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Charlotte Armstrong

Charlotte Armstrong Lewi (May 2, 1905 – July 18, 1969)[1] was an American writer. Under the names Charlotte Armstrong and Jo Valentine she wrote 29 novels, as well as short stories, plays, and screenplays.[2] She also worked for The New York Times' advertising department, as a fashion reporter for Breath of the Avenue (a buyer's guide), and in an accounting firm.[3] Additionally, she worked for the New Yorker magazine, publishing only three poems for them.

Charlotte Armstrong
Born(1905-05-02)May 2, 1905
Vulcan, Michigan
DiedJuly 18, 1969(1969-07-18) (aged 64)
Glendale, California
Pen nameJo Valentine
Education
Genre
  • Mystery
  • suspense
  • fantasy
Notable awardsEdgar Award
1957 A Dram of Poison
Spouse
Joseph Lewi
(m. 1928)
Children3

Personal life

Born as Charlotte Armstrong on May 2, 1905 in Vulcan, Michigan. She was the daughter of mining engineer Frank Hall Armstrong and Clara Pascoe Armstrong. She graduated from Vulcan High School in Vulcan, Michigan in June 1921 just after she turned 16 years old. She attended the junior college program at Ferry Hall in Lake Forest, Illinois, for one year (1921–1922), during which time she served as editor of the student publication, Ferry Tales. She attended the University of Wisconsin for two years and received a Bachelor of Arts degree from Barnard College in 1925.[4] During her time at The New York Times, she met Joseph (Jack) Lewi, whom she married in 1928. She had a daughter and two sons.

Career

Armstrong's publications generally followed one of two tracks. All of her novels were published by Coward-Mccan, even The Protege, which was published posthumously.[5] Armstrong's short stories, however, were published in magazines. Most of these stories were published in Ellery-Queen's Mystery Magazine, but some others were published in The Saturday Evening Post and Argosy magazine.

In September 1952, Armstrong's fantasy novella, Three Day Magic (1948) was published in longer form in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction. The long version was reprinted in the 1979 anthology, Mysterious Visions, by Martin H. Greenberg, Joseph Olander, and Charles G. Waugh. The editors remarked in their introduction that it was a "powerful and almost forgotten novella" that demonstrated that, although the well-known mystery writer was "most famous for suspense and style," she could have "become equally famous for humor and style."[6]

Style and themes

In 1939, while living in Cape Cod, Massachusetts, Charlotte Armstrong began her career as a writer with the plays The Happiest Days and Ring Around Elizabeth. Both made it to Broadway, but The Happiest Days flopped, and Ring Around Elizabeth did not perform well either. This lack of success prompted Armstrong to shift to mystery fiction with Lay On, Mac Duff! (1942), The Case of the Weird Sisters (1943) and The Innocent Flower (1945), a trilogy featuring detective MacDougal Duff. Her successful entrance into suspense with The Unsuspected was a boost to her career, and soon she was recognized as pioneer of domestic suspense.[7] Later adapted into the film Talk About a Stranger, Charlotte Armstrong's 1951 novel The Enemy is a good example of Armstrong work in the genre.

Many of Armstrong's novels, such as The Enemy, also include hidden political allegories.[8] In these stories, characters group into mobs to try to solve the mysteries. Mobs tend to jump to the first proposed conclusion, and in the process ignore any contradictions. Around the same time, fear of Communist influence in American institutions and the infiltration of Soviet spies started the McCarthy era. During this time, hundreds of Americans were accused of being communist or working with communists despite questionable and usually exaggerated evidence, leading to destroyed careers and unemployment. In The Enemy, mob rule is prevalent as people ignored evidence, paralleling McCarthyism as it dominated politics at the time. These elements of McCarthyism are also present in her 1951 novel Mischief, which was adapted into the film Don't Bother to Knock, directed by Roy Baker.

Legacy

In recognition of her work, the house which Armstrong moved to and lived in until death in Glendale, California, became known as the "Charlotte Armstrong House."[9] In 1965, the Howard Gotlieb Archival Research Center reached out to Armstrong and requested to be the repository of all of her works. Armstrong obliged and now the Gotlieb Center serves as the best body for retrieving any of Armstrong's works. Furthermore, around 1956, Armstrong and her family put together a collection of works about her and her family, titled, Charlotte Armstrong, A Master Storyteller Remembered.

It seems Armstrong was not able to finish her own autobiography due to her early passing, but in 2008, Rick Cypert authored a biography of Armstrong which dictated her personal and professional life titled The Virtue of Suspense: The Life and Works of Charlotte Armstrong. Additionally, Mysterious Press made 13 of Armstrong's novels accessible by e-book.

Awards

In 1957, Armstrong received an Edgar Award from the Mystery Writers of America for her novel A Dram of Poison.[2] She wrote two other Edgar-nominated novels: The Gift Shop (1966) and Lemon in the Basket (1967). Three of her short stories, all published in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, were nominated for Edgars: "And Already Lost" (1957), "The Case for Miss Peacock" (1965), and "The Splintered Monday" (1966).[10]

Publications

  • "The Albatross"
  • "The Enemy"
  • "Laugh It Off"
  • "What Would You Have Done?"
  • "All the Way Home"
  • "The Evening Hour"
  • "The Hedge Between"
  • "Ten Points for Mr. Polkinghorn"
  • "Miss Murphy"
  • "Ride with the Executioner"
  • Incident at a Corner, 1957
  • Something Blue, 1959
  • The Seventeen Widows of San Souci, 1959
  • The Girl with a Secret, 1959
  • The Ring in the Fish, 1959
  • Then Came Two Women, 1962
  • The One-Faced Girl, 1963
  • The Mark of the Hand, 1963
  • The Witch's House, 1963
  • Who's Been Sitting in My Chair?, 1963
  • A Little Less Than Kind, 1964
  • Run--If You Can, 1964
  • The Turret Room, 1965
  • Dream of Fair Woman, 1966
  • I See You, 1966 (short story collection)
  • "At the Circus"
  • "The World Turned Upside Down"
  • "The Enemy"
  • "Miss Murphy"
  • "Motto Day"
  • "The Weight of the Word"
  • "The Conformers"
  • "How They Met"
  • "I See You"
  • The Gift Shop, 1966
  • Lemon in the Basket, 1967
  • The Balloon Man, 1968
  • Seven Seats to the Moon, 1969
  • The Protege, 1970
  • Night Call and Other Stories of Suspense, ed. Rick Cypert and Kirby McCauley, Crippen & Landru Publishers, 2014
  • "Mink Coat, Very Cheap"
  • "From Out of the Garden"
  • "Protector of Travelers"
  • "The Other Shoe"
  • "A Matter of Timing"
  • "The Splintered Monday"
  • "The Case for Miss Peacock"
  • "The Cool Ones"
  • "Night Call"
  • "More Than One Kind of Luck"
  • "St. Patrick's Day in the Morning"
  • "The Light Next Door"
  • "The Vise"
  • "The Second Commandment"
  • "Man in the Road"

Filmography

Screenplays

  • "Incident at a Corner", episode of Startime, dir. Alfred Hitchcock, 1959
  • "The Summer Hero," episode of The Chevy Mystery Show, 1960
  • Three episodes of Alfred Hitchcock Presents: "Sybilla" (dir. Ida Lupino); "The Five-Forty-Eight" (adapted from the John Cheever short story); and "Across the Threshold", 1960
  • The Mark of the Hand was adapted for an episode of the Thriller television series.[12]

Film adaptations of Armstrong's novels and stories

References

  1. ^ "Charlotte Armstrong, Author Of Mystery Tales, Dies at 64". The New York Times. July 20, 1969. p. 57.
  2. ^ a b Wright, Erica (October 12, 2018). "The Book You Have Read: "A Dram of Poison," by Charlotte Armstrong". The Rap Sheet. The Rap Sheet. Retrieved October 13, 2018.
  3. ^ "Charlotte Armstrong". detective-fiction.com. Retrieved August 26, 2022.
  4. ^ Swartley, Ariel (April 30, 1999). . LA Weekly. Archived from the original on September 11, 2005.
  5. ^ "Charlotte Armstrong | Women Crime Writers of the 1940s and 50s". womencrime.loa.org. Retrieved September 27, 2019.
  6. ^ Davin, Eric Leif. (2006). Partners in wonder : women and the birth of science fiction, 1926-1965. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books. pp. 369–370. ISBN 978-0-7391-5868-5. OCLC 607833865.
  7. ^ Unger, Lisa. "Mischief by Charlotte Armstrong | Women Crime Writers of the 1940s and 50s". womencrime.loa.org. Retrieved February 14, 2019.
  8. ^ "Armstrong, Charlotte". gadetection.pbworks.com. Retrieved February 14, 2019.
  9. ^ "About Charlotte Armstrong". Charlotte Armstrong - Mystery and Suspense Writer. Retrieved September 27, 2019.
  10. ^ "Category List – Best Short Story | Edgar® Awards Info & Database". edgarawards.com. Retrieved August 26, 2022.
  11. ^ a b c Khan, Irman (January 29, 2015). "Perilous Discoveries: The Feminist Murder-Mysteries of Charlotte Armstrong". PopMatters. Retrieved October 13, 2018.
  12. ^ Warren, Alan (April 14, 2004). This Is a Thriller: An Episode Guide, History and Analysis of the Classic 1960s Television Series. McFarland. p. 33. ISBN 978-0-7864-1969-2.

Further reading

  • Burke, Jan (Summer 2007). "The Last Word: The Mean Streets of the Suburbs, the Kindness of Strangers—A Tribute to Charlotte Armstrong". Clues: A Journal of Detection. Vol. 25, no. 4. pp. 65–69. Archived from the original on June 29, 2013.
  • Cypert, Rick (2008). The Virtue of Suspense: The Life and Works of Charlotte Armstrong. Selinsgrove: Susquehanna University Press. ISBN 978-1-57591-122-9.

External links

charlotte, armstrong, baseball, player, baseball, lewi, 1905, july, 1969, american, writer, under, names, valentine, wrote, novels, well, short, stories, plays, screenplays, also, worked, york, times, advertising, department, fashion, reporter, breath, avenue,. For the baseball player see Charlotte Armstrong baseball Charlotte Armstrong Lewi May 2 1905 July 18 1969 1 was an American writer Under the names Charlotte Armstrong and Jo Valentine she wrote 29 novels as well as short stories plays and screenplays 2 She also worked for The New York Times advertising department as a fashion reporter for Breath of the Avenue a buyer s guide and in an accounting firm 3 Additionally she worked for the New Yorker magazine publishing only three poems for them Charlotte ArmstrongBorn 1905 05 02 May 2 1905Vulcan MichiganDiedJuly 18 1969 1969 07 18 aged 64 Glendale CaliforniaPen nameJo ValentineEducationBarnard CollegeUniversity of WisconsinGenreMysterysuspensefantasyNotable awardsEdgar Award 1957 A Dram of PoisonSpouseJoseph Lewi m 1928 wbr Children3 Contents 1 Personal life 2 Career 3 Style and themes 4 Legacy 5 Awards 6 Publications 7 Filmography 7 1 Screenplays 7 2 Film adaptations of Armstrong s novels and stories 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksPersonal life EditBorn as Charlotte Armstrong on May 2 1905 in Vulcan Michigan She was the daughter of mining engineer Frank Hall Armstrong and Clara Pascoe Armstrong She graduated from Vulcan High School in Vulcan Michigan in June 1921 just after she turned 16 years old She attended the junior college program at Ferry Hall in Lake Forest Illinois for one year 1921 1922 during which time she served as editor of the student publication Ferry Tales She attended the University of Wisconsin for two years and received a Bachelor of Arts degree from Barnard College in 1925 4 During her time at The New York Times she met Joseph Jack Lewi whom she married in 1928 She had a daughter and two sons Career EditArmstrong s publications generally followed one of two tracks All of her novels were published by Coward Mccan even The Protege which was published posthumously 5 Armstrong s short stories however were published in magazines Most of these stories were published in Ellery Queen s Mystery Magazine but some others were published in The Saturday Evening Post and Argosy magazine In September 1952 Armstrong s fantasy novella Three Day Magic 1948 was published in longer form in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction The long version was reprinted in the 1979 anthology Mysterious Visions by Martin H Greenberg Joseph Olander and Charles G Waugh The editors remarked in their introduction that it was a powerful and almost forgotten novella that demonstrated that although the well known mystery writer was most famous for suspense and style she could have become equally famous for humor and style 6 Style and themes EditIn 1939 while living in Cape Cod Massachusetts Charlotte Armstrong began her career as a writer with the plays The Happiest Days and Ring Around Elizabeth Both made it to Broadway but The Happiest Days flopped and Ring Around Elizabeth did not perform well either This lack of success prompted Armstrong to shift to mystery fiction with Lay On Mac Duff 1942 The Case of the Weird Sisters 1943 and The Innocent Flower 1945 a trilogy featuring detective MacDougal Duff Her successful entrance into suspense with The Unsuspected was a boost to her career and soon she was recognized as pioneer of domestic suspense 7 Later adapted into the film Talk About a Stranger Charlotte Armstrong s 1951 novel The Enemy is a good example of Armstrong work in the genre Many of Armstrong s novels such as The Enemy also include hidden political allegories 8 In these stories characters group into mobs to try to solve the mysteries Mobs tend to jump to the first proposed conclusion and in the process ignore any contradictions Around the same time fear of Communist influence in American institutions and the infiltration of Soviet spies started the McCarthy era During this time hundreds of Americans were accused of being communist or working with communists despite questionable and usually exaggerated evidence leading to destroyed careers and unemployment In The Enemy mob rule is prevalent as people ignored evidence paralleling McCarthyism as it dominated politics at the time These elements of McCarthyism are also present in her 1951 novel Mischief which was adapted into the film Don t Bother to Knock directed by Roy Baker Legacy EditIn recognition of her work the house which Armstrong moved to and lived in until death in Glendale California became known as the Charlotte Armstrong House 9 In 1965 the Howard Gotlieb Archival Research Center reached out to Armstrong and requested to be the repository of all of her works Armstrong obliged and now the Gotlieb Center serves as the best body for retrieving any of Armstrong s works Furthermore around 1956 Armstrong and her family put together a collection of works about her and her family titled Charlotte Armstrong A Master Storyteller Remembered It seems Armstrong was not able to finish her own autobiography due to her early passing but in 2008 Rick Cypert authored a biography of Armstrong which dictated her personal and professional life titled The Virtue of Suspense The Life and Works of Charlotte Armstrong Additionally Mysterious Press made 13 of Armstrong s novels accessible by e book Awards EditIn 1957 Armstrong received an Edgar Award from the Mystery Writers of America for her novel A Dram of Poison 2 She wrote two other Edgar nominated novels The Gift Shop 1966 and Lemon in the Basket 1967 Three of her short stories all published in Ellery Queen s Mystery Magazine were nominated for Edgars And Already Lost 1957 The Case for Miss Peacock 1965 and The Splintered Monday 1966 10 Publications EditThe Happiest Days 1939 play 11 Ring Around Elizabeth 1941 play Lay On Mac Duff 1942 11 The Case of the Weird Sisters 1943 The Innocent Flower 1945 also known as Death Filled the Glass The Unsuspected 1946 Coward McCann The Chocolate Cobweb 1948 Fatal Lady 1950 Mischief 1950 The Black Eyed Stranger 1951 Catch as Catch Can 1953 also known as Walk Out on Death The Trouble in Thor 1953 as Jo Valentine also known as And Sometimes Death The Better to Eat You 1954 also known as Murder s Nest A Gun is a Nervous Thing 1955 The Dream Walker 1955 also known as Alibi for Murder A Dram of Poison 1956 And Already Lost 1957 The Albatross 1957 short story collection The Albatross The Enemy Laugh It Off What Would You Have Done All the Way Home The Evening Hour The Hedge Between Ten Points for Mr Polkinghorn Miss Murphy Ride with the Executioner Incident at a Corner 1957 Something Blue 1959 The Seventeen Widows of San Souci 1959 The Girl with a Secret 1959 The Ring in the Fish 1959 Then Came Two Women 1962 The One Faced Girl 1963 The Mark of the Hand 1963 The Witch s House 1963 Who s Been Sitting in My Chair 1963 A Little Less Than Kind 1964 Run If You Can 1964 The Turret Room 1965 Dream of Fair Woman 1966 I See You 1966 short story collection At the Circus The World Turned Upside Down The Enemy Miss Murphy Motto Day The Weight of the Word The Conformers How They Met I See You The Gift Shop 1966 Lemon in the Basket 1967 The Balloon Man 1968 Seven Seats to the Moon 1969 The Protege 1970 Night Call and Other Stories of Suspense ed Rick Cypert and Kirby McCauley Crippen amp Landru Publishers 2014 Mink Coat Very Cheap From Out of the Garden Protector of Travelers The Other Shoe A Matter of Timing The Splintered Monday The Case for Miss Peacock The Cool Ones Night Call More Than One Kind of Luck St Patrick s Day in the Morning The Light Next Door The Vise The Second Commandment Man in the Road Filmography EditScreenplays Edit Incident at a Corner episode of Startime dir Alfred Hitchcock 1959 The Summer Hero episode of The Chevy Mystery Show 1960 Three episodes of Alfred Hitchcock Presents Sybilla dir Ida Lupino The Five Forty Eight adapted from the John Cheever short story and Across the Threshold 1960 The Mark of the Hand was adapted for an episode of the Thriller television series 12 Film adaptations of Armstrong s novels and stories Edit Merci pour le chocolat 2000 from the novel The Chocolate Cobweb dir Claude Chabrol 11 The Sitter 1991 from the novel Mischief dir Rick Berger La Rupture 1970 from the novel The Balloon Man dir Claude Chabrol Talk About a Stranger 1952 from the short story The Enemy Don t Bother to Knock 1952 from the novel Mischief dir Roy Baker The Three Weird Sisters 1948 from the novel The Case of the Weird Sisters dir Daniel Birt The Unsuspected 1947 dir Michael Curtiz References Edit Charlotte Armstrong Author Of Mystery Tales Dies at 64 The New York Times July 20 1969 p 57 a b Wright Erica October 12 2018 The Book You Have Read A Dram of Poison by Charlotte Armstrong The Rap Sheet The Rap Sheet Retrieved October 13 2018 Charlotte Armstrong detective fiction com Retrieved August 26 2022 Swartley Ariel April 30 1999 Guns and Roses The Women of Noir LA Weekly Archived from the original on September 11 2005 Charlotte Armstrong Women Crime Writers of the 1940s and 50s womencrime loa org Retrieved September 27 2019 Davin Eric Leif 2006 Partners in wonder women and the birth of science fiction 1926 1965 Lanham MD Lexington Books pp 369 370 ISBN 978 0 7391 5868 5 OCLC 607833865 Unger Lisa Mischief by Charlotte Armstrong Women Crime Writers of the 1940s and 50s womencrime loa org Retrieved February 14 2019 Armstrong Charlotte gadetection pbworks com Retrieved February 14 2019 About Charlotte Armstrong Charlotte Armstrong Mystery and Suspense Writer Retrieved September 27 2019 Category List Best Short Story Edgar Awards Info amp Database edgarawards com Retrieved August 26 2022 a b c Khan Irman January 29 2015 Perilous Discoveries The Feminist Murder Mysteries of Charlotte Armstrong PopMatters Retrieved October 13 2018 Warren Alan April 14 2004 This Is a Thriller An Episode Guide History and Analysis of the Classic 1960s Television Series McFarland p 33 ISBN 978 0 7864 1969 2 Further reading EditBurke Jan Summer 2007 The Last Word The Mean Streets of the Suburbs the Kindness of Strangers A Tribute to Charlotte Armstrong Clues A Journal of Detection Vol 25 no 4 pp 65 69 Archived from the original on June 29 2013 Cypert Rick 2008 The Virtue of Suspense The Life and Works of Charlotte Armstrong Selinsgrove Susquehanna University Press ISBN 978 1 57591 122 9 External links EditCharlotte Armstrong at IMDb Charlotte Armstrong at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database List of Charlotte Armstrong stories Charlotte Armstrong Manuscripts at Dartmouth College Library Charlotte Armstrong at Fantastic Fiction Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Charlotte Armstrong amp oldid 1163981486, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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