Texarkana Gazette

Scriptwrit­er Walter Bernstein dies at age 101

- By Adam Bernstein

Walter Bernstein, a scriptwrit­er who was blackliste­d in the 1950s for his Communist Party membership and two decades later skewered the McCarthy era in “The Front,” a film that starred Woody Allen in a rare semi-serious role and earned an Oscar nomination for best screenplay, died Jan. 23 at his home in Manhattan. He was 101.

The cause was pneumonia, said his wife, literary agent Gloria Loomis.

Bernstein first published in the New Yorker at 20 and distinguis­hed himself as a combat correspond­ent during World War II with the military weekly Yank. His best-selling book of war dispatches, “Keep Your Head Down” (1945), was lauded for its expertise with dialogue and propelled a film and TV writing career that lasted into his 90s.

He contribute­d to the Hollywood western “The Magnificen­t Seven” (1960) and movies such as “Fail-Safe” (1964), starring Henry Fonda as the U.S. president facing a nuclear holocaust, and “Semi-Tough” (1977), a comedy with Burt Reynolds and Kris Kristoffer­son as football players.

Bernstein also co-wrote “The Molly Maguires” (1970), starring Sean Connery as a 19th-century Pennsylvan­ia coal miner whose protests for better working conditions are violently suppressed. It was not a commercial success, even after Bernstein acceded to studio demands to tack on a love story. “It was very downbeat, I guess, for most people at the time,” he later told the Nomadic Press. “You know, the hero got hanged and the villain got rewarded.”

The son of a Brooklyn schoolteac­her, Bernstein came of age during the Depression and said he was drawn to communism to battle fascism in Europe as well as racial and economic injustices at home. Communism, he wrote in his 1996 memoir, “Inside Out,” “expressed what I wept for in movies, what moved and thrilled me the most: people fighting not only for themselves but for other people, and now for the whole world.”

He was one of many prominent figures whose livelihood­s and relationsh­ips were upended amid the Red Scare of the 1950s - an era of political witch hunts in which Bernstein’s phone was tapped, his garbage was rifled through, and he was trailed by the FBI. It was nearly impossible to get off the blacklist without denouncing other alleged communists, an option he could not stomach.

He said the perception of fear was pervasive, but he also found it laughable that anyone would suspect the communists he knew of plotting a violent overthrow of the government. “No one I knew in the Party ever dreamed of it,” Bernstein wrote in his book. “Our meetings might have been less boring if they had.”

Neverthele­ss, he became unemployab­le under his own name from 1950 to 1958, and he asked friends to act as “fronts” to shield his identity as a writer. His work, although not his name, appeared on prestigiou­s anthology shows such as “Studio One,” and he won awards he could not openly accept. At least one front earned a lucrative movie contract on the strength of Bernstein’s scripts. “Careers were made on my talent,” he acidly observed.

“The Front” (1976) was based on that time of political hysteria. He originally wrote the film as a straightfo­rward drama, but when he and a close friend, the once-blackliste­d director Martin Ritt, shopped it around Hollywood, they were told the subject was commercial poison.

It only was greenlight­ed after Bernstein retooled the script as a partial comedy, and Ritt persuaded Allen, the writer-director and comedy star who was then at his most bankable, to star.

“No responsibl­e person in the movie industry ever offered me a serious role before,” Allen quipped to the New York Times. “The reason I did ‘The Front’ was that the subject was worthwhile. Martin Ritt and Walter Bernstein lived through the blacklist and survived it with dignity, so I didn’t mind deferring to their judgment.”

Allen played a bookie who pretends, for a share of the profits, to be the author of TV scripts written by blackliste­d writers.

Reviews for “The Front” were uneven, with many critics noting its precarious hodgepodge of humor, tragedy and politics.

“Almost everything it does could have been done better,” Time magazine’s Richard Schickel wrote. “On the other hand, it is a very difficult movie to judge because it takes up a previously forbidden subject … and has the nerve, and grace, to take an absurdist view of that deplorable era.”

Walter Saul Bernstein was born in Brooklyn on Aug. 20, 1919. By his telling, he was a sports and film fanatic who had only passing awareness of world affairs before he was selected at 16 for a studyabroa­d program in France.

In Grenoble, he fell in with a group of English communists who engaged in impassione­d discussion­s about the plight of the proletaria­t and the fight against Nazism.

He published a short work of fiction in the New Yorker in 1939, leading to regular contributi­ons to the magazine’s “Reporter at Large” column after his Dartmouth College graduation the next year and his enlistment in the Army during World War II. The military made him a press agent for the Broadway show “This Is the Army,” Irving Berlin’s morale-boosting musical.

Bernstein was supposed to publicize how the active-duty service members in the cast were, in fact, working as hard as all other recruits. That seemed to be undermined by his New Yorker article showing a comedian who specialize­d in double-talk leading a calistheni­cs drill: “Inhale! Outhale! Sidehale!”

A humor-impaired colonel threatened Bernstein with a court-martial. But New Yorker editor Harold Ross intervened with his good friend George Marshall, the Army chief of staff. Bernstein soon obtaining a transfer to a new Army publicatio­n, Yank.

As a roving correspond­ent, he covered the brutal campaigns in Sicily and Italy. He also tramped a week over mountains in German-occupied Yugoslavia to obtain one of the first interviews by a U.S. newsman with the anti-fascist partisan revolution­ary Josip Broz Tito.

With the success of “Keep Your Head Down,” he was lured to Hollywood. He saw promise in the new medium of television, and his speed and versatilit­y as a writer made him attractive to producers. But assignment­s dried up in 1950 after his name appeared in the influentia­l anti-communist pamphlet Red Channels.

With the help of a sympatheti­c CBS producer, Bernstein concocted schemes to avoid detection by the panicky network brass on the lookout for communist writers.

Bernstein took a pseudonym, Paul Bauman. He and other blackliste­d scribes churned out story lines spotlighti­ng historic examples of intoleranc­e, intended as veiled commentari­es on the Red Scare. His own reprieve was expedited by a studio chief who needed Bernstein’s services on two Sophia Loren movies — “That Kind of Woman” (1959) and “Heller in Pink Tights” (1960).

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States