Fay Kanin: Screenwriter who was blacklisted before becoming president of the Academy
Kanin was a true pioneer, who began her career when the film industry was dominated by men
She was not on the list.
Fay Kanin shared an Oscar nomination in 1958 for the screenplay of the Clark Gable-Doris Day comedy Teacher's Pet and won two Emmy awards for television scripts. She also served as president of the Motion Picture Academy of Arts and Sciences from 1979 to 1983, only the second woman to do so – the first was Bette Davis, who relinquished the post after two months. Kanin was noted for her commitment to the Academy's preservation program, and was considered a pioneer who began her career in the late 1930s, when the industry was dominated by men.
Born Fay Mitchell in Maryland in 1917, but raised in Elmira, New York, she was the daughter of a clothing store manager and a retired vaudeville actress. At 12 she won the New York State Spelling Championship and as a schoolgirl she contributed articles to the local newspaper and produced a children's radio show. Having studied acting and writing on a scholarship to Elmira College, she persuaded her parents to move to Los Angeles so that she could fulfil an ambition to work in films.
After graduating from the University of Southern California with a bachelor's degree, she became a story editor at RKO. Michael Kanin, brother of stage and screen writer Garson Kanin, was working as a writer in RKO's "B" unit, and in 1940 they married.
Together, they adapted a New Yorker short story about a boarding house for boxers, "Sunday Punch", and sold it to MGM. During the Second World War, Kanin promoted women's participation in the war effort by hosting and writing a radio show, A Woman's Angle, and co-writing a "B" movie, Blondie for Victory (1942).
In 1947 she made a rare screen appearance as a Shakespearean actress in A Double Life, a film written by her brother-in-law, Garson Kanin, and his wife, Ruth Gordon. Though Fay and Michael found that collaborating put too much strain on their marriage – "The time came when I felt as if we were together 48 hours a day" – they had trouble selling solo efforts ("We were hyphenated in people's minds").
In 1948, Michael produced a play written by his wife, Goodbye, My Fancy, the story of a congresswoman (played by Madeleine Carroll) who returns to her alma mater to accept a degree. She is actually hoping to rekindle a romance with a former student, now the Dean, and she is shocked to find that the former radical is now a hidebound conservative anxious to placate the board of governors. "I'm a big feminist," said Kanin. "I've put into my play my feeling that women should never back away from life." Goodbye, My Fancy ran for over a year, and Vincent Sherman directed a film version for Warners with Joan Crawford in the lead and with some political elements diluted.
Fay and Michael teamed up again as writers to pen My Pal Gus (1952), starring Richard Widmark as a single father, but they were then blacklisted by the House Un-American Activities Committee because of their affiliation with some left-leaning writers' organisations. "It was ridiculous, but it was very real and there was nothing we could do about it. We took a larger mortgage on the house and started writing a play, but we didn't work in films for almost two years."
They returned when director Charles Vidor persuaded MGM to hire them as writers on Rhapsody (1954), a vehicle for Elizabeth Taylor which has a cult reputation for its heady mix of passion, lush Technicolored locations and lashings of Rachmaninov and Tchaikovsky. Though The Opposite Sex (1957), a remake of the all-women play The Women, first filmed in 1939, was inevitably compared unfavourably with the original, it was fashioned by the Kanins into a splendid piece of wickedly wisecracking entertainment in its own right. It was followed by their most lauded work, Teacher's Pet, in which Clark Gable masquerades as a would-be reporter in Doris Day's journalism class, though he is actually a newspaper editor.
In 1959 they converted Kurosawa's admired drama Rashomon, with its multiple versions of the same incident, for the stage, and then they adapted that into a film script titled Outrage for director Martin Ritt. In 1961 the team wrote the only musical comedy libretto they did together, The Gay Life, an adaptation of Arthur Schnitzler's play The Affairs of Anatol, starring Walter Chiari and Barbara Cook. Though the score by Arthur Schwartz and Howard Dietz was ravishing, the libretto was weak and Chiari was often unintelligible.
Kanin was able to establish herself as a solo writer when she moved into television. Her first TV movie was Heat of Anger (1972), a vehicle for Susan Hayward, who starred as a high-powered lawyer – but it failed to become a hoped-for series. Tell Me Where It Hurts (1974) won two Emmys, and Hustling (1975), in which a prostitute (Jill Clayburgh) recounts her life to a reporter (Lee Remick), was praised for its authenticity.
But Kanin's most lauded project was the Emmy-winning Friendly Fire (1979). Based on fact, it told of a mother (Carol Burnett) who challenges the military's official version of her son's death in Vietnam – that he had been accidentally killed by American troops. Kanin said she understood the mother's anguish because one of her own two sons died of leukaemia at the age of 13. In 1980 she produced for television a story of harassment in the workplace, Fun and Games, starring Valerie Harper, and her final teleplay was Heartsounds (1984), with Mary Tyler Moore and James Garner as a couple dealing with heart disease. One of her last scripts was for a stage musical about a burlesque house, Grind (1985), which was directed by Harold Prince, but lost nearly $5m.
Having served four terms as president of the Academy of
Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (the maximum), Kanin returned to serve on the
Board of Governors in 2001.
She was the Sister-in-law of Garson Kanin and Ruth Gordon.
Fay Kanin, screenwriter: born Baltimore, Maryland 9 May 1917; married 1940 Michael Kanin (died 1993; one son, and one son deceased); died Santa Monica, California 27 March 2013.
Stage productions
Goodbye, My Fancy (1948)
His and Hers (1954) with Michael Kanin
Rashomon (1959) with Michael Kanin
The Gay Life (1961) with Michael Kanin (later retitled as
The High Life)
Grind (1985)
Writer
Lee Curreri, Lori Singer, Erica Gimpel, and Gene Anthony Ray
in Fame (1982)
Fame
7.1
TV Series
from the play "Rashomon" by
1986
1 episode
Heartsounds (1984)
Heartsounds
7.2
TV Movie
Writer
1984
Friendly Fire (1979)
Friendly Fire
7.2
TV Movie
written for television by
1979
Jill Clayburgh and Lee Remick in Hustling (1975)
Hustling
5.9
TV Movie
written by
1975
Tell Me Where It Hurts (1974)
Tell Me Where It Hurts
6.8
TV Movie
Writer
1974
Heat of Anger (1972)
Heat of Anger
7.2
TV Movie
Writer
1972
The Outrage (1964)
The Outrage
6.2
play "Rashomon"
1964
Mein oder Dein
9.2
TV Movie
comedy
1964
Leb wohl, mein Traum
TV Movie
play "Goodbye My Fancy"
1963
Swordsman of Siena (1962)
Swordsman of Siena
5.9
screenplay
1962
Juliet Prowse and Frankie Vaughan in The Right Approach
(1961)
The Right Approach
5.3
screenplay
1961
Rashomon
4.9
TV Movie
adaptation
1961
Walter Matthau in Play of the Week (1959)
Play of the Week
7.2
TV Series
adaptationplay
1960
1 episode
Doris Day and Clark Gable in Teacher's Pet (1958)
Teacher's Pet
7.1
written by
1958
ITV Play of the Week (1955)
ITV Play of the Week
6.7
TV Series
Writer
1957
1 episode
June Allyson, Joan Collins, Dolores Gray, Ann Miller, and
Ann Sheridan in The Opposite Sex (1956)
The Opposite Sex
6.1
screen play by
1956
Star Stage (1955)
Star Stage
7.5
TV Series
teleplay
1956
1 episode
Rhapsody (1954)
Rhapsody
6.1
Writer
1954
Richard Widmark, Joanne Dru, Audrey Totter, and George
Winslow in My Pal Gus (1952)
My Pal Gus
6.6
original screenplay
1952
Goodbye, My Fancy (1951)
Goodbye, My Fancy
6.0
play
1951
Arthur Lake, Larry Simms, Penny Singleton, Majelle White,
and Daisy in Blondie for Victory (1942)
Blondie for Victory
6.1
story
1942
Dan Dailey, Leo Gorcey, Guy Kibbee, Sam Levene, William
Lundigan, and Jean Rogers in Sunday Punch (1942)
Sunday Punch
5.7
screenplaystory
1942
Actress
Candice Bergen and Jacqueline Bisset in Rich and Famous
(1981)
Rich and Famous
5.8
Professor Fields
1981
Tell Me Where It Hurts (1974)
Tell Me Where It Hurts
6.8
TV Movie
Jane
1974
Shelley Winters, Ronald Colman, and Signe Hasso in A Double
Life (1947)
A Double Life
6.9
Actress in 'Othello'
1947
Producer
Heartsounds (1984)
Heartsounds
7.2
TV Movie
producer
1984
Valerie Harper and Max Gail in Fun and Games (1980)
Fun and Games
6.1
TV Movie
producer
1980
Friendly Fire (1979)
Friendly Fire
7.2
TV Movie
co-producer
1979
Jill Clayburgh and Lee Remick in Hustling (1975)
Hustling
5.9
TV Movie
associate producer
1975
Self
Reel Herstory: The Real Story of Reel Women (2014)
Reel Herstory: The Real Story of Reel Women
8.3
Self - Interviewee
2014
Biography (1987)
Biography
7.7
TV Series
Self
2003
1 episode
American Masters (1985)
American Masters
8.2
TV Series
Self
2000
1 episode
Without Lying Down: Frances Marion and the Power of Women in
Hollywood (2000)
Without Lying Down: Frances Marion and the Power of Women in
Hollywood
7.5
TV Movie
Self
2000
Mary Pickford: A Life on Film (1997)
Mary Pickford: A Life on Film
7.7
Self - Writer and Producer
1997
Hollywood the Golden Years: The RKO Story (1987)
Hollywood the Golden Years: The RKO Story
8.5
TV Series
Self - Writer
1987
1 episode
Working in the Theatre (1976)
Working in the Theatre
6.3
TV Series
Self
1985
1 episode
The 55th Annual Academy Awards (1983)
The 55th Annual Academy Awards
5.7
TV Special
Self - Academy President
1983
The 54th Annual Academy Awards (1982)
The 54th Annual Academy Awards
6.3
TV Special
Self - Academy President
1982
The 53rd Annual Academy Awards (1981)
The 53rd Annual Academy Awards
6.5
TV Special
Self - Academy President
1981
Mike Douglas in The Mike Douglas Show (1961)
The Mike Douglas Show
7.1
TV Series
Self - President Academy of Arts and Sciences
1980
1 episode
The 52nd Annual Academy Awards (1980)
The 52nd Annual Academy Awards
5.8
TV Special
Self - Academy President
1980
The 31st Annual Primetime Emmy Awards (1979)
The 31st Annual Primetime Emmy Awards
7.6
TV Special
Self - Winner
1979
Dinah Shore in Dinah! (1974)
Dinah!
7.0
TV Series
Self
1979
1 episode
Archive Footage
Ellen DeGeneres in The Oscars (2014)
The Oscars
7.7
TV Special
Self - WriterAcademy President (In Memoriam) (archive
footage)
2014
TCM Remembers 2013
Music Video
Selfwriter (archive footage)
2013
The 65th Primetime Emmy Awards (2013)
The 65th Primetime Emmy Awards
6.9
TV Special
Self (In Memoriam) (archive footage)
2013

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