Harold Robbins(1916-1997)
- Writer
- Producer
Harold Robbins summed up his career best in a 1971 ITV documentary: "I'm the
world's best writer--there's nothing more to say". This phenomenally
successful author--over 750,000,000 copies of his books were sold
worldwide, and most were adapted successfully for the screen. At fifteen,
he left home to begin a series of low-paying jobs, including working as a numbers runner.
At twenty, after buying options on farmers' produce, Robbins was a millionaire,
but a move into sugar futures wiped him out. He next took a job as a
shipping clerk with Universal Pictures warehouse in New York and was
soon promoted to executive director for budget and planning. On a bet
with a studio executive, Robbins wrote his personal favorite novel,
Never Love a Stranger (Knopf, 1948), and other early works which
achieved minor critical success. He soon devolved into a writer of more
popular novels involving celebrity, sex, and violence, to the scorn of
critics. His writings after 1960 reflected his personal life: six
marriages, wild Hollywood parties, drug abuse. A stroke in 1982 left
him with aphasia, although he continued to write, publishing his last
novel, Tycoon, in 1997.