American novelist
Bradford Ropes (January 1, 1905 – November 21, 1966) was an American novelist and screenwriter whose work includes the novel 42nd Street that was adapted into the 1933 film of the same name , which then became a
Tony Award-winning stage musical .[ 1] The same year, his next novel, Stage Mother , was also adapted to film ,[ 2] Ropes’s novels were inspired by his own experiences as a performer, and focused on the lives of gay men in show business.[ 3] He also wrote many Western stories , screenplays for Roy Rogers and Rex Allen , and contributed to films starring Abbott and Costello as well as Laurel and Hardy .
Ropes wrote in 1932 that America was still waiting for the "Uncle Tom's Cabin of the chorus girl ."[ 4]
Born in Boston , Ropes died in the Wollaston section of Quincy, Massachusetts at the age of 61.
Works
Novels
42nd Street (1932)
Stage Mother (1933)
Go Into Your Dance (1934)
Mr. Tilley Takes a Walk (1951)
Films (screenplays unless noted)
Further reading
Maya Cantu: Greasepaint Puritan : Boston to 42nd street in the queer backstage novels of Bradford Ropes , Ann Arbor : University of Michigan Press, 2024, ISBN 978-0-472-07657-4
References
^ James, Rian; Seymour, James (May 18, 1980). 42nd Street . Univ of Wisconsin Press. p. 12 – via Internet Archive. bradford ropes.
^ Barrios, Richard (1995). A Song in the Dark: The Birth of the Musical Film . Oxford University Press. p. 396 . ISBN 9780195088113 . Retrieved May 18, 2018 .
^ Cantu, Maya Greasepaint Puritan: Boston to 42nd Street in the Queer Backstage Novels of Bradford Ropes , University of Michigan Press, 2024, passim
^ Graham, T. Austin (January 21, 2013). The Great American Songbooks: Musical Texts, Modernism, and the Value of Popular Culture . OUP USA. ISBN 978-0-19-986211-5 – via Google Books.
^ "Bradford Ropes" AFI Catalog
External links
International National Other