Douglass Wallop
American writer

Douglass Wallop

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American writer
Gender:
Male
Birth:
8 March 1920(Washington, D.C., USA)
Death:
1 April 1985(Washington, D.C., USA)
Star sign:
Education:
University of Maryland
Family:
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The details
Biography

Introduction

John Douglass Wallop III (8 March 1920 – 1 April 1985) was an American novelist and playwright.

Early life

On March 8, 1920, Wallop was born as John Douglass Wallop III in Washington, DC. Wallop's parents were John Douglass Wallop Jr., an insurance agent, and Marjorie Ellis Wallop.

Education

Wallop graduated from the University of Maryland in 1942, where he served as editor of "The Old Line", a student-run literary and humor magazine.

Career

His first novel, 1953's Night Light, concerns a father's search into the background of his child's murderer. Anne Brooks of the New York Herald Tribune Book Review said he "created characters who are both real and colorful, and he has delved into a maniac's mind with considerable understanding." R.G. Peck wrote an article for the Chicago Sunday Tribune and said it was the "first novel that's well constructed, carefully written, and free of painful mannerisms." Al Hine of the Saturday Review said it's a "novel that is moving and tautly interesting from first page to last. Mr. Wallop writes fluently and without affectation, even when he is exploring the subcellars of bop."

He authored 13 works but is most famous for The Year the Yankees Lost the Pennant (1954), which was adapted by Wallop and George Abbott into the Tony Award-winning musical Damn Yankees.

Awards

  • 1956 Tony Award Damn Yankees
  • Book of the Month Club
    • The Year the Yankees Lost the Pennant
    • The Good Life
  • Reader's Digest Condensed Books
    • The Year the Yankees Lost the Pennant
    • So This Is What Happened to Charlie Moe

Personal life

On January 6, 1949 Wallop married writer and actress Lucille Fletcher. They remained together until his death. Wallop interests included chess, sailing, music and woodworking.