Макгиверн Уильям Питер

Уильям Питер Макгиверн

Уильям Питер Макгиверн
William Peter McGivern
December 6, 1918-Chicago, Illinois, USA / November 18, 1982 (age 63)-Palm Desert, California, USA
American novelist and screenplay writer
United States

Bio
William P. McGivern was born in Chicago, but grew up in Mobile, Alabama. His father was the son of a farmer, and mother, Julia Costello, a dress-maker, who had a shop, Madame Julia's, in Chicago. After quitting high school McGivern started to write. He worked at the Pullman Company and read on his spare time such authors as Hemingway, Fitzgerald, and Hawthorne. In 1940 his works were published in Amazing Stories, Short Stories, etc. From 1943 to 1946 he served in the U.S. Army as a line sergeant and won the Soldier's Medal - he jumped on a bombed tanker and opened the valves to release the gas inside, thereby saving its trapped crew.
Before returning to the United States he studied at the University of Birmingham. McGivern left the service in January 1946, and worked then for two years as a police reporter for the Philadelphia Bulletin. Between the years 1949 and 1951 McGivern was a reporter and reviewer in Evening Bulletin in Philadelphia. His first novel, But Death Runs Faster, appeared in 1948. It was was followed by several other hard-boiled novels. McGivern shared an Edgar 1954 because he wrote the novel that was the basis of The Big Heat, the winner in the MWA's "Best Motion Picture" catagory that year. He served as president of the Mystery Writers of America in 1980. He also taught creative writing at the University of North Carolina. He married the writer Maureen Daly in 1948.
In the 1960s McGivern moved to Hollywood and wrote for TV films. Odds Against Tomorrow was adapted into screen two years later. In the story a former cop (Ed Begley, Sr.), a war veteran (Robert Ryan), and a black gambler and jazzman (Harry Belafonte) team up for a bank robbery. The enterprise fails because of their own racist hatred and a small town sheriff who turns out to be a vigilant. The film was directed by Robert Wise for Harry Belafonte's company. McGivern was married to Maureen Daly, an editor and author of Seventeenth Summer and other books for young people. McGivern died on November 18, 1982. One year later, his daughter Megan McGivern Shaw also died of the disease on December 31, 1983. His widow Maureen Daly McGivern died a hospice in Palm Desert, California of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma on September 25, 2006. His son Patrick Joseph McGivern III passed away on July 10, 2012 in Indio, California.


Works
But Death Runs Faster (1948) aka The Whispering CorpseHeaven Ran Last (1949)
Very Cold For May (1950)
Shield For Murder (1951)
The Crooked Frame (1952)
The Big Heat (1953)
Margin of Terror (1953)
Rogue Cop (1954)
The Darkest Hour (1955) aka Waterfront Cop
The Seven File (1956) aka Chicago-7
Night Extra (1957)
Odds Against Tomorrow (1957)
Savage Streets (1959)
Seven Lies South (1960)
Killer on the Turnpike (1961)
The Road to Snail (1961)
A Pride of Place (1962)
Police Special (Omnibus) (1962)
A Choice of Assassins (1963)
The Caper of the Golden Bulls (1966)
Lie Down, I Want To Talk To You (1967)
Caprifoil (1972)
Reprisal (1973)
Night of the Juggler (1975)
Soldiers of '44 (1979)
The Seeing (1980) (With Maureen McGivern)
Summit (1982)
War Games (1984)
A Matter of Honor (1984)

as Bill Peters
Blondes Die Young (1952)

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