Las Vegas Review-Journal

Writer A.E. Hotchner, Hemingway pal, dies at 102

- By Hillel Italie The Associated Press

A.E. Hotchner, a well-traveled author, playwright and gadabout whose street smarts and famous pals led to a loving, but litigated memoir of Ernest Hemingway, business adventures with Paul Newman and a book about his Depression-era childhood that became a Steven Soderbergh film, died Saturday at age 102.

He died at his home in Westport, Connecticu­t, according to his son, Timothy Hotchner, who did not immediatel­y know the cause of death.

A.E. Hotchner, known to friends as “Ed” or “Hotch,” was an impish

St. Louis native and ex-marbles champ who read, wrote and hustled himself out of poverty and went on to publish more than a dozen books, befriend countless celebritie­s and see his play, “The White House,” performed at the real White House for President Bill Clinton. He was a natural fit for Elaine’s, the former Manhattan nightspot for the famous and the near-famous, and contribute­d the text for “Everyone Comes to Elaine’s,” an illustrate­d history. Hotchner’s other works included the novel “The Man Who Lived at the Ritz,” bestsellin­g biographie­s of Doris Day and Sophia Loren, and a musical, “Let ’Em Rot!” co-written with Cy Coleman.

In his 90s, he completed an upbeat book of essays on aging, “O.J. in the Morning, G&T at Night.” When he was 100, he wrote the detective novel “The Amazing Adventures of Aaron Broom.” At 101, he adapted Hemingway’s “The Old Man and the Sea” for the stage.

The son of a furrier who went broke during the Depression, Aaron Edward Hotchner was born in 1917 in St. Louis, a city he would recall with deep affection despite times so dire he claimed to have eaten paper to fight hunger. Hotchner wrote about his youth in “King of the Hill,” published in 1972 and adapted 20 years later into a Soderbergh film of the same name.

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A.E. Hotchner

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