David Freedman was a Romanian-born American playwright and biographer who became known as the "King of the Gag-writers" in the early days of radio.
Biography
David Freedman was born in Botoşani, Romania, as the first child and only son of Sara and Israel Freedman. Israel, a political refugee, immigrated with his young family to the United States in 1900, where four years later, David's sister Sophie became the first Freedman born in the U.S. Freedman graduated from the City College of New York in 1918, the first in his family to complete a formal education beyond high school. In September 1918, he married Beatrice, a fellow New Yorker, who was born in the city on September 27, 1899. Within five years they had three sons, Benedict, David Noel, and Toby. A decade later their only daughter, who is now known as Laurie Hayden, arrived. From 1924 on, Freedman was a self-employed writer. He created sketches for musicals and had shows on Broadway almost every year from 1926 through 1937. His novel Mendel Marantz featured a Jewish father who frequently made witty remarks. His first play, Mendel, Inc., debuted in 1929. When radio replaced vaudeville, Freedman—who already enjoyed a reputation as a popular, versatile writer—was ready for the new medium. He was prolific, creating as many as six entertainment programs a week for several years, and eventually worked in movies as well. Freedman was also a biographer and wrote about industry insiders. His first biography, the Eddie Cantor memoir My Life Is in Your Hands, became a bestseller. Freedman and Cantor collaborated on a biography of showman Florenz Ziegfeld; Ziegfeld: the Great Glorifier was used for the film Ziegfeld Follies. Similarly, Phantom Fame which he co-authored with the impresario Harry Reichenbach became the basis for the movie The Half-Naked Truth. In the mid-1930s Freedman contributed scripts for short comedies produced by Educational Pictures in New York. The best known is probably Blue Blazes, starring Buster Keaton as an inept fireman. Freedman suffered a massive heart attack on the evening of Monday, December 7, 1936. By the morning of the 8th, he was dead, leaving Beatrice, his partner of 18 years, and their four children, who ranged in age from just under 17 to just under 2 years.
Legacy
According to his son, David Noel Freedman, it is unlikely that contemporary audiences would appreciate most of David Freedman's work, because most of his jokes played on the peculiarities and sensitivities of his era. Freedman's stories, however, have a timeless quality. As the years passed, his family honored his memory with the posthumous publication of The Intellectual Lover, a collection of short stories that were originally published individually between 1922 and 1928. Of the countless pieces Freedman wrote between 1920 and 1936, Mendel, Inc. is the only fully realized play. A product of the beginning of his brief career, it embodies the mature thoughts of a humorist/playwright. On June 2, 2004, this classic comedy about an immigrant Jewish family living in the uncertain times of 1929 of the Lower East Side was read to a packed house at the North CoastRepertory Theatre in Solana Beach, California. Mendel, Inc. was used as the basis for the 1932 Warner Brothers movie The Heart of New York. a vehicle for Jewish-dialect comedians Smith and Dale, with comedian George Sidney as Mendel Marantz. Four books by Freedman were translated into Russian and published by Ogonyok in 1926; they enjoyed tremendous popularity for a short period, and Mendel's witty "definitions" were quoted everywhere, but within a year they were eclipsed by the comic writings of Ilf and Petrov and Mikhail Zoshchenko, and soon were forgotten, although Anatoly Rybakov has a character quote Mendel in Children of the Arbat. His novel Mendel Marantz was republished as an audiobook in Russian in 2011, narrated by noted actors Klara Novikova, Leonid Kanevsky and others. A fictionalized version of David Freedman appears as Harry Goldhandler in the novelInside, Outside by Herman Wouk.
Writings
Books
The Intellectual Lover and Other Stories
Ziegfeld: the Great Glorifier
Your Next President!
Phantom Fame: The Anatomy of Ballyhoo
Yoo-Hoo Prosperity! The Eddie Cantor Five-year Plan