From 1919 to 1930, he worked as a sports editor for the Dallas Journal in Texas. In 1924, he did the play-by-play of a baseball game for radio broadcast.[2] In the late 1920s he began getting stories published in various pulp mystery magazines.[1]
When Oliver Hinsdell, director of the Dallas Little Theater from 1923–31, was engaged as an acting coach for MGM, McCoy followed him to Hollywood to become a film actor.[5] He appeared in a short, "The Hollywood Handicap" (1932), then moved on to screenwriting.
The bouncer job inspired They Shoot Horses, Don't They?, the story of a Depression-era dance marathon. His novel I Should Have Stayed Home dealt with the experiences of a young Southern actor attempting to find work in 1930s Hollywood. Another novel, No Pockets in a Shroud, featured a heroic, misunderstood reporter as the protagonist.[1]
In 1948, McCoy published the hard-boiled classic Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye. The story is narrated by the amoral protagonist, Ralph Cotter. It was made into a James Cagneymovie of the same name.[1] Its influence—McCoy's influence—on the French filmmakers who love pulp fiction and film noir can be seen, for example, in Jean-Luc Godard's film Made in U.S.A., in which one character is reading this novel in its French translation, Adieu la vie, adieu l'amour.
In Hollywood, McCoy wrote westerns, crime melodramas, and other films for various studios. McCoy worked with such movie directors as Henry Hathaway, Raoul Walsh, and Nicholas Ray.[1] He was also an uncredited script assistant for King Kong (1933).[7]
The film Bad for Each Other (1953), for which McCoy received co-screenwriting credit (with Irving Wallace), was based on his novel Scalpel (1952) which was uncredited.[8]
He was married to Helen Vinmont McCoy, with whom he had two sons, Horace Stanley McCoy II and Peter McCoy; and a daughter, Amanda McCoy. He died in Beverly Hills, California of a heart attack.[1][5]
Works
Novels
They Shoot Horses, Don't They? (1935)
No Pockets in a Shroud (1937; revised 1948)
I Should Have Stayed Home (1938)
Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye (1948)
Scalpel (1952)
Corruption City (unfinished; completed by a ghostwriter and published posthumously in 1959)