Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Mr. Roberts and American Remembering; or, Why Major Major Major Major Looks Like Henry Fonda

View through CrossRef
Although the idea may be hard for us to imagine fifty years later, especially given the historical weight of the subject, the first of the great postwar entertainment classics to come out of the American experience of World War II took shape initially as a set of comic short stories by Thomas Heggen about the backwater Pacific Navy. Gathered into a slim 1946 novel, the stories became the basis of a hit Broadway play of 1948; and that play in turn became the basis of an extraordinarily popular 1955 movie. The classic so described, of course, was Mr. Roberts, with the titular hero eventually so thoroughly identified with the actor playing him on stage and screen that by the end of the decade in question, a New York Times Reviewer would observe of the actor, Henry Fonda, “it now appears he is Mr. Roberts.”
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Title: Mr. Roberts and American Remembering; or, Why Major Major Major Major Looks Like Henry Fonda
Description:
Although the idea may be hard for us to imagine fifty years later, especially given the historical weight of the subject, the first of the great postwar entertainment classics to come out of the American experience of World War II took shape initially as a set of comic short stories by Thomas Heggen about the backwater Pacific Navy.
Gathered into a slim 1946 novel, the stories became the basis of a hit Broadway play of 1948; and that play in turn became the basis of an extraordinarily popular 1955 movie.
The classic so described, of course, was Mr.
Roberts, with the titular hero eventually so thoroughly identified with the actor playing him on stage and screen that by the end of the decade in question, a New York Times Reviewer would observe of the actor, Henry Fonda, “it now appears he is Mr.
Roberts.
”.

Related Results

Relational Remembering and Oppression
Relational Remembering and Oppression
This paper begins by discussing Sue Campbell's account of memory as she first developed it in Relational Remembering: Rethinking the Memory Wars and applied it to the context of th...
Monet at a Glance: A Dynamic, Ekphrastic Encounter in Michèle Roberts’s “On the Beach at Trouville”
Monet at a Glance: A Dynamic, Ekphrastic Encounter in Michèle Roberts’s “On the Beach at Trouville”
The essay analyzes Michèle Roberts’s 2012 story “On the Beach at Trouville” as an ekphrasis of Claude Monet’s early Impressionist painting, The Beach at Trouville. It first approac...
Two Informational Theories of Memory: a case from Memory-Conjunction Errors
Two Informational Theories of Memory: a case from Memory-Conjunction Errors
Abstract The causal and simulation theories are often presented as very distinct views about declarative memory, their major difference lying on the causal condition...
Encountering Lateness in Postunification Berlin
Encountering Lateness in Postunification Berlin
Berlin's material past remains obstinately visible despite the predictions of urban theorists about the “overexposed” city. What is “remembering well” in contemporary Berlin: the p...
Remembering Richard Paul
Remembering Richard Paul
Remembering Richard Paul (1937-2015)...
The Last “Hero” and Jia Pingwa's Ecological Concerns in Remembering Wolves
The Last “Hero” and Jia Pingwa's Ecological Concerns in Remembering Wolves
Abstract As a writer rooted in China's historical, social, and cultural transformation, Jia Pingwa has expressed in his works his anxieties over environmental deteri...
Memory and Forgetting in Lisa Appignanesi’S the Memory Man
Memory and Forgetting in Lisa Appignanesi’S the Memory Man
Abstract The aim of this paper is to look at Lisa Appignanesi’s novel The memory man ([2004] 2005), which won the 2005 Holocaust Literature Award, and examine the pa...
Archiving ‘Future Years’: Wordsworthian Dis-ease of Memory from Pantheism to Pandemic
Archiving ‘Future Years’: Wordsworthian Dis-ease of Memory from Pantheism to Pandemic
While the experiment with memory in Wordsworth’s ‘Tintern Abbey’ (1798) has been a much-discussed topic since its publication, what constitutes a discussion seldom approached is th...

Back to Top