|
Transcript:
Interrogator: "Are you a member of the Communist
Party or have you ever been a member of the Communist
Party?"
John Howard Lawson, screenwriter:
"It's unfortunate and tragic that I have
to teach this committee the basic principles of
Americanism."
Interrogator: "That's
not the question. That's not the question. The
question is -- have you ever been a member of
the Communist Party?"
John Howard Lawson, screenwriter:
"I am framing my answer in the only way in
which any American citizen can frame ... absolutely
invades his privacy ..."
Interrogator: "Then
you deny it? You refuse to answer that question,
is that correct?"
John Howard Lawson, screenwriter:
"I have told you that I will offer my beliefs,
my affiliations and everything else to the American
public and they will know where I stand as they
do from what I have written."
Interrogator: "Stand
away from the stand. Stand away from the stand.
Officer, take this man away from the stand."
Background:
John Howard Lawson (born September 25, 1894 -
died August 14, 1977, was an American writer.
Born in New York City,
New York, after studying at Williams College (1910-1914)
he became a successful writer with plays such
as Standards (1916) and Servant-Master-Lover (1916).
When United States entered
the First World War in 1917, he became an ambulance
driver with the American Field Service in Europe.
While in France, he became friends with another
driver, John Dos Passos.
After the war he edited
a newspaper in Rome. Lawson returned to the United
States where he began writing and directing plays.
Although these often expressed Marxist ideas,
some made it to Broadway. Plays performed in New
York included "Roger Bloomer" (1923),
"Processional" (1925), "Loud Speaker"
(1927) and "The International" (1927).
In 1928, Lawson moved to
Hollywood where he wrote scripts for films such
as "The Ship for Shanghai," "Bachelor
Apartment," and "Goodbye Love."
In 1933, Lawson joined with Lester Cole and Samuel
Ornitz to establish the Writers' Guild of America
and was the organization's first president.
Lawson, who joined the
American Communist Party in 1934, made several
films that were were political, including Blockade
(1938), a film on the Spanish Civil War for which
he received a nomination for the Academy Award
for Best Story. Lawson also wrote Counter-Attack
(1945), a tribute to the Soviet-USA alliance during
the Second World War.
After the Second World
War, the House Un-American Activities Committee
began an investigation into the Hollywood Motion
Picture Industry. In September 1947, the HUAC
interviewed 41 people who were working in Hollywood.
These people attended voluntarily and became known
as "friendly witnesses". During their
interviews they named several people who they
accused of holding left-wing views.
Lawson appeared before
the HUAC on October 29, 1947, but like Alvah Bessie,
Herbert Biberman, Albert Maltz, Adrian Scott,
Dalton Trumbo, Lester Cole, Edward Dmytryk, Samuel
Ornitz and Ring Lardner Jr, he refused to answer
any questions. Known as the Hollywood Ten, they
claimed that the First Amendment of the United
States Constitution gave them the right to do
this. The House of Un-American Activities Committee
and the courts during appeals disagreed and all
were found guilty of contempt of Congress and
Lawson was sentenced to twelve months in Ashland
Prison and fined $1,000. Edward Dmytryk claimed
that Lawson pressured him to put communist propaganda
in his films during Dmytryk's 1951 HUAC testimony.
Blacklisted by the Hollywood
studios, Lawson moved to Mexico where he began
writing Marxist interpretation of drama and film-making
such as The Hidden Heritage (1950), Film in the
Battle of Ideas (1953) and Film: The Creative
Process (1964). John Howard Lawson died in San
Francisco on 14th August, 1977.
|