Read Noir(ish) (9781101610053) Online
Authors: Evan Guilford-blake
A
CKNOWLEDGMENTS
As anyone who has written a novel, play, or other long work will tell you, its creation is a collaborative task. There are so many people to thank for their insights, suggestions, constructive criticisms, and patience in dealing with my effort to create this book. If I've left anyone out, I apologize to him or her, but the process of going from first word on the first page of the first draft to last word of what you're about to read, has taken three years, and I'm sometimes forgetful.
Thanks are due to Rial and Kathy Ellsworth and Ian North for reading the manuscript and offering considered and useful suggestions; my agent, Steven Hutson of WordWise Media for his tenacious pursuit of a publisher; my editor, Jessica Horvath, for her flexibility and her suggestions that have made this a better book; and, above all, to my wife, Roxanna: Some people are gifted with a spouse who believes in them, sometimes more than they believe in themselves. I am blessed with such a gift. Without her love, support, and tireless dedication to me and to the book, it wouldn'tâcouldn'tâexist.
A Who and What of Noir(ish)
There are numerous allusions in the novel to noir fiction, film noir, and the people and films and books connected to it. A list is below.
C
HARACTERS
Robert Grahame
âA combination of Robert Mitchum and Gloria Grahame, both stars of various noirs of the era.
Lizabeth Duryea
âA combination of Lizabeth Scott and Dan Duryea, both stars of various noirs of the era.
Lauren Stanwyck
âA combination of Lauren Bacall and Barbara Stanwyck, both stars of various noirs of the era.
Gloria Mitchum
âA combination of Gloria Grahame and Robert Mitchum, both stars of various noirs of the era.
Dan Scott
âA combination of Dan Duryea and Lizabeth Scott, both stars of various noirs of the era.
Moe Sedway
âNot
a
Noir(ish)
invention but a real person who ran much of the early Vegas operation for the mob. He was close friends with Bugsy Siegel.
Humphrey Bacall
âA combination of Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall, both stars of various noirs of the era.
Fritz Lorre
âA combination of Fritz Lang and Peter Lorre, director of and supporting player in various noir films. Lang and Lorre's most famous collaboration was
M
, in which Lorre plays a child-murderer whose coat, on the back, is marked with the letter
M
. The film isn't noir, but stylistically it's a forerunner of the genre.
Sydney MacMurray
âA combination of Sydney Greenstreet and Fred MacMurray, both stars of various noirs of the era.
Greenstreet
âRobert's cat, named for Sydney Greenstreet, a star of various noirs of the era.
Elisha
âNamed for Elisha Cook, a supporting player in various noirs of the era.
Ed Hopper, the counterman
âNamed for painter Edward Hopper, whose
Nighthawks
incorporates many of the visual elements of the films' style.
Wilmer
âNamed for the “gunsel” played by Elisha Cook in
The Maltese Falcon
.
Vivian O'Shaughnessy
âA combination of Vivian Sternwood and Brigid O'Shaughnessy, femmes fatale of the noir classics
The Big Sleep
and the 1941 version of
The Maltese Falcon
, respectively.
O
THER
N
AMED
C
HARACTERS
Agnes (one of Kathie and Madge's lovebirds)âNamed for Agnes Moorehead. (See Madge Rapf.)
Jules Bezzerides, the numismatistâA combination of Jules Dassin and A. I. Bezzerides, the director and writer of
Thieves' Highway,
a noir classic.
Victor BiancoâA combination of Victor Mature and Nick Bianco, the character Mature plays in the noir classic
Kiss of Death
.
Tommy BiddleâA combination of Tommy Udo and Ray Biddle, the names of the two most famous noir characters played by Richard Widmark.
Phyllis and Walter DietrichsonâNamed for Phyllis Dietrichson (played by Barbara Stanwyck), the femme fatale, and Walter Neff (Fred MacMurray) her target, in
Double Indemnity
.
Johnny DollarâThe insurance investigator of the long-running radio series
Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar
, who dealt frequently with noiresque dilemmas. The title role was originated by Dick Powell and played at one time or another by Charkes Russell, Edmond O'Brien, John Lund, Bob Bailey Bob Readick, and Mandel Kramer.
Mike FigliaâThe bad guy, played by Lee J. Cobb, in
Thieves' Highway
.
Nick GarcosâThe central character, played by Richard Conte, in
Thieves' Highway
.
Virginia HillâNot a
Noir(ish)
invention. Girlfriend of Bugsy Siegel (and, perhaps, other Hollywood luminaries) at whose mansion Siegel was staying when he was killed. She left abruptly for Paris about ten days before the shooting.
Martha IversâThe title character, played by Barbara Stanwyck, of the semi-noir
The Strange Love of Martha Ivers
.
Jacques (the clerk at the Hotel Niagara)âNamed for Jacques Tourneur, director of the noir classic
Out of the Past
.
Jane (one of Kathie and Madge's lovebirds)âNamed for Jane Greer. (See Kathie Moffat.)
Fred Keyes and Bart NeffâCombinations of Barton Keyes (played by Edward G. Robinson), the chief insurance investigator; Walter Neff, Keyes's friend and coworker; and Fred MacMurray, who plays Neff in
Double Indemnity
.
Peter LangâA combination of Fritz Lang and Peter Lorre, director of and supporting player in various noir films. (See also Fritz Lorre.)
Mark McPhersonâThe detective, played by Dana Andrews, in the noir classic
Laura
.
Kathie MoffatâThe femme fatale, played by Jane Greer, of
Out of the Past
.
Rip Murdock and Johnny DrakeâThe best friends of the noir classic
Dead Reckoning
.
Jane PalmerâThe leading lady/femme fatale, played by Lizabeth Scott, of
Too Late for Tears
(also known as
Killer Bait
).
Madge RapfâBoth the femme fatale
and the antithesis of the femme fatale, played by Agnes Moorehead, in
Dark Passage
.
Richard G. RobinsonâA combination of Richard Widmark and Edward G. Robinson, both stars of various noirs of the era.
Benjamin “Bugsy” SiegelâNot a
Noir(ish)
invention but a real person who was a prominent Vegas/West Coast mob figure. He was shot at nine times (either two or five shots hit him, depending on which report you believe) and died in the home of his absent girlfriend, Virginia Hill, on June 20, 1947. The murder has never been solved.
Dixon SteeleâThe character played by Humphrey Bogart in
In a Lonely Place
, considered by many a noir film.
Whit SterlingâThe villain, played by Kirk Douglas, of
Out of the Past
.
Judy TaylorâThe “girl” reporter, played by Marjorie Weaver, who helps Michael Shayne clear an innocent woman in
Just Off Broadway
.
Stoker ThompsonâRobert Ryan's over-the-hill boxer in Robert Wise's
The Set-Up
, a film that looks like noir but lacks key elements of the genre.
Sophie TuckerâNot a
Noir(ish)
invention but a well-known singer of the era, known as the Last of the Red Hot Mamas.
Nicholas UdoâA combination of Nicholas Ray and Tommy Udo, the director of various noir films and the villain of the noir classic
Kiss of Death
.
Edward WidmarkâA combination of Edward G. Robinson and Richard Widmark, both stars of various noirs of the era.
Samuel WilderâThe real name of Billy Wilder, the well-known director/co-screenwriter of
Double Indemnity
.
Ruth WonderlyâThe femme fatale of the original 1931 film version of
The Maltese Falcon
.
O
THER
R
EFERENCES
The Bad and the Beautiful
,
The Big Sleep
,
Blonde Ice
,
Dark Passage
,
In a Lonely Placeâ
Among the genre's better-known movies.
The Black BirdâThe common appellation for the Maltese Falcon.
The Black DahliaâA famous Los Angeles murder case of 1947. Elizabeth Short was the victim. (There was also a Blue Dahlia murder case.)
Captain Archer of the Martian Interstellar Law Enforcement Section (MILES)âA reference to Miles Archer, Sam Spade's doomed partner, in
The Maltese Falcon
.
Cregar StreetâNamed for Laird Cregar, the actor who plays the Nazi collaborator in
This Gun for Hire
, a noir classic.
The Criss CrossâNamed for the noir film
Criss Cross
.
Floyd Avenue and Thursby StreetâNamed for Floyd Thursby, Brigid O'Shaughnessy's never-seen antagonist in
The Maltese Falcon
.
Fuller-0812 (Widmark's phone number)âThe last name and date of birth of Samuel Fuller, a renowned noir director.
The Greer HotelâNamed for Jane Greer, the femme fatale of
Out of the Past
.
gunselâSam Spade's derogatory term for Elisha Cook's character (Wilmer) in
The Maltese Falcon
.
Hellinger BuildingâNamed for Mark Hellinger, a film producer (and writer) during the era who made
The Killers
and
The Naked City
.
The Lollipop GuildâThe bad boys of Munchkinland in
The Wizard of Oz.
The Hotel NiagaraâNamed for the noir film
Niagara
.
Howard-0530 (Robinson's phone number)âThe first name and date of birth of Howard Hawks, a renowned noir director.
KRAY (radio station call letters)âA reference to Nicholas Ray, a renowned noir director.
“Laura”âThe theme song to the film of the same name, one of the genre's best-known movies.
Philip MarloweâSee Sam Spade.
The Pickup, located on South StreetâA reference to
Pickup on South Street
, Samuel Fuller's most famous noir film.
Orrin QuestâThe doomed big brother, sought for by the title character and Philip Marlowe in Raymond Chandler's
The Little Sister
.
Scarlet StreetâA film noir classic, directed by Fritz Lang and starring Edward G. Robinson, Joan Bennett, and Dan Duryea.
Michael “Mike” ShayneâA renowned fictional private eye, created by Brett Halliday.
Room 805 (Robert's office number)âThe date of birth (August 5, 1905) of John Huston, arguably noir's greatest director.
Sam Spade and Philip MarloweâFictional private eyes (created by Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler, respectively) who were at the center of several noir classics, including
The Maltese Falcon
,
The Big Sleep
,
Lady in the Lake
, and
Murder, My Sweet
.
Philo VanceâA renowned fictional private eye, created by S. S. Van Dine.
Veronica Apartments, Lake-1114âThe name and date of birth of Veronica Lake, star of
This Gun for Hire
, a noir classic.
M
ISCELLANEOUS
N
OTE
There were reported sightings of UFOs in the Puget SoundâMount Rainier area of Washington on June 21 and June 24, 1947, respectively. Both predate by about two weeks the more famous crash at Roswell.
About the Author
Evan Guilford-Blake
writes plays, fiction, creative nonfiction, and poetry for adults and children. He has authored about forty plays that have been produced internationally, twenty of which are published, and has won thirty-eight playwriting competitions, including, twice, the Tennessee Williams/New Orleans Literary Festival. (He is the only playwright to have done so.)
Evan has been nominated for the Pushcart Prize, and his work has appeared in numerous print and online journals, as well as in several anthologies
.
Among his dozen short fiction awards are
Soundings Review
's Founders' Award, Wayne State University's Judith Siegel Pearson Award, the D. G. Flamand competition (twice), and the Porter Fleming prize.