryl Streep and, again, Webb gave away his earnings. His final novel, “Home School,” was a sequel to “The Graduate.” Critics largely wished he hadn’t bothered to revisit his original work.

Charles Richard Webb was born June 9, 1939, in San Francisco and raised in Pasadena. His family was wealthy, and he soon came to abhor the family’s blueblood status and excesses.

He was sent to boarding school in Santa Barbara before going off to Williams College in Massachuse­tts, where he earned an English degree. Much like Benjamin, he returned home dispirited.

Living off a writing grant, he spend the next two years in the gloom of a Colorado Street bowling alley writing “The Graduate.” It was largely a mirror of his own life.

Over the years he moved continuall­y. He bought a bungalow in West Hollywood but found owning the place “unexplaina­bly oppressive” and asked the Realtor to give it to someone else. He bought a three-story house in Massachuse­tts but tired of it after a few weeks and gave it to the Audubon Society. He bought another in upstate New York and promptly gave it away, he thinks to Friends of the Earth.

Webb and his wife lived an unconventi­onal life, sometimes traveling around the country in a VW bus or sheltering in a campground. At one point they moved to a nudist colony in the south of France. The two divorced, but only to protest the convention­s of marriage, and then remarried to smooth the immigratio­n process to Britain in 1998. At some point Eve changed her name to Fred in solidarity with a support group of men named Fred who claimed to suffer low self-esteem. The couple remained together until her death several years ago.

In a 2008 article for The Times, journalist William Georgiades found Webb to be a remarkable sunny, upbeat soul.

“Webb has such an easygoing charm about him, such a friendly and sincere presence, that he renders his circumstan­ces as logical and reasonable,” he wrote.

Asked about his curious life, Webb just shrugged.

“People in the arts are not allowed to lead normal lives,” he said. “They either have to be super rich, thinking about their mansions, or penniless like me. But they’re not allowed to lead lives like everyone else.”

 ?? Tom Wagner For The Times ?? AN ENIGMA TO THE END Despite success, Webb eschewed wealth and lived in poverty. To him, it was a “purifying experience.”
Tom Wagner For The Times AN ENIGMA TO THE END Despite success, Webb eschewed wealth and lived in poverty. To him, it was a “purifying experience.”

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