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Today is September 10th, 2004 - the site contains 36 poets and 4616 poems.
Biography of Dorothy Parker

Dorothy Parker (1893 - 1967)


Dorothy Parker was one of the most successful and influential women writers of her era. Dorothy Rothschild was born on August 22, 1893 in West End, N.J. Her mother was Scottish and her father Jewish. She was "a late unexpected arrival in a loveless family". At the age of four her mother died. Her father remarried and Dorothy's home life was strained and distant at best. She was educated in private schools in N.J. and N.Y.C. Dorothy suffered two tragedies as a young woman. Her brother Henry died aboard the Titanic and a yearlater her father passed away. Dorothy moved to New York City in 1911 where she lived in a boarding house and worked as a piano player at a dance school. At the age of 21 she began submitting her writing to various magazines and papers. Her poem "Any Porch" was accepted and published by Vanity Fair. A few months later she was hired by Vogue, a sister publication of Vanity Fair. While working at Vogue her submissions to Vanity Fair continued to be published. After two years of working at Vogue she was transferred to Vanity Fair. In 1917 she married Edwin Parker, a stock broker. The marriage only lasted a brief time, but now she was Mrs. Dorothy Parker. At Vanity Fair she became New York's only female drama critic at the time. In the spring of 1919 she was invited to the Algonquin Hotel because of her connections at Vanity Fair and her reputation as a drama critic. This was the beginning of the famous Algonquin Round Table, an renowned intellectual literary circle.Dorothy was the only female founding member. It brought together such writers as Robert Benchley, Robert Sherwood, James Thurber, George Kaufman and many others. Dorothy was still writing for Vanity Fair but her reviews were becoming increasingly sarcastic and unfavorable. She was fired from the magazine in 1921. To earn money she began writing subtitles for a movie by D.W. Griffith.

Dorothy soon found another job at the magazine Ainslee's where she could be as sarcastic, bitchy, and witty as she pleased. In 1922 she wrote her first short story - "Such a PrettyLittle Picture" - this was the beginning of her literary career. In January of 1924 Dorothy divorced and moved into the Algonquin Hotel. She began writing plays; "Close Harmony" was her first. The first issue of The New Yorker was published in early 1925 and Dorothy contributed drama reviews and poetry for the first few issues. In February of 1926 she set off for Paris, but continued contributing articles to the New Yorker and Life. While in France she befriended Earnest Hemingway; surprisingly, considering his male chauvinist attitudes. Dorothy returned to New York in November. Her first book of poetry, "Enough Rope", was published and received favorable reviews as well ad being a commercial success. In 1927 she became very involved in the Sacco and Vanzetti trial. She traveled to Boston to join the protests against the execution of two innocent men. During the protest she was arrested but refused to travel in the paddy wagon, insisting on walking to jail. She was a committed socialist from this day until her death.

In October Dorothy became the book reviewer for the The New Yorker Magazine, under the title "The Constant Reader". In February of 1929 Dorothy's short story "The Big Blonde" was published and she won the prestigious O. Henry award for the best short story of the year. That same year Dorothy began doing screen writing in Hollywood. She moved to Hollywoodbecause she needed the money and was offered a contract by MGM. Dorothy wrote many screenplays over the next decade. In 1933 she once again traveled to Europe where she met her second husband Alan Campbell. He was also of Scottish-Jewish descent, and a rumored bisexual. They became screen writing partners and signed a contract with Paramount Pictures in 1935. In 1936 she helped found the Anti Nazi League. In 1937 Dorothy won an academy award for her joint screenplay of "A Star is Born".

Throughout the 1940's Dorothy continued writing prose and short stories along with screenplays. She was widely published in many magazines and Viking released an anthology of her short stories and prose. In 1949 she divorced Alan Campbell, but later they remarried.

In the 1950's she was called before the House on un-American Activities and pleaded the first instead of the fifth, still refusing to name any names. In 1952-1953 testimonywas given against her before the HUAC. From 1957-1963 she worked as a book reviewer for Esquire magazine. In 1959 she was inducted into American Academy of Arts and Letters. She was a distinguished Visiting Professor of English at California State College in L.A. In 1964 she published her final magazine piece in November's issue of Esquire.

On June 7, 1967, she was found dead of a heart attack in her room at Hotel Volney in New York City. She bequeathed her entire literary estate to the NAACP.



189 Poems written by Dorothy Parker

The poems are by default sorted according to volume, but you can also choose to sort them alphabetically or by page views.

[Volume] | Alphabetically | Page Views


Death and Taxes

1. Prayer for a Prayer
2. After Spanish Proverb
3. The Danger of Writing Defiant Verse
4. Distance
5. Sanctuary
6. The Evening Primrose
7. The Flaw in Paganism
8. Salome's Dancing-Lesson
9. Cherry White
10. My Own
11. Solace
12. Little Words
13. Tombstones in the Starlight
14. Garden-Spot
15. Ornithology for Beginners
16. Vers Demode
17. The Little Old Lady in Lavender Silk
18. Sonnet for the End of a Sequence
19. The Apple Tree
20. Iseult of Brittany
21. "Star Light, Star Bright-"
22. The Sea
23. Guinevere at Her Fireside
24. Transition
25. Lines on Reading Too Many Poets
26. From a Letter from Lesbia
27. Purposely Ungrammatical Love Song
28. Ballade of Unfortunate Mammals
29. Sweet Violets
30. Prayer for a New Mother
31. Midnight
32. Ninon de Lenclos, on Her Last Birthday
33. Ultimatum
34. The Willow
35. Summary 1 Comment
36. Of a Woman, Dead Young
37. Sonnet on an Alpine Night
38. Requiescat
39. Ballade of a Talked-off Ear
40. Prologue to a Saga
41. Sight
42. Prisoner
43. The Lady's Reward
44. Temps Perdu
45. Autumn Valentine

Enough Rope

1. Threnody
2. The Small Hours
3. The False Friends
4. The Trifler
5. A Very Short Song
6. A Well-Worn Story
7. Convalescent
8. The Dark Girl's Rhyme
9. Epitaph
10. Light of Love
11. Wail
12. The Satin Dress
13. Somebody's Song
14. Braggart
15. Epitaph for a Darling Lady
16. To a Much Too Unfortunate Lady
17. Paths
18. Hearthside
19. Rainy Night
20. The New Love
21. Anecdote
22. For a Sad Lady
23. Recurrence
24. Story of Mrs. W-
25. The Dramatists
26. August
27. The White Lady
28. I Know I Have Been Happiest
29. Testament
30. I Shall Come Back
31. Condolence
32. The Immortals
33. A Portrait
34. Portrait of the Artist
35. Chant for Dark Hours
36. Unfortunate Coincidence
37. Comment
38. Inventory
39. Now at Liberty
40. Plea
41. Pattern
42. De Profundis
43. Resume 1 Comment
44. They Part
45. Ballade of a Great Weariness
46. Renunciation
47. The Veteran
48. Verse for a Certain Dog
49. Prophetic Soul
50. Godspeed
51. Song of Perfect Propriety
52. Social Note
53. One Perfect Rose
54. Ballade at Thirty-Five
55. The Thin Edge
56. Love Song
57. Indian Summer
58. Philosophy 1 Comment
59. For an Unknown Lady
60. The Leal
61. Words of Comfort to Be Scratched on a Mirror
62. Faute de Mieux
63. Men
64. News Item
65. Song of One of the Girls
66. Lullaby
67. Roundel
68. A Certain Lady
69. Observation
70. Symptom Recital
71. Rondeau Redouble
72. Fighting Words
73. Autobiography
74. The Choice
75. General Review of the Sex Situation
76. Pictures in the Smoke
77. Inscription for the Ceiling of a Bedroom 1 Comment
78. Nocturne
79. Interview
80. Experience
81. Neither Bloody nor Bowed
82. The Burned Child

Sunset Gun

1. Godmother
2. The Red Dress
3. Victoria
4. To Newcastle
5. Parable for a Certain Virgin
6. Bric-a-Brac
7. Interior
8. Reuben's Children
9. On Cheating the Fiddler
10. There Was One
11. Incurable
12. The Second Oldest Story
13. Partial Comfort
14. Fable
15. A Pig's-Eye View of Literature
16. Oscar Wilde
17. Harriet Beecher Stowe
18. D. G. Rossetti
19. Thomas Carlyle
20. Charles Dickens
21. Alexandre Dumas and His Son
22. Alfred, Lord Tennyson
23. George Gissing
24. Walter Savage Landor
25. George Sand
26. Mortal Enemy
27. Penelope 1 Comment
28. Bohemia
29. The Searched Soul
30. The Trusting Heart
31. The Gentlest Lady
32. The Maid-Servant at the Inn
33. Fulfillment
34. Daylight Saving
35. Thought for a Sunshiny Morning
36. Surprise
37. On Being a Woman
38. Afternoon
39. A Dream Lies Dead
40. The Homebody
41. Second Love
42. Fair Weather
43. The Whistling Girl
44. Story
45. Frustration
46. Healed
47. Post-Graduate
48. Landscape
49. For a Favorite Granddaughter
50. Liebestod
51. Dilemma
52. Theory
53. Superfluous Advice
54. A Fairly Sad Tale
55. The Last Question
56. But Not Forgotten
57. Pour Prendre Conge
58. For a Lady Who Must Write Verse
59. Two-Volume Novel
60. Rhyme Against Living
61. Wisdom
62. Coda

Parker Info

Biography
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(189 poems)

 
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