|
|
Larry McMurtry
Larry McMurtry (born June 3, 1936 in Wichita Falls, Texas) is a
novelist, screenwriter, and essayist.
McMurtry is best known for his Pulitzer Prize-winning 1985 novel
Lonesome Dove, a sweeping historical epic that follows ex-Texas
Rangers as they drive their cattle from the Rio Grande to a new
home in the frontier of Montana. It was adapted into a hit television
miniseries. Much of his other Fiction is also set in the "old
west" or contemporary Texas.
He grew up on a ranch outside of Archer City, Texas, which is the
model for his Fictional town of Thalia (which is near Archer City).
He earned degrees from North Texas State University (B.A. 1958)
and Rice University (M.A. 1960). He published his first novels while
an English instructor, and he won the 1962 Texas Institute of Letters
Jesse M. Jones award. In 1964 he was awarded a Guggenheim grant.
In 1960, McMurtry was also a Wallace Stegner Fellow at Stanford
University, where he studied the craft of Fiction under novelist
Wallace Stegner and alongside a number of other future literary
luminaries, including Ken Kesey, Peter S. Beagle, Robert Stone,
and Gordon Lish. McMurtry and Kesey maintained a close friendship
after McMurtry left California and returned to Texas, and Kesey's
famous cross-country trip with his Merry Pranksters in the day-glo
painted schoolbus 'Furthur' included a memorable stop at McMurtry's
home in Houston, described in Tom Wolfe's New-Journalistic masterpiece
The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test.
A book collector, McMurtry purchased a rare book store in Washington,
D.C.'s Georgetown neighborhood in 1970 and named it Booked Up. He
moved to Washington D.C. to run the store. In 1988 he opened a second
Booked Up in Archer City, establishing the town as an American "Book
City." The Archer City store is arguably the largest single
used bookstore in the United States, carrying somewhere between
400,000 and 450,000 titles. (Every book in the store has been previously
owned.)
A prolific, award-winning, and highly-respected literary writer,
McMurtry is well-known for the film adaptations of his work, especially
Hud (from the novel Horseman, Pass By), starring Paul Newman and
Patricia Neal; Peter Bogdanovich's masterpiece, The Last Picture
Show; James L. Brooks's Terms of Endearment, which won five Academy
Awards, including Best Picture (1984); and Lonesome Dove, which
became an enormously popular television mini-series starring Tommy
Lee Jones and Robert Duvall.
In 2006, he was co-winner (with Diana Ossana) of both the Best Screenplay
Golden Globe and the Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay for
Brokeback Mountain. He accepted his Oscar wearing jeans and cowboy
boots along with his dinner jacketwhich Academy Awards host
Jon Stewart made fun of immediatelyand payed homage to his
love for books by telling everybody that Brokeback Mountain was
a "book before it was a movie." In his Golden Globe acceptance
speech, he famously paid tribute to his Swiss-made Hermes 3000 typewriter.
His son, James McMurtry, is a singer/songwriter and guitarist.
|