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Edgar Wallace

Richard Horatio Edgar Wallace (1 April 1875 – 10 February 1932) was a British writer.

Edgar Wallace
Wallace in 1928
Born
Richard Horatio Edgar Wallace

(1875-04-01)1 April 1875
Greenwich, Kent, England
Died10 February 1932(1932-02-10) (aged 56)
NationalityBritish
Occupation(s)Crime writer, war correspondent, journalist, novelist, screenwriter, and playwright
Known forCreation of King Kong
Spouse(s)
Ivy Maude Caldecott
(m. 1901; div. 1918)

Ethel Violet King
(m. 1921)

Born into poverty as an illegitimate London child, Wallace left school at the age of 12. He joined the army at age 21 and was a war correspondent during the Second Boer War for Reuters and the Daily Mail. Struggling with debt, he left South Africa, returned to London and began writing thrillers to raise income, publishing books including The Four Just Men (1905). Drawing on his time as a reporter in the Congo, covering the Belgian atrocities, Wallace serialised short stories in magazines such as The Windsor Magazine and later published collections such as Sanders of the River (1911). He signed with Hodder and Stoughton in 1921 and became an internationally recognised author.

After an unsuccessful bid to stand as Liberal MP for Blackpool (as one of David Lloyd George's Independent Liberals) in the 1931 general election, Wallace moved to Hollywood, where he worked as a script writer for RKO. He died suddenly from undiagnosed diabetes, during the initial drafting of King Kong (1933).

Wallace was such a prolific writer that one of his publishers claimed that a quarter of all books in England were written by him.[1] As well as journalism, Wallace wrote screen plays, poetry, historical non-fiction, 18 stage plays, 957 short stories and over 170 novels, 12 in 1929 alone. More than 160 films have been made of Wallace's work.[2]

In addition to his work on King Kong, he is remembered as a writer of "the colonial imagination", for the J. G. Reeder detective stories, and for The Green Archer serial. He sold over 50 million copies of his combined works in various editions and The Economist in 1997 describes him as "one of the most prolific thriller writers of [the 20th] century", although the great majority of his books are out of print in the UK, but are still read in Germany.[3][4] A 50-minute German TV documentary was made in 1963 called The Edgar Wallace Story, which featured his son Bryan Edgar Wallace.

Life and work

Ancestry and birth

Wallace's great-grandfather was entertainer James Henry Marriott, and his grandmother was actress Alice Marriott.[5] Wallace was born at 7 Ashburnham Grove, Greenwich, to actors Richard Horatio Marriott Edgar (1847–1894) and Mary Jane "Polly" Richards, née Blair (born 1843).[6][7][8]

Wallace's mother's family had been in show business, and she worked in the theatre as a stagehand, usherette, and bit-part actress until she married in 1867. Her husband, Captain Joseph Richards, was born in 1838; he was from Irish family. He and his father John Richards were both Merchant Navy captains, and his mother Catherine Richards came from a mariner family. Joseph died at sea in 1868, leaving his pregnant wife destitute. After the birth of Wallace's older sibling, his mother returned to the stage, assuming the stage name "Polly" Richards. In 1872, she met and joined the Marriott family theatre troupe, managed by Alice Marriott, her husband Richard Edgar, and her three adult children (from earlier liaisons), Grace, Adeline and Richard Horatio Marriott Edgar.[9]

Wallace's parents had a "broom cupboard" style sexual encounter during an after-show party. Discovering she was pregnant, his mother invented a fictitious obligation in Greenwich that would last at least half a year and obtained a room in a boarding house where she lived until her son's birth, on 1 April 1875.[10] During her confinement she had asked her midwife to find a couple to foster the child. The midwife introduced Wallace's mother to her close friend, Mrs Freeman, a mother of ten children, whose husband George Freeman was a Billingsgate fishmonger. On 9 April 1875, his mother took Wallace to the semi-literate Freeman family, and made arrangements to visit often.[citation needed]

Childhood and early career

Wallace, then known as Richard Horatio Edgar Freeman, had a happy childhood and a close bond with 20-year-old Clara Freeman, who became a second mother to him. By 1878, his mother could no longer afford the small sum she had been paying the Freemans to care for her son and, instead of placing the boy in the workhouse, the Freemans adopted him.[6] His mother never visited Wallace again as a child. His foster-father George Freeman was determined to ensure Richard received a good education, and for some time Wallace attended St. Alfege with St. Peter's, a boarding school in Peckham,[7] but he played truant and then left full-time education at the age of 12.[6]

By his early teens, Wallace had held down numerous jobs such as newspaper-seller at Ludgate Circus near Fleet Street, milk-delivery boy, rubber factory worker, shoe shop assistant, and ship's cook. A plaque at Ludgate Circus commemorates Wallace's first encounter with the newspaper business.[6][7] He was dismissed from his job on the milk run for stealing money.[10] In 1894, he became engaged to a local Deptford girl, Edith Anstree, but broke the engagement and enlisted in the infantry.

Wallace registered in the British Army under the name Edgar Wallace, after the author of Ben-Hur, Lew Wallace.[6][7][10] At the time the medical records register him as having a 33-inch chest and being stunted from his childhood spent in the slums.[10] He was posted to South Africa with the West Kent Regiment, in 1896.[7] He disliked army life but managed to arrange a transfer to the Royal Army Medical Corps, which was less arduous but more unpleasant, and so transferred again to the Press Corps, which he found suited him better.[10]

1898–1918

 
Edgar Wallace c. 1898–1902

Wallace began publishing songs and poetry, much inspired by Rudyard Kipling, whom he met in Cape Town in 1898. Wallace's first book of ballads, The Mission that Failed!, was published that same year. In 1899, he bought his way out of the forces and turned to writing full time.[6] Remaining in Africa, he became a war correspondent, first for Reuters and then the Daily Mail (1900) and other periodicals during the Boer War.

In 1901, while in South Africa, Wallace married Ivy Maude Caldecott (1880?–1926),[6] although her father Reverend William Shaw Caldecott, a Wesleyan missionary, was strongly opposed to the marriage. The couple's first child, Eleanor Clare Hellier Wallace, died suddenly from meningitis in 1903, and the couple returned to London soon afterwards, deeply in debt.[6][11]

In London, Wallace worked for the Mail and began writing detective stories in a bid to earn quick money. A son, Bryan Edgar Wallace, was born in 1904 followed by a daughter, Patricia, in 1908.[6] In 1903, Wallace met his birth mother Polly, whom he had never known. Terminally ill, 60 years old, and living in poverty, she came to him to ask for money and was turned away. Polly died in the Bradford Infirmary later that year.[12]

 
Plaque in Fleet Street, London, commemorating Edgar Wallace who worked there for the Daily Mail before finding fame as an author.

Unable to find any backer for his first book, Wallace set up his own publishing company, Tallis Press, which issued the thriller The Four Just Men (1905). Despite promotion in the Mail and good sales, the project was financially mismanaged, and Wallace had to be bailed out by the Mail's proprietor Alfred Harmsworth, who was anxious that the farrago might reflect badly on his newspaper.[6] Problems were compounded when inaccuracies in Wallace's reporting led to libel suits being brought against the Mail. Wallace was fired in 1907, the first reporter ever to be fired from the paper, and he found no other paper would employ him, given his reputation. The family lived continuously in a state of near-bankruptcy, Ivy having to sell her jewellery for food.[6]

During 1907, Edgar travelled to the Congo Free State, to report on atrocities committed against the Congolese under King Leopold II of Belgium and the Belgian rubber companies, in which up to 15 million Congolese were killed.[6] Isabel Thorne, of the Weekly Tale-Teller penny magazine, invited Wallace to serialise stories inspired by his experiences. These were published as his first collection Sanders of the River (1911), a best seller, and in 1935 it was adapted into an eponymous film, starring Paul Robeson. Wallace went on to publish 11 more similar collections (102 stories). They were tales of exotic adventure and local tribal rites, set on an African river, mostly without love interest as this held no appeal for Wallace. His first 28 books and their film rights he sold outright, with no royalties, for quick money.[6] Critic David Pringle noted in 1987: "The Sanders Books are not frequently reprinted nowadays, perhaps because of their overt racism".[13]

The period from 1908 to 1932 was the most prolific of Wallace's life. Initially, he wrote mainly in order to satisfy creditors in the UK and South Africa. However, his books' success began to rehabilitate his reputation as a journalist, and he began reporting from horse racing circles. He wrote for the Week-End and the Evening News, became an editor for Week-End Racing Supplement, started his own racing papers Bibury's and R. E. Walton's Weekly, and bought many racehorses of his own. He lost many thousands gambling, and despite his success, spent large sums on an extravagant lifestyle he could not afford.[6]

During 1916, Ivy had her third and last child by Edgar, Michael Blair Wallace, and filed for divorce in 1918.[6]

1918–1929

Ivy moved to Tunbridge Wells with the children, and Wallace drew closer to his secretary Ethel Violet King (1896–1933), daughter of banker Frederick King. They married in 1921; their daughter Margaret Penelope June (known as Penny Wallace) was born in 1923.[14]

Wallace began to take his fiction writing career more seriously and signed with publishers Hodder and Stoughton in 1921, organising his contracts, instead of selling rights to his work piecemeal in order to raise funds. This allowed him advances, royalties, and full scale promotional campaigns for his books, which he had never before had. The publisher aggressively advertised him as a celebrity writer, "King of Thrillers", known for this trademark trilby, cigarette holder, and yellow Rolls-Royce. He was said to be able to write a 70,000 word novel in three days and plough through three novels at once, and the publishers agreed to publish everything he wrote as fast as he could write it. In 1928, it was estimated that one in four books being read in the UK had come from Wallace's pen. He wrote across many genres including science fiction, screen plays, and a non-fiction ten-volume history of the First World War. All told, he wrote over 170 novels, 18 stage plays, and 957 short stories, and his works were translated into 28 languages.[6][10][15][16] The critic Wheeler Winston Dixon suggests that Wallace became somewhat of a public joke for this prodigious output.[17]

Wallace served as chairman of the Press Club, which continues to present an annual Edgar Wallace Award for excellence in writing.[6] Following the great success of his novel The Ringer, Wallace was appointed chairman of the British Lion Film Corporation in return for giving British Lion first option on all his output.[18] Wallace's contract gave him an annual salary, a substantial block of stock in the company, a large stipend from everything British Lion produced based on his work, plus 10% of British Lion's overall annual profits. Additionally, British Lion employed his elder son, Bryan E. Wallace, as a film editor. By 1929, Wallace's earnings were almost £50,000 per annum (equivalent to about £2 million in current terms). He also invented at this time the Luncheon Club,[clarification needed] bringing together his two greatest loves: journalism and horse-racing.[citation needed]

Firsts

Wallace was the first British crime novelist to use policemen as his protagonists, rather than amateur sleuths as most other writers of the time did. Most of his novels are independent stand-alone stories; he seldom used series heroes, and when he did he avoided a strict story order, so that continuity was not required from book to book.

On 6 June 1923, Edgar Wallace became the first British radio sports reporter, when he made a report on The Derby for the British Broadcasting Company, the newly founded predecessor of the BBC.

Ivy's death

Wallace's ex-wife Ivy was diagnosed with breast cancer in 1923, and though the tumour was successfully removed, it returned terminally by 1925, and she died in 1926.

"The Canker In Our Midst"

Wallace wrote a controversial article in the Daily Mail in 1926 entitled "The Canker In Our Midst" about paedophilia and the show business world.[19] Describing how some show business people unwittingly leave their children vulnerable to predators, it linked paedophilia with homosexuality and outraged many of his colleagues, publishing associates, and business friends including theatre mogul Gerald du Maurier. Biographer Margaret Lane describes it as an "intolerant, blustering, kick-the-blighters-down-the-stairs" type of essay, even by the standards of the day.[20]

Politics, emigration to the U.S., and screenwriting

Wallace became active in the Liberal Party and contested Blackpool in the 1931 general election as one of a handful of Independent Liberals, who rejected the National Government, and the official Liberal support for it, and strongly supported free trade.[6] He also bought the Sunday News, edited it for six months, and wrote a theatre column, before it closed.[21] In the event, he lost the election by over 33,000 votes. He went to America, burdened by debt, in November 1931. Around the same time, he wrote the screenplay for the first sound film adaptation of The Hound of the Baskervilles (1932), produced in England by Gainsborough Pictures.

He moved to Hollywood and began working as a "script doctor" for RKO.[6] His later play, The Green Pack, opened to excellent reviews, boosting his status even further. Wallace wanted to get his own work on Hollywood celluloid, and so he adapted books such as The Four Just Men and Mr J G Reeder. In Hollywood, Wallace met Stanley Holloway's scriptwriter, Wallace's own half-brother Marriott Edgar. Wallace's play On the Spot, written about gangster Al Capone, would prove to be the writer's greatest theatrical success. It was described by Jack Adrian as "arguably, in construction, dialogue, action, plot and resolution, still one of the finest and purest of 20th-century melodramas".[22] It launched the career of Charles Laughton, who played the lead Capone character Tony Perelli.[22]

Death and aftermath

Death

In December 1931, Wallace was assigned work on the RKO "gorilla picture" (King Kong, 1933) for producer Merian C. Cooper. By late January, however, he was beginning to suffer sudden, severe headaches and was diagnosed with diabetes. His condition deteriorated within days. Violet booked passage to California on a liner out of Southampton, but received word that Edgar had slipped into a coma and died of the condition, combined with double pneumonia, on 10 February 1932 in North Maple Drive, Beverly Hills.[6] The flags on Fleet Street's newspaper offices flew at half-mast, and the bell of St. Bride's tolled in mourning.[10] His body was returned to England and he was buried at Little Marlow Cemetery, Fern Lane, Buckinghamshire, not far from his UK country home, Chalklands, in Bourne End.[23]

Aftermath

Despite his later success, Wallace had amassed massive debts, some still remaining from his years in South Africa, many to racing bookies. The large royalties from his greatly popular works allowed the estate to be settled within two years.[6][10]

Violet Wallace outlived her husband by only 14 months. She died suddenly in April 1933, aged 33, while the estate was still deep in debt.[citation needed]

Legacy

 
The Edgar Wallace pub, Essex Street, off Strand, London

Violet Wallace's own will left her share of the Wallace estate to her daughter Penelope (1923–1997), herself an author of mystery and crime novels, who became the chief benefactor and shareholder. Penelope married George Halcrow in 1955. The couple ran the Wallace estate, managing her father's literary legacy and starting the Edgar Wallace Society in 1969.[10] The work is continued by Penelope's daughter, also named Penelope. The Society has members in 20 countries. The literary body is currently managed by the London agency A.P. Watt.

Wallace's eldest son Bryan Edgar Wallace (1904–1971) was also an author of mystery and crime novels. In 1934, Bryan married Margaret Lane (1907–94), also a writer.[24] Lane's biography of Edgar Wallace was published in 1938[25]

The Edgar Wallace Mystery Magazine was a monthly digest-size fiction magazine specializing in crime and detective fiction. It published 35 issues from 1964 to 1967. Each issue contained original works of short crime or mystery fiction as well as reprints by authors like Wallace, Chekhov, Steinbeck, and Agatha Christie.

More than 160 films and several radio adaptations have been made based on Wallace's work.[2][18] Wallace also has a pub named after him in Essex Street, off Strand in London.

Writing

Method

Wallace narrated his words onto wax cylinders (the dictaphones of the day) and his secretaries typed up the text. This may be why he was able to work at such high speed and why his stories have narrative drive. Many of Wallace's successful books were dictated like this over two or three days, locked away with cartons of cigarettes and endless pots of sweet tea, often working pretty much uninterrupted in 72 hours. Most of his novels were serialised in segments but written in this way. The serialised stories that were instead written piecemeal have a distinctly different narrative energy, not sweeping up the reader on the story wave.[26]

Wallace rarely edited his own work after it was dictated and typed up, but sent it straight to the publishers, intensely disliking the revision of his work with other editors. The company would do only cursory checks for factual errors before printing.[26]

Wallace faced widespread accusations that he used ghost writers to churn out books, though there is no evidence of this, and his prolificness became something of a joke, the subject of cartoons and sketches. His "three day books", reeled off to keep the loan sharks from the door, were unlikely to garner great critical praise and Wallace claimed not to find literary value in his own works.[27]

Themes and critique

Wallace characters such as District Commissioner Sanders can be taken to represent the values of colonial white supremacy in Africa, and now viewed by many critics as deeply racist and paternalistic. His writing has been attacked by some for its conception of Africans as stupid children who need a firm hand.[28] Sanders, for example, pledges to bring "civilisation" to "half a million cannibal folk".[10] George Orwell called Wallace a "bully worshipper" and "proto-fascist", though many critics conceived Wallace more as a populist writer who wrote for the market of the time.[10] Selling over 50 million copies of his works, including 170 novels, Wallace was very much a populist writer, and was dismissed by the literati as such.

Q. D. Leavis, Arnold Bennett and Dorothy L Sayers led the attack on Wallace, suggesting he offered no social critique or subversive agenda at all and distracting the reading public from better things.[29] Trotsky, reading a Wallace novel whilst recuperating on his sickbed in 1935, found it to be "mediocre, contemptible and crude ... [with no] shade of perception, talent or imagination."[30] Critics Steinbrunner and Penzler stated that Wallace's writing is "slapdash and cliché-ridden, [with] characterization that is two dimensional and situations [that] are frequently trite, relying on intuition, coincidence, and much pointless, confusing movement to convey a sense of action. The heroes and villains are clearly labelled, and stock characters, humorous servants, baffled policemen, breathless heroines, could be interchanged from one book to another."[31] The Oxford Companion to the Theatre asserts, however, that "In all his works [Wallace] showed unusual precision of detail, narrative skill, and inside knowledge of police methods and criminal psychology, the fruits of his apprenticeship as a crime reporter".[32]

Wallace did not use plot formulae, unlike many other thriller writers. The critic Wheeler Winston Dixon maintains that Wallace covered a wide variety of perspectives and characterisations, exploring themes such as feminist self-determination (Barbara on her Own 1926, Four-Square Jane 1929, The Girl from Scotland Yard 1926), upsetting peerage hierarchies (Chick, 1923), science fiction (The Day of Uniting, 1926), schizophrenia (The Man Who Knew, 1919) and autobiography (People, 1926).[26]

Science fiction

Edgar Wallace enjoyed writing science fiction but found little financial success in the genre despite several efforts. His constant need for income always brought him back to the more mundane styles of fiction that sold more easily.[33] Planetoid 127, first published in 1924 but reprinted as late as 2011,[34] is a short story about an Earth scientist who communicates via wireless with his counterpart on a duplicate Earth orbiting unseen because it is on the opposite side of the Sun. The idea of a "mirror Earth" or "mirror Universe" later became a standard subgenre within science fiction. The story also bears similarities to Rudyard Kipling's hard science fiction story "Wireless". Wallace's other science fiction works include The Green Rust, a story of bio-terrorists who threaten to release an agent that will destroy the world's corn crops, 1925, which accurately predicted that a short peace would be followed by a German attack on England, and The Black Grippe, about a disease that renders everyone in the world blind. His last work of science fiction and the only one widely remembered today is the screenplay for King Kong.

King Kong

 
The cover of the original 1932 screenplay for the film King Kong by Edgar Wallace entitled "Kong".

Out of the many scripts he penned for RKO, Merian C. Cooper's "gorilla picture" had the most lasting influence, becoming the classic King Kong (1933).

Wallace wrote the initial 110-page first draft for "The Beast" (the film's original title) over five weeks, from late December 1931 to January 1932.[35] In all, there were three draft versions, another titled "Kong". Kong was rejected as the film's title because it was too similar to another Cooper film, Chang, released in 1927, and because it sounded Chinese. Wallace suggested the title King Ape. His diary described the writing process for this draft: Cooper fed aspects of the story in conferences and phone conversations; Wallace then executed Cooper's ideas, the latter approving the developing script on a sequence-by-sequence basis. While working on the project, Cooper also screened various recent films for Wallace to put him in the right mindset, including Dracula (1931) and Frankenstein (1931). One of Cooper's main aspirations with the story was to use as much footage of an abandoned RKO picture with a similar premise, Creation, as possible. He showed Wallace the fragments that were to be reused in the current script.

Although the draft was incomplete, Wallace only made minor revisions to it, each at Cooper's request. In late January, Wallace was hospitalized, and by 10 February, he was dead, leaving Cooper without a screenwriter. The fragmentary nature of Wallace's script meant that the main dialogue-free action of the film (the jungle sequences) would have to be shot first, both as insurance and as a showreel for the board of RKO.

In My Hollywood Diary, Edgar Wallace wrote about the reception of his screenplay: "Cooper called me up last night and told me that everybody who had read 'Kong' was enthusiastic. They say it is the best adventure story that has ever been written for the screen."[36] Wallace had high expectations for the film: "I am certain that 'Kong' is going to be a wow."[37]

His screenplay begins with Denham and the party at the island, called "Vapour Island" by Wallace because of the volcanic emissions. Ann Darrow is called Shirley Redman in this early version. Jack Driscoll is also referred to as John Lanson or Johnny, and Captain Englehorn is much more domineering. Danby G. Denham is a promoter and a P. T. Barnum type showman who is looking for a giant ape to bring back to Madison Square Garden or the Polo Grounds to exhibit as a sideshow. The movie retains the Barnum theme when Denham, who evolved into Carl Denham in the Rose and Creelman treatment, refers to Kong as "the eighth wonder of the world", echoing Barnum's style of hyping acts. Wallace created the major characters, their relationships, and their role in the overall plot. He also created the story's beauty and the beast theme.

In his original screenplay, the crew of the boat consists of escaped convicts who kidnap Shirley. After a dinosaur attacks and wrecks their boat, they find refuge on the island. In a tent, a convict tries to rape Shirley. Kong appears, rescues Shirley and takes her away to his cave. Wallace says in a notation on the script that Kong is 30 feet tall, thus establishing Kong as a giant ape. John and the remaining convicts then go after Shirley, using a log to cross a ravine. Kong attacks them which leads to their deaths as the log crashes down the ravine. Kong fights and kills a triceratops. Dinosaurs and pterodactyls attack Kong and the party. Kong takes Shirley to his hideout in the mountains, and Jack rescues her. Using gas bombs, the expedition knocks out Kong.

Kong is brought back to New York and put in a cage. Shirley is attacked by lions and tigers let loose on purpose by Senorita. Kong kills the cats and whisks Shirley away. He climbs the Empire State Building where airplanes shoot at him. Cooper sent Wallace an internal memo from RKO suggesting that John dissuade the police from shooting Kong because of the danger to Shirley: "Please see if you consider it practical to work out theme that John attempts single handed rescue on top of Empire State Building if police will let off shooting for a minute." Kong is finally killed when lightning strikes the flag pole he is hanging on to. Early publicity stills for the movie have the title as "Kong" and "by Edgar Wallace" and show a lightning storm and flashes of lightning as envisioned by Wallace.

In his version, a small ape peeling a rose prefigured Kong's peeling away Shirley's clothes. His treatment also included an underwater scene from the attacking dinosaur's point of view as it approached a capsized boat.

However, his 110-page script was merely the first rough draft, not a final and completed shooting script.

After Wallace's death, Ruth Rose was brought in to work on the document he had started. She happened to be Schoedsack's wife and was able to translate the expectations of the producers into the final script. She added the ritual scene on Skull Island to replace Wallace's original idea of the attempted rape of Ann Darrow. Rose also added the opening scenes of the movie in which the main characters and plot are introduced. James Ashmore Creelman, who worked on the screenplay for The Most Dangerous Game, a film that Wallace was in discussions to write for at the time of his death, was also brought in to tidy up the script. The job of Rose and Creelman was to rework Wallace's original screenplay and replace scenes that failed to translate as expected.

The original Wallace screenplay was published in the 2013 book Ray Harryhausen – The Master of the Majicks, Volume 1: Beginnings and Endings by Mike Hankin.[38]

That original screenplay is analysed and discussed in The Girl in the Hairy Paw (1976), edited by Ronald Gottesman and Harry Geduld, and by Mark Cotta Vaz, in the preface to the Modern Library reissue of King Kong (2005).

In December 1932, Wallace's story and screenplay for King Kong were "novelised" or transcribed by Delos W. Lovelace, a journalist and author himself who knew Cooper from when they worked on a newspaper, and appeared in book form under the title King Kong. Lovelace based the transcription largely on the Ruth Rose and James A. Creelman screenplay. This "novelization" of King Kong, attributed to Wallace, Cooper, and Lovelace, was originally published by Grosset and Dunlap. The book was reissued in 2005 by the Modern Library, a division of Random House, with an introduction by Greg Bear and a preface by Mark Cotta Vaz, and by Penguin in the US. In the UK, Victor Gollancz published a hardcover version in 2005. The first paperback edition had been published by Bantam in 1965 in the US and by Corgi in 1966 in the UK. In 1976, Grosset and Dunlap republished the novel in paperback and hardcover editions. There were paperback editions by Tempo and by Futura that year as well. In 2005, Blackstone Audio released a spoken-word version of the book as an audiobook on CD with commentary by Ray Bradbury, Harlan Ellison, and Ray Harryhausen, among others. Harryhausen stated that he had read the original screenplay by Wallace. There were also German and Czech versions of the novel in 2005.

On 28 October 1933, Cinema Weekly published the short story "King Kong", credited to Edgar Wallace and Draycott Montagu Dell (1888–1940). Dell had known Wallace as both worked for British newspapers. This can be called a "story-ization" of the Wallace and Cooper story which relied on the Rose and Creelman screenplay, but which like the Wallace treatment, begins at the island. Both Wallace and Cooper had signed a contract which allowed them to develop the story in a book or short story or serial form. Walter F. Ripperger also wrote a two-part serialization of the Wallace and Cooper story in Mystery magazine titled "King Kong" in the February and March issues in 1933.

West Germany

In 1959 Danish production company Rialto Film on behalf of West German distributor Constantin Film made "The Fellowship of the Frog" into a movie. The initial success prompted Rialto Film to establish a German subsidiary, securing the rights to most of Wallace's novels, and producing an additional 38 movies until 1972. During the time Wallace's eldest son Bryan as well had 10 of his novels adapted into movies by West Berlin-based production company CCC-Filmkunst. Both series were set in contemporary UK but filmed entirely in Western Germany and West Berlin. Although panned by critics the movies garnered a following with occasional reruns on German TV.

In 2004, Oliver Kalkofe produced the movie Der Wixxer, an homage to the popular black and white Wallace movies. It featured many well known comedians. In 2007, Kalkofe produced a sequel Neues vom Wixxer.

There are more of Wallace's books still in print in Germany than elsewhere and his work has consistently remained popular there.[3]

Literary works

African novels (Sanders of the River series)

  • Sanders of the River (1911) - short stories serialised in The Weekly Tale-Teller, filmed in 1935
  • The People of the River (1911) - short stories serialised in The Weekly Tale-Teller
  • The River of Stars (1913) - full-length novel featuring a cameo appearance by Sanders.
  • Bosambo of the River (1914) - short stories serialised in The Weekly Tale-Teller
  • Bones (1915) - short stories serialised in The Weekly Tale-Teller
  • The Keepers of the King's Peace (1917) - short stories serialised in The Windsor Magazine
  • Lieutenant Bones (1918) - short stories serialised in The Windsor Magazine
  • Bones in London (1921) - short stories serialised in The Windsor Magazine
  • Sandi the Kingmaker (1922) - full-length novel serialised in The Windsor Magazine
  • Bones of the River (1923) - short stories serialised in The 20-Story Magazine
  • Sanders (1926) - short stories
  • Again Sanders (1928) - short stories

The series was posthumously continued by Francis Gérard -

  • The Return of Sanders of the River - short stories (1938)
  • The Law of the River - short stories (1940)
  • The Justice of Sanders - short stories (1951)

Four Just Men series

Mr. J. G. Reeder series

Detective Sgt. (Insp.) Elk series

Educated Evans series

  • Educated Evans (1924)
  • More Educated Evans (1926)
  • Good Evans (1927)

Smithy series

  • Smithy (1905)
  • Smithy Abroad (1909)
  • Smithy and The Hun (1915)
  • Nobby or Smithy's Friend Nobby (1916)

Crime novels

Other novels

Poetry collections

  • The Mission That Failed (1898)
  • War and Other Poems (1900)
  • Writ In Barracks (1900)

Non-fiction

  • Unofficial Despatches of the Anglo-Boer War (1901)
  • Famous Scottish Regiments (1914)
  • Field Marshal Sir John French (1914)
  • Heroes All: Gallant Deeds of the War (1914)
  • The Standard History of the War (1914)
  • Kitchener's Army and the Territorial Forces: The Full Story of a Great Achievement (1915)
  • Vol. 2–4. War of the Nations (1915)
  • Vol. 5–7. War of the Nations (1916)
  • Vol. 8–9. War of the Nations (1917)
  • Famous Men and Battles of the British Empire (1917)
  • The Real Shell-Man: The Story of Chetwynd of Chilwell (1919)
  • People or Edgar Wallace by Himself (1926)
  • The Trial of Patrick Herbert Mahon (1928)
  • My Hollywood Diary (1932)

Plays

Screenplays

  • The Valley of Ghosts (1928, British film)
  • Mark of the Frog (1928, American film)
  • Prince Gabby (1929, British film)
  • The Squeaker (1930, British film)
  • The Hound of the Baskervilles (1932, British film)
  • King Kong (1932, 5 January 1932, first draft of original screenplay entitled "The Beast", 110 pages) While the script was not used in its entirety, much of it was retained for the final screenplay. Portions of the original Wallace screenplay were published in 1976. The complete original screenplay was published in 2013 in Ray Harryhausen – The Master of the Majicks, Vol. 1 by Archive Editions in Los Angeles. The Delos Lovelace transcription remains the official book-length treatment of the story.

Short story collections

  • P.C. Lee (1909) Police Constable Lee; 24 short stories
  • The Admirable Carfew (1914)
  • The Adventures of Heine (1917)
  • Tam O' the Scouts (1918)
  • The Man Called McGinnice (1918)
  • The Fighting Scouts (1919)
  • The Black Grippe (1920)
  • Chick (1923)
  • Elegant Edward (1924)
  • The Exploits of Airman Hay (1924)
  • The Black Avons (1925)
  • The Brigand (1927)
  • The Mixer (1927)
  • This England (1927)
  • The Orator (1928)
  • The Thief in the Night (1928)
  • The Lone House Mystery and Other Stories (Collins and son, 1929)
  • The Governor of Chi-Foo (1929)
  • Again the Ringer The Ringer Returns (US Title) (1929)
  • The Big Four or Crooks of Society (1929)
  • The Black or Blackmailers I Have Foiled (1929)
  • The Cat-Burglar (1929)
  • Circumstantial Evidence (1929)
  • Fighting Snub Reilly (1929)
  • For Information Received (1929)
  • Forty-Eight Short Stories (1929)
  • Planetoid 127 and The Sweizer Pump (1929)
  • The Ghost of Down Hill & The Queen of Sheba's Belt (1929)
  • The Iron Grip (1929)
  • The Lady of Little Hell (1929)
  • The Little Green Man (1929)
  • The Prison-Breakers (1929)
  • The Reporter (1929)
  • Killer Kay (1930)
  • Mrs William Jones and Bill (1930)
  • Forty Eight Short-Stories (George Newnes Limited ca. 1930)
  • The Stretelli Case and Other Mystery Stories (1930)
  • The Terror (1930)
  • The Lady Called Nita (1930)
  • Sergeant Sir Peter or Sergeant Dunn, C.I.D. (1932)
  • The Scotland Yard Book of Edgar Wallace (1932)
  • The Steward (1932)
  • Nig-Nog And Other Humorous Stories (1934)
  • The Last Adventure (1934)
  • The Woman From the East (1934) – co-written with Robert George Curtis
  • The Edgar Wallace Reader of Mystery and Adventure (1943)
  • The Undisclosed Client (1963)
  • The Man Who Married His Cook (White Lion, 1976)
  • The Death Room: Strange and Startling Stories (1986)
  • The Sooper and Others (1984)
  • Stories collected in the Death Room (William Kimber, 1986)
  • Winning Colours: The Selected Racing Writings of Edgar Wallace (1991)

Other

  • King Kong, with Draycott M. Dell, (1933 posthumously), 28 October 1933 Cinema Monthly

Films based on works by Edgar Wallace

See also Edgar Wallace Mysteries
See also Bryan Edgar Wallace Filmography

References

  1. ^ "Edgar Wallace".
  2. ^ a b Films based on works by Edgar Wallace
  3. ^ a b "More at home abroad". The Economist. 21 August 1997.
  4. ^ Dixon (1998), p. 73
  5. ^ Downes, Peter. "James Henry Marriott". Dictionary of New Zealand Biography. Ministry for Culture and Heritage. Retrieved 1 March 2019.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u "Edgar Wallace". Dictionary of National Biography (Online ed.). January 2011.
  7. ^ a b c d e "Past Masters: Edgar Wallace". Shot.
  8. ^ "Index entry". FreeBMD. ONS. Retrieved 21 August 2016.
  9. ^ Gänzl, Kurt. "Old Adam: or, when talent skips a generation", Kurt Gänzl's blog, 25 May 2018
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Sutherland, John (2012). Lives of the Novelists: A History of Fiction in 294 Lives. Yale University Press. p. 122. ISBN 978-0-300-18243-9.
  11. ^ Teri Duerr (Summer 2013). "Edgar Wallace: The Man Who Wrote Too Much?". Mystery Scene.
  12. ^ Lane, Margaret (1938). Edgar Wallace: The Biography of a Phenomenon (Limited ed.). University of Michigan. p. 169.
  13. ^ Pringle, David (1987). Imaginary People: A Who's Who of Modern Fictional Characters. London: Grafton Books. p. 401. ISBN 0-246-12968-9.
  14. ^ Adrian, Jack (11 February 1997). "Obituary: Penny Wallace". The Independent. Retrieved 20 October 2019.
  15. ^ . Crime Time. Archived from the original on 23 September 2015.
  16. ^ Dixon (1998), p. 79
  17. ^ Dixon, Wheeler W. (1998). The Transparency of Spectacle: Meditations on the Moving Image. SUNY Press. p. 72. ISBN 978-0-7914-3781-0.
  18. ^ a b Fowler, Christopher (23 October 2011). "Invisible Ink: No 99 – Edgar Wallace". The Independent. Retrieved 29 December 2014.
  19. ^ McLaren, Angus (2002). Sexual Blackmail: A Modern History. Harvard University Press. p. 332. ISBN 067400924X.
  20. ^ Dixon (1998), p. 85
  21. ^ . Time. 31 August 1931. Archived from the original on 15 December 2008.
  22. ^ a b Adrian, Jack (27 October 2000). "Obituary: Jenia Reissar". The Independent.
  23. ^ . Archaeology in Marlow. Archived from the original on 14 June 2015. Retrieved 11 June 2015.
  24. ^ Pace, Eric (21 February 1994). "Margaret Lane, 86, British Writer on Beatrix Potter and the Brontes". The New York Times.
  25. ^ Lane, Margaret (1938). Edgar Wallace: The Biography of a Phenomenon (Limited ed.). University of Michigan.
  26. ^ a b c Dixon (1998) pp. 74–81
  27. ^ Dixon (1998) pp. 74–79
  28. ^ The Popular Press Companion to Popular Literature, Victor E. Neuburg, Popular Press, 1983, p196 ISBN 978-0-87972-233-3
  29. ^ Dixon (1998) pp. 73–79
  30. ^ Dixon (1998) p. 87
  31. ^ Blood on the Stage, 1925–1950: Milestone Plays of Crime, Mystery, and Detection, "Edgar Wallace", (2010) by Amnon Kabatchnik, Scarecrow Press, p15 ISBN 978-0-8108-6963-9
  32. ^ Hartnoll, Phyllis, ed. (1985) [1983]. The Oxford Companion to the Theatre. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 876.
  33. ^ Moskowitz, Sam (November 1962). "Introduction, Planetoid 127". Fantastic Stories of Imagination. 11: 76.
  34. ^ "Wallace, Edgar". The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction.
  35. ^ Between the Cover.
  36. ^ Wallace, Edgar. My Hollywood Diary. London: Hutchinson, 1932, p. 192.
  37. ^ Wallace (1932) p. 202
  38. ^ Hankin, Mike. Ray Harryhausen – The Master of the Majicks, Vol. 1: Beginnings and Endings. Los Angeles, CA: Archive Editions, 2013.
  39. ^ a b Wallace also directed the movie
  40. ^ a b c d e f novelised from Wallace's play by Robert George Curtis

Further reading

  • Clark, Neil Stranger than Fiction: The Life of Edgar Wallace, the Man Who Created King Kong, (The History Press, October 2014 (UK), February 2015 (US)) ISBN 978-0-7524-9882-9
  • Cox, J.R. "Edgar Wallace", in British Mystery Writers, 1860–1919, ed. B. Benstock, B. and Staley, T.F. (1988)
  • Curtis, Robert Edgar Wallace Each Way by (John Long, 1932)
  • Hankin, Mike Ray Harryhausen – Master of the Majicks, Volume 1: Beginnings and Endings (Archive Editions, LLC, 2013). Contains the complete first draft of the Kong screenplay by Edgar Wallace.
  • Kabatchnik, Ammon "Edgar Wallace" in Blood on the Stage, 1925–1950: Milestone Plays of Crime, Mystery, and Detection (Scarecrow Press, 2010) pp. 7–16 ISBN 978-0-8108-6963-9
  • Lane, Margaret Edgar Wallace, The Biography of a Phenomenon (William Heinemann, October 1938). Revised and reprinted in 1965. An abridged version was issued in Reader's Digest, Vol. 34, No. 205, May 1939.
  • Lofts, W.O.G. and Adley, D. The British Bibliography of Edgar Wallace (1969)
  • Nolan, J.E "Edgar Wallace" in Films in Review, 18 (1967), 71–85
  • Wallace, E. People: A Short Autobiography (1926)
  • Wallace, E My Hollywood Diary (1932)
  • Wallace, Ethel V. Edgar Wallace by His Wife (Hutchinson, 1932)

External links

  • The Edgar Wallace Society, founded in 1969 by his daughter, Penelope Wallace
  • Edgar Wallace at IMDb
  • The Mixer (1992 TV series) at IMDb
  • Edgar Wallace at the BFI's Screenonline
  • House where Edgar Wallace was born
  • Edgar Wallace at Library of Congress Authorities, with 252 catalogue records

Online editions

  • Works by Edgar Wallace at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by (Richard Horatio) Edgar Wallace at Faded Page (Canada)
  • Works by Edgar Wallace at Project Gutenberg Australia
  • Works by or about Edgar Wallace at Internet Archive
  • Works by Edgar Wallace at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  

edgar, wallace, richard, horatio, april, 1875, february, 1932, british, writer, wallace, 1928bornrichard, horatio, 1875, april, 1875greenwich, kent, englanddied10, february, 1932, 1932, aged, beverly, hills, california, nationalitybritishoccupation, crime, wri. Richard Horatio Edgar Wallace 1 April 1875 10 February 1932 was a British writer Edgar WallaceWallace in 1928BornRichard Horatio Edgar Wallace 1875 04 01 1 April 1875Greenwich Kent EnglandDied10 February 1932 1932 02 10 aged 56 Beverly Hills California U S NationalityBritishOccupation s Crime writer war correspondent journalist novelist screenwriter and playwrightKnown forCreation of King KongSpouse s Ivy Maude Caldecott m 1901 div 1918 wbr Ethel Violet King m 1921 wbr Born into poverty as an illegitimate London child Wallace left school at the age of 12 He joined the army at age 21 and was a war correspondent during the Second Boer War for Reuters and the Daily Mail Struggling with debt he left South Africa returned to London and began writing thrillers to raise income publishing books including The Four Just Men 1905 Drawing on his time as a reporter in the Congo covering the Belgian atrocities Wallace serialised short stories in magazines such as The Windsor Magazine and later published collections such as Sanders of the River 1911 He signed with Hodder and Stoughton in 1921 and became an internationally recognised author After an unsuccessful bid to stand as Liberal MP for Blackpool as one of David Lloyd George s Independent Liberals in the 1931 general election Wallace moved to Hollywood where he worked as a script writer for RKO He died suddenly from undiagnosed diabetes during the initial drafting of King Kong 1933 Wallace was such a prolific writer that one of his publishers claimed that a quarter of all books in England were written by him 1 As well as journalism Wallace wrote screen plays poetry historical non fiction 18 stage plays 957 short stories and over 170 novels 12 in 1929 alone More than 160 films have been made of Wallace s work 2 In addition to his work on King Kong he is remembered as a writer of the colonial imagination for the J G Reeder detective stories and for The Green Archer serial He sold over 50 million copies of his combined works in various editions and The Economist in 1997 describes him as one of the most prolific thriller writers of the 20th century although the great majority of his books are out of print in the UK but are still read in Germany 3 4 A 50 minute German TV documentary was made in 1963 called The Edgar Wallace Story which featured his son Bryan Edgar Wallace Contents 1 Life and work 1 1 Ancestry and birth 1 2 Childhood and early career 1 3 1898 1918 1 4 1918 1929 1 5 Firsts 1 6 Ivy s death 1 7 The Canker In Our Midst 1 8 Politics emigration to the U S and screenwriting 2 Death and aftermath 2 1 Death 2 2 Aftermath 3 Legacy 4 Writing 4 1 Method 4 2 Themes and critique 4 3 Science fiction 4 4 King Kong 4 5 West Germany 5 Literary works 5 1 African novels Sanders of the River series 5 2 Four Just Men series 5 3 Mr J G Reeder series 5 4 Detective Sgt Insp Elk series 5 5 Educated Evans series 5 6 Smithy series 5 7 Crime novels 5 8 Other novels 5 9 Poetry collections 5 10 Non fiction 5 11 Plays 5 12 Screenplays 5 13 Short story collections 5 14 Other 6 Films based on works by Edgar Wallace 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External links 9 1 Online editionsLife and work EditAncestry and birth Edit Wallace s great grandfather was entertainer James Henry Marriott and his grandmother was actress Alice Marriott 5 Wallace was born at 7 Ashburnham Grove Greenwich to actors Richard Horatio Marriott Edgar 1847 1894 and Mary Jane Polly Richards nee Blair born 1843 6 7 8 Wallace s mother s family had been in show business and she worked in the theatre as a stagehand usherette and bit part actress until she married in 1867 Her husband Captain Joseph Richards was born in 1838 he was from Irish family He and his father John Richards were both Merchant Navy captains and his mother Catherine Richards came from a mariner family Joseph died at sea in 1868 leaving his pregnant wife destitute After the birth of Wallace s older sibling his mother returned to the stage assuming the stage name Polly Richards In 1872 she met and joined the Marriott family theatre troupe managed by Alice Marriott her husband Richard Edgar and her three adult children from earlier liaisons Grace Adeline and Richard Horatio Marriott Edgar 9 Wallace s parents had a broom cupboard style sexual encounter during an after show party Discovering she was pregnant his mother invented a fictitious obligation in Greenwich that would last at least half a year and obtained a room in a boarding house where she lived until her son s birth on 1 April 1875 10 During her confinement she had asked her midwife to find a couple to foster the child The midwife introduced Wallace s mother to her close friend Mrs Freeman a mother of ten children whose husband George Freeman was a Billingsgate fishmonger On 9 April 1875 his mother took Wallace to the semi literate Freeman family and made arrangements to visit often citation needed Childhood and early career Edit Wallace then known as Richard Horatio Edgar Freeman had a happy childhood and a close bond with 20 year old Clara Freeman who became a second mother to him By 1878 his mother could no longer afford the small sum she had been paying the Freemans to care for her son and instead of placing the boy in the workhouse the Freemans adopted him 6 His mother never visited Wallace again as a child His foster father George Freeman was determined to ensure Richard received a good education and for some time Wallace attended St Alfege with St Peter s a boarding school in Peckham 7 but he played truant and then left full time education at the age of 12 6 By his early teens Wallace had held down numerous jobs such as newspaper seller at Ludgate Circus near Fleet Street milk delivery boy rubber factory worker shoe shop assistant and ship s cook A plaque at Ludgate Circus commemorates Wallace s first encounter with the newspaper business 6 7 He was dismissed from his job on the milk run for stealing money 10 In 1894 he became engaged to a local Deptford girl Edith Anstree but broke the engagement and enlisted in the infantry Wallace registered in the British Army under the name Edgar Wallace after the author of Ben Hur Lew Wallace 6 7 10 At the time the medical records register him as having a 33 inch chest and being stunted from his childhood spent in the slums 10 He was posted to South Africa with the West Kent Regiment in 1896 7 He disliked army life but managed to arrange a transfer to the Royal Army Medical Corps which was less arduous but more unpleasant and so transferred again to the Press Corps which he found suited him better 10 1898 1918 Edit Edgar Wallace c 1898 1902 Wallace began publishing songs and poetry much inspired by Rudyard Kipling whom he met in Cape Town in 1898 Wallace s first book of ballads The Mission that Failed was published that same year In 1899 he bought his way out of the forces and turned to writing full time 6 Remaining in Africa he became a war correspondent first for Reuters and then the Daily Mail 1900 and other periodicals during the Boer War In 1901 while in South Africa Wallace married Ivy Maude Caldecott 1880 1926 6 although her father Reverend William Shaw Caldecott a Wesleyan missionary was strongly opposed to the marriage The couple s first child Eleanor Clare Hellier Wallace died suddenly from meningitis in 1903 and the couple returned to London soon afterwards deeply in debt 6 11 In London Wallace worked for the Mail and began writing detective stories in a bid to earn quick money A son Bryan Edgar Wallace was born in 1904 followed by a daughter Patricia in 1908 6 In 1903 Wallace met his birth mother Polly whom he had never known Terminally ill 60 years old and living in poverty she came to him to ask for money and was turned away Polly died in the Bradford Infirmary later that year 12 Plaque in Fleet Street London commemorating Edgar Wallace who worked there for the Daily Mail before finding fame as an author Unable to find any backer for his first book Wallace set up his own publishing company Tallis Press which issued the thriller The Four Just Men 1905 Despite promotion in the Mail and good sales the project was financially mismanaged and Wallace had to be bailed out by the Mail s proprietor Alfred Harmsworth who was anxious that the farrago might reflect badly on his newspaper 6 Problems were compounded when inaccuracies in Wallace s reporting led to libel suits being brought against the Mail Wallace was fired in 1907 the first reporter ever to be fired from the paper and he found no other paper would employ him given his reputation The family lived continuously in a state of near bankruptcy Ivy having to sell her jewellery for food 6 During 1907 Edgar travelled to the Congo Free State to report on atrocities committed against the Congolese under King Leopold II of Belgium and the Belgian rubber companies in which up to 15 million Congolese were killed 6 Isabel Thorne of the Weekly Tale Teller penny magazine invited Wallace to serialise stories inspired by his experiences These were published as his first collection Sanders of the River 1911 a best seller and in 1935 it was adapted into an eponymous film starring Paul Robeson Wallace went on to publish 11 more similar collections 102 stories They were tales of exotic adventure and local tribal rites set on an African river mostly without love interest as this held no appeal for Wallace His first 28 books and their film rights he sold outright with no royalties for quick money 6 Critic David Pringle noted in 1987 The Sanders Books are not frequently reprinted nowadays perhaps because of their overt racism 13 The period from 1908 to 1932 was the most prolific of Wallace s life Initially he wrote mainly in order to satisfy creditors in the UK and South Africa However his books success began to rehabilitate his reputation as a journalist and he began reporting from horse racing circles He wrote for the Week End and the Evening News became an editor for Week End Racing Supplement started his own racing papers Bibury s and R E Walton s Weekly and bought many racehorses of his own He lost many thousands gambling and despite his success spent large sums on an extravagant lifestyle he could not afford 6 During 1916 Ivy had her third and last child by Edgar Michael Blair Wallace and filed for divorce in 1918 6 1918 1929 Edit Ivy moved to Tunbridge Wells with the children and Wallace drew closer to his secretary Ethel Violet King 1896 1933 daughter of banker Frederick King They married in 1921 their daughter Margaret Penelope June known as Penny Wallace was born in 1923 14 Wallace began to take his fiction writing career more seriously and signed with publishers Hodder and Stoughton in 1921 organising his contracts instead of selling rights to his work piecemeal in order to raise funds This allowed him advances royalties and full scale promotional campaigns for his books which he had never before had The publisher aggressively advertised him as a celebrity writer King of Thrillers known for this trademark trilby cigarette holder and yellow Rolls Royce He was said to be able to write a 70 000 word novel in three days and plough through three novels at once and the publishers agreed to publish everything he wrote as fast as he could write it In 1928 it was estimated that one in four books being read in the UK had come from Wallace s pen He wrote across many genres including science fiction screen plays and a non fiction ten volume history of the First World War All told he wrote over 170 novels 18 stage plays and 957 short stories and his works were translated into 28 languages 6 10 15 16 The critic Wheeler Winston Dixon suggests that Wallace became somewhat of a public joke for this prodigious output 17 Wallace served as chairman of the Press Club which continues to present an annual Edgar Wallace Award for excellence in writing 6 Following the great success of his novel The Ringer Wallace was appointed chairman of the British Lion Film Corporation in return for giving British Lion first option on all his output 18 Wallace s contract gave him an annual salary a substantial block of stock in the company a large stipend from everything British Lion produced based on his work plus 10 of British Lion s overall annual profits Additionally British Lion employed his elder son Bryan E Wallace as a film editor By 1929 Wallace s earnings were almost 50 000 per annum equivalent to about 2 million in current terms He also invented at this time the Luncheon Club clarification needed bringing together his two greatest loves journalism and horse racing citation needed Firsts Edit Wallace was the first British crime novelist to use policemen as his protagonists rather than amateur sleuths as most other writers of the time did Most of his novels are independent stand alone stories he seldom used series heroes and when he did he avoided a strict story order so that continuity was not required from book to book On 6 June 1923 Edgar Wallace became the first British radio sports reporter when he made a report on The Derby for the British Broadcasting Company the newly founded predecessor of the BBC Ivy s death Edit Wallace s ex wife Ivy was diagnosed with breast cancer in 1923 and though the tumour was successfully removed it returned terminally by 1925 and she died in 1926 The Canker In Our Midst Edit Wallace wrote a controversial article in the Daily Mail in 1926 entitled The Canker In Our Midst about paedophilia and the show business world 19 Describing how some show business people unwittingly leave their children vulnerable to predators it linked paedophilia with homosexuality and outraged many of his colleagues publishing associates and business friends including theatre mogul Gerald du Maurier Biographer Margaret Lane describes it as an intolerant blustering kick the blighters down the stairs type of essay even by the standards of the day 20 Politics emigration to the U S and screenwriting Edit Wallace became active in the Liberal Party and contested Blackpool in the 1931 general election as one of a handful of Independent Liberals who rejected the National Government and the official Liberal support for it and strongly supported free trade 6 He also bought the Sunday News edited it for six months and wrote a theatre column before it closed 21 In the event he lost the election by over 33 000 votes He went to America burdened by debt in November 1931 Around the same time he wrote the screenplay for the first sound film adaptation of The Hound of the Baskervilles 1932 produced in England by Gainsborough Pictures He moved to Hollywood and began working as a script doctor for RKO 6 His later play The Green Pack opened to excellent reviews boosting his status even further Wallace wanted to get his own work on Hollywood celluloid and so he adapted books such as The Four Just Men and Mr J G Reeder In Hollywood Wallace met Stanley Holloway s scriptwriter Wallace s own half brother Marriott Edgar Wallace s play On the Spot written about gangster Al Capone would prove to be the writer s greatest theatrical success It was described by Jack Adrian as arguably in construction dialogue action plot and resolution still one of the finest and purest of 20th century melodramas 22 It launched the career of Charles Laughton who played the lead Capone character Tony Perelli 22 Death and aftermath EditDeath Edit In December 1931 Wallace was assigned work on the RKO gorilla picture King Kong 1933 for producer Merian C Cooper By late January however he was beginning to suffer sudden severe headaches and was diagnosed with diabetes His condition deteriorated within days Violet booked passage to California on a liner out of Southampton but received word that Edgar had slipped into a coma and died of the condition combined with double pneumonia on 10 February 1932 in North Maple Drive Beverly Hills 6 The flags on Fleet Street s newspaper offices flew at half mast and the bell of St Bride s tolled in mourning 10 His body was returned to England and he was buried at Little Marlow Cemetery Fern Lane Buckinghamshire not far from his UK country home Chalklands in Bourne End 23 Aftermath Edit Despite his later success Wallace had amassed massive debts some still remaining from his years in South Africa many to racing bookies The large royalties from his greatly popular works allowed the estate to be settled within two years 6 10 Violet Wallace outlived her husband by only 14 months She died suddenly in April 1933 aged 33 while the estate was still deep in debt citation needed Legacy Edit The Edgar Wallace pub Essex Street off Strand London Violet Wallace s own will left her share of the Wallace estate to her daughter Penelope 1923 1997 herself an author of mystery and crime novels who became the chief benefactor and shareholder Penelope married George Halcrow in 1955 The couple ran the Wallace estate managing her father s literary legacy and starting the Edgar Wallace Society in 1969 10 The work is continued by Penelope s daughter also named Penelope The Society has members in 20 countries The literary body is currently managed by the London agency A P Watt Wallace s eldest son Bryan Edgar Wallace 1904 1971 was also an author of mystery and crime novels In 1934 Bryan married Margaret Lane 1907 94 also a writer 24 Lane s biography of Edgar Wallace was published in 1938 25 The Edgar Wallace Mystery Magazine was a monthly digest size fiction magazine specializing in crime and detective fiction It published 35 issues from 1964 to 1967 Each issue contained original works of short crime or mystery fiction as well as reprints by authors like Wallace Chekhov Steinbeck and Agatha Christie More than 160 films and several radio adaptations have been made based on Wallace s work 2 18 Wallace also has a pub named after him in Essex Street off Strand in London Writing EditMethod Edit Wallace narrated his words onto wax cylinders the dictaphones of the day and his secretaries typed up the text This may be why he was able to work at such high speed and why his stories have narrative drive Many of Wallace s successful books were dictated like this over two or three days locked away with cartons of cigarettes and endless pots of sweet tea often working pretty much uninterrupted in 72 hours Most of his novels were serialised in segments but written in this way The serialised stories that were instead written piecemeal have a distinctly different narrative energy not sweeping up the reader on the story wave 26 Wallace rarely edited his own work after it was dictated and typed up but sent it straight to the publishers intensely disliking the revision of his work with other editors The company would do only cursory checks for factual errors before printing 26 Wallace faced widespread accusations that he used ghost writers to churn out books though there is no evidence of this and his prolificness became something of a joke the subject of cartoons and sketches His three day books reeled off to keep the loan sharks from the door were unlikely to garner great critical praise and Wallace claimed not to find literary value in his own works 27 Themes and critique Edit Wallace characters such as District Commissioner Sanders can be taken to represent the values of colonial white supremacy in Africa and now viewed by many critics as deeply racist and paternalistic His writing has been attacked by some for its conception of Africans as stupid children who need a firm hand 28 Sanders for example pledges to bring civilisation to half a million cannibal folk 10 George Orwell called Wallace a bully worshipper and proto fascist though many critics conceived Wallace more as a populist writer who wrote for the market of the time 10 Selling over 50 million copies of his works including 170 novels Wallace was very much a populist writer and was dismissed by the literati as such Q D Leavis Arnold Bennett and Dorothy L Sayers led the attack on Wallace suggesting he offered no social critique or subversive agenda at all and distracting the reading public from better things 29 Trotsky reading a Wallace novel whilst recuperating on his sickbed in 1935 found it to be mediocre contemptible and crude with no shade of perception talent or imagination 30 Critics Steinbrunner and Penzler stated that Wallace s writing is slapdash and cliche ridden with characterization that is two dimensional and situations that are frequently trite relying on intuition coincidence and much pointless confusing movement to convey a sense of action The heroes and villains are clearly labelled and stock characters humorous servants baffled policemen breathless heroines could be interchanged from one book to another 31 The Oxford Companion to the Theatre asserts however that In all his works Wallace showed unusual precision of detail narrative skill and inside knowledge of police methods and criminal psychology the fruits of his apprenticeship as a crime reporter 32 Wallace did not use plot formulae unlike many other thriller writers The critic Wheeler Winston Dixon maintains that Wallace covered a wide variety of perspectives and characterisations exploring themes such as feminist self determination Barbara on her Own 1926 Four Square Jane 1929 The Girl from Scotland Yard 1926 upsetting peerage hierarchies Chick 1923 science fiction The Day of Uniting 1926 schizophrenia The Man Who Knew 1919 and autobiography People 1926 26 Science fiction Edit Edgar Wallace enjoyed writing science fiction but found little financial success in the genre despite several efforts His constant need for income always brought him back to the more mundane styles of fiction that sold more easily 33 Planetoid 127 first published in 1924 but reprinted as late as 2011 34 is a short story about an Earth scientist who communicates via wireless with his counterpart on a duplicate Earth orbiting unseen because it is on the opposite side of the Sun The idea of a mirror Earth or mirror Universe later became a standard subgenre within science fiction The story also bears similarities to Rudyard Kipling s hard science fiction story Wireless Wallace s other science fiction works include The Green Rust a story of bio terrorists who threaten to release an agent that will destroy the world s corn crops 1925 which accurately predicted that a short peace would be followed by a German attack on England and The Black Grippe about a disease that renders everyone in the world blind His last work of science fiction and the only one widely remembered today is the screenplay for King Kong King Kong Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Edgar Wallace news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section may be too long to read and navigate comfortably Please consider splitting content into sub articles condensing it or adding subheadings Please discuss this issue on the article s talk page November 2018 This section contains weasel words vague phrasing that often accompanies biased or unverifiable information Such statements should be clarified or removed November 2018 The cover of the original 1932 screenplay for the film King Kong by Edgar Wallace entitled Kong Out of the many scripts he penned for RKO Merian C Cooper s gorilla picture had the most lasting influence becoming the classic King Kong 1933 Wallace wrote the initial 110 page first draft for The Beast the film s original title over five weeks from late December 1931 to January 1932 35 In all there were three draft versions another titled Kong Kong was rejected as the film s title because it was too similar to another Cooper film Chang released in 1927 and because it sounded Chinese Wallace suggested the title King Ape His diary described the writing process for this draft Cooper fed aspects of the story in conferences and phone conversations Wallace then executed Cooper s ideas the latter approving the developing script on a sequence by sequence basis While working on the project Cooper also screened various recent films for Wallace to put him in the right mindset including Dracula 1931 and Frankenstein 1931 One of Cooper s main aspirations with the story was to use as much footage of an abandoned RKO picture with a similar premise Creation as possible He showed Wallace the fragments that were to be reused in the current script Although the draft was incomplete Wallace only made minor revisions to it each at Cooper s request In late January Wallace was hospitalized and by 10 February he was dead leaving Cooper without a screenwriter The fragmentary nature of Wallace s script meant that the main dialogue free action of the film the jungle sequences would have to be shot first both as insurance and as a showreel for the board of RKO In My Hollywood Diary Edgar Wallace wrote about the reception of his screenplay Cooper called me up last night and told me that everybody who had read Kong was enthusiastic They say it is the best adventure story that has ever been written for the screen 36 Wallace had high expectations for the film I am certain that Kong is going to be a wow 37 His screenplay begins with Denham and the party at the island called Vapour Island by Wallace because of the volcanic emissions Ann Darrow is called Shirley Redman in this early version Jack Driscoll is also referred to as John Lanson or Johnny and Captain Englehorn is much more domineering Danby G Denham is a promoter and a P T Barnum type showman who is looking for a giant ape to bring back to Madison Square Garden or the Polo Grounds to exhibit as a sideshow The movie retains the Barnum theme when Denham who evolved into Carl Denham in the Rose and Creelman treatment refers to Kong as the eighth wonder of the world echoing Barnum s style of hyping acts Wallace created the major characters their relationships and their role in the overall plot He also created the story s beauty and the beast theme In his original screenplay the crew of the boat consists of escaped convicts who kidnap Shirley After a dinosaur attacks and wrecks their boat they find refuge on the island In a tent a convict tries to rape Shirley Kong appears rescues Shirley and takes her away to his cave Wallace says in a notation on the script that Kong is 30 feet tall thus establishing Kong as a giant ape John and the remaining convicts then go after Shirley using a log to cross a ravine Kong attacks them which leads to their deaths as the log crashes down the ravine Kong fights and kills a triceratops Dinosaurs and pterodactyls attack Kong and the party Kong takes Shirley to his hideout in the mountains and Jack rescues her Using gas bombs the expedition knocks out Kong Kong is brought back to New York and put in a cage Shirley is attacked by lions and tigers let loose on purpose by Senorita Kong kills the cats and whisks Shirley away He climbs the Empire State Building where airplanes shoot at him Cooper sent Wallace an internal memo from RKO suggesting that John dissuade the police from shooting Kong because of the danger to Shirley Please see if you consider it practical to work out theme that John attempts single handed rescue on top of Empire State Building if police will let off shooting for a minute Kong is finally killed when lightning strikes the flag pole he is hanging on to Early publicity stills for the movie have the title as Kong and by Edgar Wallace and show a lightning storm and flashes of lightning as envisioned by Wallace In his version a small ape peeling a rose prefigured Kong s peeling away Shirley s clothes His treatment also included an underwater scene from the attacking dinosaur s point of view as it approached a capsized boat However his 110 page script was merely the first rough draft not a final and completed shooting script After Wallace s death Ruth Rose was brought in to work on the document he had started She happened to be Schoedsack s wife and was able to translate the expectations of the producers into the final script She added the ritual scene on Skull Island to replace Wallace s original idea of the attempted rape of Ann Darrow Rose also added the opening scenes of the movie in which the main characters and plot are introduced James Ashmore Creelman who worked on the screenplay for The Most Dangerous Game a film that Wallace was in discussions to write for at the time of his death was also brought in to tidy up the script The job of Rose and Creelman was to rework Wallace s original screenplay and replace scenes that failed to translate as expected The original Wallace screenplay was published in the 2013 book Ray Harryhausen The Master of the Majicks Volume 1 Beginnings and Endings by Mike Hankin 38 That original screenplay is analysed and discussed in The Girl in the Hairy Paw 1976 edited by Ronald Gottesman and Harry Geduld and by Mark Cotta Vaz in the preface to the Modern Library reissue of King Kong 2005 In December 1932 Wallace s story and screenplay for King Kong were novelised or transcribed by Delos W Lovelace a journalist and author himself who knew Cooper from when they worked on a newspaper and appeared in book form under the title King Kong Lovelace based the transcription largely on the Ruth Rose and James A Creelman screenplay This novelization of King Kong attributed to Wallace Cooper and Lovelace was originally published by Grosset and Dunlap The book was reissued in 2005 by the Modern Library a division of Random House with an introduction by Greg Bear and a preface by Mark Cotta Vaz and by Penguin in the US In the UK Victor Gollancz published a hardcover version in 2005 The first paperback edition had been published by Bantam in 1965 in the US and by Corgi in 1966 in the UK In 1976 Grosset and Dunlap republished the novel in paperback and hardcover editions There were paperback editions by Tempo and by Futura that year as well In 2005 Blackstone Audio released a spoken word version of the book as an audiobook on CD with commentary by Ray Bradbury Harlan Ellison and Ray Harryhausen among others Harryhausen stated that he had read the original screenplay by Wallace There were also German and Czech versions of the novel in 2005 On 28 October 1933 Cinema Weekly published the short story King Kong credited to Edgar Wallace and Draycott Montagu Dell 1888 1940 Dell had known Wallace as both worked for British newspapers This can be called a story ization of the Wallace and Cooper story which relied on the Rose and Creelman screenplay but which like the Wallace treatment begins at the island Both Wallace and Cooper had signed a contract which allowed them to develop the story in a book or short story or serial form Walter F Ripperger also wrote a two part serialization of the Wallace and Cooper story in Mystery magazine titled King Kong in the February and March issues in 1933 West Germany Edit In 1959 Danish production company Rialto Film on behalf of West German distributor Constantin Film made The Fellowship of the Frog into a movie The initial success prompted Rialto Film to establish a German subsidiary securing the rights to most of Wallace s novels and producing an additional 38 movies until 1972 During the time Wallace s eldest son Bryan as well had 10 of his novels adapted into movies by West Berlin based production company CCC Filmkunst Both series were set in contemporary UK but filmed entirely in Western Germany and West Berlin Although panned by critics the movies garnered a following with occasional reruns on German TV In 2004 Oliver Kalkofe produced the movie Der Wixxer an homage to the popular black and white Wallace movies It featured many well known comedians In 2007 Kalkofe produced a sequel Neues vom Wixxer There are more of Wallace s books still in print in Germany than elsewhere and his work has consistently remained popular there 3 Literary works EditAfrican novels Sanders of the River series Edit Sanders of the River 1911 short stories serialised in The Weekly Tale Teller filmed in 1935 The People of the River 1911 short stories serialised in The Weekly Tale Teller The River of Stars 1913 full length novel featuring a cameo appearance by Sanders Bosambo of the River 1914 short stories serialised in The Weekly Tale Teller Bones 1915 short stories serialised in The Weekly Tale Teller The Keepers of the King s Peace 1917 short stories serialised in The Windsor Magazine Lieutenant Bones 1918 short stories serialised in The Windsor Magazine Bones in London 1921 short stories serialised in The Windsor Magazine Sandi the Kingmaker 1922 full length novel serialised in The Windsor Magazine Bones of the River 1923 short stories serialised in The 20 Story Magazine Sanders 1926 short stories Again Sanders 1928 short storiesThe series was posthumously continued by Francis Gerard The Return of Sanders of the River short stories 1938 The Law of the River short stories 1940 The Justice of Sanders short stories 1951 Four Just Men series Edit The Four Just Men 1905 The Council of Justice 1908 The Just Men of Cordova 1917 The Law of the Four Just Men 1921 The Three Just Men 1925 Again the Three 1928 Mr J G Reeder series Edit Room 13 1924 The Mind of Mr J G Reeder US title The Murder Book of Mr J G Reeder 1925 Terror Keep 1927 Red Aces 1929 39 The Crook in Crimson 1929 The Guv nor and Other Short Stories US title Mr Reeder Returns 1932 Detective Sgt Insp Elk series Edit The Nine Bears 1910 revised as Silinski Master Criminal 1930 The Fellowship of the Frog 1925 adapted as The Frog spawned a sequel Return of the Frog The Joker or The Colossus 1926 The Twister 1928 The India Rubber Men 1929 adapted as The Return of the Frog White Face 1930 Educated Evans series Edit Educated Evans 1924 More Educated Evans 1926 Good Evans 1927 Smithy series Edit Smithy 1905 Smithy Abroad 1909 Smithy and The Hun 1915 Nobby or Smithy s Friend Nobby 1916 Crime novels Edit Angel Esquire 1908 The Fourth Plague 1913 Grey Timothy 1913 The Man Who Bought London 1915 The Melody of Death 1915 A Debt Discharged 1916 The Tomb of Ts in 1916 The Secret House 1917 The Clue of the Twisted Candle 1918 Down Under Donovan 1918 The Man Who Knew 1918 The Strange Lapses of Larry Loman 1918 short novelette The Green Rust 1919 Kate Plus Ten 1919 The Daffodil Mystery 1920 Jack O Judgment 1920 The Angel of Terror 1922 The Crimson Circle 1922 Mr Justice Maxell 1922 The Valley of Ghosts 1922 Captains of Souls 1923 The Clue of the New Pin 1923 The Green Archer 1923 The Missing Million 1923 The Dark Eyes of London expanded from The Croakers 1924 Double Dan 1924 a k a Diana of Kara Kara The Face in the Night 1924 The Sinister Man 1924 The Three Oak Mystery 1924 The Avenger or The Hairy Arm 1925 The Blue Hand 1925 The Daughters of the Night 1925 The Gaunt Stranger or Police Work 1925 revised as The Ringer 1926 A King by Night 1925 The Strange Countess 1925 The Black Abbot 1926 The Day of Uniting 1926 The Door with Seven Locks 1926 The Girl from Scotland Yard 1926 The Man from Morocco or Souls In Shadows or The Black US Title 1926 The Million Dollar Story 1926 The Northing Tramp 1926 Penelope of the Polyantha 1926 The Square Emerald or The Woman 1926 The Terrible People or The Gallows Hand 1926 We Shall See US title The Gaol Breakers 1926 The Yellow Snake a k a The Black Tenth 1926 Big Foot 1927 The Feathered Serpent or Inspector Wade or Inspector Wade and the Feathered Serpent 1927 Flat 2 1927 The Forger or The Counterfeiter 1927 The Hand of Power or The Proud Sons of Ragusa 1927 The Man Who Was Nobody 1927 Number Six 1927 The Squeaker or The Sign of the Leopard US title The Squealer 1927 The Traitor s Gate 1927 The Double 1928 The Flying Squad 1928 The Gunner US title Gunman s Bluff 1928 Four Square Jane 1929 The Golden Hades or Stamped In Gold or The Sinister Yellow Sign 1929 The Green Ribbon 1929 The Calendar 1930 The Clue of the Silver Key or The Silver Key 1930 The Lady of Ascot 1930 The Devil Man or Sinister Street or Silver Steel or The Life and Death of Charles Peace 1931 The Man at the Carlton or The Mystery of Mary Grier 1931 The Coat of Arms or The Arranways Mystery 1931 On the Spot Violence and Murder in Chicago 1931 When the Gangs Came to London or Scotland Yard s Yankee Dick or The Gangsters Come To London 1932 The Frightened Lady or The Case of the Frightened Lady or Criminal At Large 1933 The Green Pack 1933 40 The Man Who Changed His Name 1935 40 The Mouthpiece 1935 40 Smoky Cell 1935 40 The Table 1936 40 Sanctuary Island 1936 40 The Road to London 1986 Other novels Edit Captain Tatham of Tatham Island 1909 The Duke in the Suburbs 1909 Private Selby 1912 1925 The Story of a Fatal Peace 1915 Those Folk of Bulboro 1918 Tam o the Scoots 1918 The Book of All Power 1921 The Flying Fifty Five 1922 The Books of Bart 1923 Barbara on Her Own 1926 Poetry collections Edit The Mission That Failed 1898 War and Other Poems 1900 Writ In Barracks 1900 Non fiction Edit Unofficial Despatches of the Anglo Boer War 1901 Famous Scottish Regiments 1914 Field Marshal Sir John French 1914 Heroes All Gallant Deeds of the War 1914 The Standard History of the War 1914 Kitchener s Army and the Territorial Forces The Full Story of a Great Achievement 1915 Vol 2 4 War of the Nations 1915 Vol 5 7 War of the Nations 1916 Vol 8 9 War of the Nations 1917 Famous Men and Battles of the British Empire 1917 The Real Shell Man The Story of Chetwynd of Chilwell 1919 People or Edgar Wallace by Himself 1926 The Trial of Patrick Herbert Mahon 1928 My Hollywood Diary 1932 Plays Edit An African Millionaire 1904 The Forest of Happy Dreams 1910 Dolly Cutting Herself 1911 The Manager s Dream 1914 M Lady 1921 The Mystery of room 45 1926 Double Dan 1927 A Perfect Gentleman 1927 The Terror 1927 based on the novel The Black Abbot Traitors Gate 1927 The Lad 1928 The Man Who Changed His Name 1928 The Squeaker 1928 39 The Calendar 1929 Persons Unknown 1929 The Ringer 1929 The Mouthpiece 1930 On the Spot 1930 Smoky Cell 1930 The Squeaker 1930 To Oblige A Lady 1930 The Case of the Frightened Lady 1931 The Old Man 1931 The Green Pack 1932 The Table 1932 Screenplays Edit The Valley of Ghosts 1928 British film Mark of the Frog 1928 American film Prince Gabby 1929 British film The Squeaker 1930 British film The Hound of the Baskervilles 1932 British film King Kong 1932 5 January 1932 first draft of original screenplay entitled The Beast 110 pages While the script was not used in its entirety much of it was retained for the final screenplay Portions of the original Wallace screenplay were published in 1976 The complete original screenplay was published in 2013 in Ray Harryhausen The Master of the Majicks Vol 1 by Archive Editions in Los Angeles The Delos Lovelace transcription remains the official book length treatment of the story Short story collections Edit P C Lee 1909 Police Constable Lee 24 short stories The Admirable Carfew 1914 The Adventures of Heine 1917 Tam O the Scouts 1918 The Man Called McGinnice 1918 The Fighting Scouts 1919 The Black Grippe 1920 Chick 1923 Elegant Edward 1924 The Exploits of Airman Hay 1924 The Black Avons 1925 The Brigand 1927 The Mixer 1927 This England 1927 The Orator 1928 The Thief in the Night 1928 The Lone House Mystery and Other Stories Collins and son 1929 The Governor of Chi Foo 1929 Again the Ringer The Ringer Returns US Title 1929 The Big Four or Crooks of Society 1929 The Black or Blackmailers I Have Foiled 1929 The Cat Burglar 1929 Circumstantial Evidence 1929 Fighting Snub Reilly 1929 For Information Received 1929 Forty Eight Short Stories 1929 Planetoid 127 and The Sweizer Pump 1929 The Ghost of Down Hill amp The Queen of Sheba s Belt 1929 The Iron Grip 1929 The Lady of Little Hell 1929 The Little Green Man 1929 The Prison Breakers 1929 The Reporter 1929 Killer Kay 1930 Mrs William Jones and Bill 1930 Forty Eight Short Stories George Newnes Limited ca 1930 The Stretelli Case and Other Mystery Stories 1930 The Terror 1930 The Lady Called Nita 1930 Sergeant Sir Peter or Sergeant Dunn C I D 1932 The Scotland Yard Book of Edgar Wallace 1932 The Steward 1932 Nig Nog And Other Humorous Stories 1934 The Last Adventure 1934 The Woman From the East 1934 co written with Robert George Curtis The Edgar Wallace Reader of Mystery and Adventure 1943 The Undisclosed Client 1963 The Man Who Married His Cook White Lion 1976 The Death Room Strange and Startling Stories 1986 The Sooper and Others 1984 Stories collected in the Death Room William Kimber 1986 Winning Colours The Selected Racing Writings of Edgar Wallace 1991 Other Edit King Kong with Draycott M Dell 1933 posthumously 28 October 1933 Cinema MonthlyFilms based on works by Edgar Wallace EditMain article Films based on works by Edgar Wallace See also Edgar Wallace Mysteries See also Bryan Edgar Wallace FilmographyReferences Edit Edgar Wallace a b Films based on works by Edgar Wallace a b More at home abroad The Economist 21 August 1997 Dixon 1998 p 73 Downes Peter James Henry Marriott Dictionary of New Zealand Biography Ministry for Culture and Heritage Retrieved 1 March 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Edgar Wallace Dictionary of National Biography Online ed January 2011 a b c d e Past Masters Edgar Wallace Shot Index entry FreeBMD ONS Retrieved 21 August 2016 Ganzl Kurt Old Adam or when talent skips a generation Kurt Ganzl s blog 25 May 2018 a b c d e f g h i j k Sutherland John 2012 Lives of the Novelists A History of Fiction in 294 Lives Yale University Press p 122 ISBN 978 0 300 18243 9 Teri Duerr Summer 2013 Edgar Wallace The Man Who Wrote Too Much Mystery Scene Lane Margaret 1938 Edgar Wallace The Biography of a Phenomenon Limited ed University of Michigan p 169 Pringle David 1987 Imaginary People A Who s Who of Modern Fictional Characters London Grafton Books p 401 ISBN 0 246 12968 9 Adrian Jack 11 February 1997 Obituary Penny Wallace The Independent Retrieved 20 October 2019 Edgar Wallace profile Crime Time Archived from the original on 23 September 2015 Dixon 1998 p 79 Dixon Wheeler W 1998 The Transparency of Spectacle Meditations on the Moving Image SUNY Press p 72 ISBN 978 0 7914 3781 0 a b Fowler Christopher 23 October 2011 Invisible Ink No 99 Edgar Wallace The Independent Retrieved 29 December 2014 McLaren Angus 2002 Sexual Blackmail A Modern History Harvard University Press p 332 ISBN 067400924X Dixon 1998 p 85 The Press Odds amp Ends Time 31 August 1931 Archived from the original on 15 December 2008 a b Adrian Jack 27 October 2000 Obituary Jenia Reissar The Independent Edgar Wallace The King of Thrillers Archaeology in Marlow Archived from the original on 14 June 2015 Retrieved 11 June 2015 Pace Eric 21 February 1994 Margaret Lane 86 British Writer on Beatrix Potter and the Brontes The New York Times Lane Margaret 1938 Edgar Wallace The Biography of a Phenomenon Limited ed University of Michigan a b c Dixon 1998 pp 74 81 Dixon 1998 pp 74 79 The Popular Press Companion to Popular Literature Victor E Neuburg Popular Press 1983 p196 ISBN 978 0 87972 233 3 Dixon 1998 pp 73 79 Dixon 1998 p 87 Blood on the Stage 1925 1950 Milestone Plays of Crime Mystery and Detection Edgar Wallace 2010 by Amnon Kabatchnik Scarecrow Press p15 ISBN 978 0 8108 6963 9 Hartnoll Phyllis ed 1985 1983 The Oxford Companion to the Theatre Oxford Oxford University Press p 876 Moskowitz Sam November 1962 Introduction Planetoid 127 Fantastic Stories of Imagination 11 76 Wallace Edgar The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction Between the Cover Wallace Edgar My Hollywood Diary London Hutchinson 1932 p 192 Wallace 1932 p 202 Hankin Mike Ray Harryhausen The Master of the Majicks Vol 1 Beginnings and Endings Los Angeles CA Archive Editions 2013 a b Wallace also directed the movie a b c d e f novelised from Wallace s play by Robert George CurtisFurther reading EditClark Neil Stranger than Fiction The Life of Edgar Wallace the Man Who Created King Kong The History Press October 2014 UK February 2015 US ISBN 978 0 7524 9882 9 Cox J R Edgar Wallace in British Mystery Writers 1860 1919 ed B Benstock B and Staley T F 1988 Curtis Robert Edgar Wallace Each Way by John Long 1932 Hankin Mike Ray Harryhausen Master of the Majicks Volume 1 Beginnings and Endings Archive Editions LLC 2013 Contains the complete first draft of the Kong screenplay by Edgar Wallace Kabatchnik Ammon Edgar Wallace in Blood on the Stage 1925 1950 Milestone Plays of Crime Mystery and Detection Scarecrow Press 2010 pp 7 16 ISBN 978 0 8108 6963 9 Lane Margaret Edgar Wallace The Biography of a Phenomenon William Heinemann October 1938 Revised and reprinted in 1965 An abridged version was issued in Reader s Digest Vol 34 No 205 May 1939 Lofts W O G and Adley D The British Bibliography of Edgar Wallace 1969 Nolan J E Edgar Wallace in Films in Review 18 1967 71 85 Wallace E People A Short Autobiography 1926 Wallace E My Hollywood Diary 1932 Wallace Ethel V Edgar Wallace by His Wife Hutchinson 1932 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Edgar Wallace Wikiquote has quotations related to Edgar Wallace Wikisource has original works by or about Edgar Wallace The Edgar Wallace Society founded in 1969 by his daughter Penelope Wallace Edgar Wallace at IMDb The Mixer 1992 TV series at IMDb Edgar Wallace at the BFI s Screenonline House where Edgar Wallace was born Former London home of Edgar Wallace Edgar Wallace at Library of Congress Authorities with 252 catalogue recordsOnline editions Edit Works by Edgar Wallace at Project Gutenberg Works by Richard Horatio Edgar Wallace at Faded Page Canada Works by Edgar Wallace at Project Gutenberg Australia Works by or about Edgar Wallace at Internet Archive Works by Edgar Wallace at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Edgar Wallace amp oldid 1135707322, wikipedia, 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