- Timothy Crouse
Timothy Crouse is an American
journalist andwriter .It's said that he got hooked on theater at age four when he saw
Ethel Merman in the Lindsay & Crouse/Irving Berlin musical "Call Me Madam ".Family
Timothy Crouse's affinity for campaign reporters and the theater took root thanks to his father,
Russel Crouse , who was a career newspaperman and playwright. "The stories he told me of his newspaper days—especially traveling around the country with prankish sports teams—had a fatal tinge of romance about them," said Crouse. [http://www.mediabistro.com/articles/cache/a3133.asp?pntvs=1& mediabistro.com: Articles: Q&A: Timothy Crouse ] ] His father's career in the theatre began in 1928 when he played Bellflower in the play "Gentlemen of the Press." Later, his father turned his attention to writing. In 1934, he and his long-time partnerHoward Lindsay together revisedP. G. Wodehouse and Guy Bolton's book for theCole Porter musical "Anything Goes ." "My father and Howard's trademark was a painstaking craftsmanship," says Crouse. "They spent months on an outline for a play, then worked on the dialogue, then rewrote and rewrote until everything was just right." [http://www.donshewey.com/theater_articles/anything_goes.html Program notes by Don Shewey for Lincoln Center Theater's 1988 revival of "Anything Goes" ] ] And more than fifty years after his father collaborated on the original score, Timothy Crouse's revised libretto of "Anything Goes" opened on Broadway. [ [http://www.donshewey.com/theater_articles/anything_goes.html Program notes by Don Shewey for Lincoln Center Theater's 1988 revival of "Anything Goes" ] ]Crouse is the brother of Actress
Lindsay Crouse and also the grandson of Pauline Ives and John Erskine (the novelist and former Columbia professor).Crouse attended
Harvard University .Early career
Crouse served as a Peace Corps Volunteer in Morocco from 1968 to 1969. [ [http://peacecorpswriters.org/pages/depts/resources/bibliog/bibc.html Bibliography of Peace Corps Writers – C ] ] Returning to the United States he wrote for the
Boston Herald before joining the staff ofRolling Stone Magazine where he worked as a contributing editor from 1971 to 1972. [ [http://history.enotes.com/1970-government-politics-american-decades-ps/boys-bus The Boys on the Bus - 1970's Government and Politics ] ]The Boys on the Bus
Crouse is the author of "
The Boys on the Bus ", a largely critical look at the journalists who covered the 1972 US presidential campaign. As a youngRolling Stone reporter he wrote music stories, but he wanted to try his hand at political reporting. At a 1972 Rolling Stone staff meeting the only other writer interested in covering the election was the legendary writerHunter S. Thompson , so Crouse latched onto him. "It only took a few days of riding the bus for me to see that the reporters themselves would make a great story," Crouse said. [ [http://www.mediabistro.com/articles/cache/a3133.asp?pntvs=1& mediabistro.com: Articles: Q&A: Timothy Crouse ] ] Crouse profiled his colleagueHunter S. Thompson in the book. [Thompson] "wrote to provoke, shock, protest and annoy," wrote Crouse. [ [http://www.nytimes.com/2005/02/21/books/21hunter.html?ex=1186891200&en=f6cbc480339d3cc9&ei=5070 The New York Times > Books > Hunter S. Thompson, 67, Author, Commits Suicide ] ] Crouse also profiledR.W. Apple , the legendary reporter and editor at theNew York Times . Reporters "recognized many of their own traits in him, grotesquely magnified. The shock of recognition frightened them. Apple was like them, only more blatant. He openly displayed the faults they tried to hide: the insecurity, the ambitiousness, the name-dropping" and "the weakness for powerful men." [ [http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/04/nyregion/05applecnd.html?ex=1317614400&en=7e231b4a0234f616&ei=5090&partner=rssuserland&emc=rss R.W. Apple, a Times Journalist in Full, Dies at 71 - New York Times ] ]David Broder andRobert Novak are also profiled in the book. In the book, Crouse coins the termpack journalism . "The press likes to demonstrate its power by destroying lightweights, and pack journalism is never more doughty and complacent than when the pack has tacitly agreed that a candidate is a joke." [ [http://jillandhal.home.att.net/halqn/t_crous2.htm Q&N: The Boys on the Bus (Timothy Crouse) ] ]Later Work
After "The Boys on the Bus", Crouse became the Washington columnist for
Esquire Magazine and also wrote articles forThe New Yorker andThe Village Voice . [ [http://www.randomhouse.com/randomhouse/publicity/catalog/display.pperl?isbn=9780812968200&view=pr Random House Publicity | The Boys on the Bus by Hunter S. Thompson ] ] In 1982 Crouse conceived the idea of reviving "Anything Goes ". He co-authored a new libretto for the musical withJohn Weidman that opened at theVivian Beaumont Theatre on October 19, 1987, and ran for 784 performances. They re-ordered the musical numbers, borrowing Cole Porter pieces from other Porter shows, a practice which the composer often engaged in. ("Easy To Love" was from the 1936 movie "Born to Dance ".) In 2002 the musical was produced at theRoyal National Theatre in London. [ [http://www.mediabistro.com/articles/cache/a3133.asp?pntvs=1& mediabistro.com: Articles: Q&A: Timothy Crouse ] ] In 2000Alfred A. Knopf published Crouse and Luc Brébion's translation of Nobel-prize winnerRoger Martin du Gard ’s nearly 800 page memoir "Lieutenant-Colonel de Maumort". [ [http://www.nytimes.com/books/00/01/23/reviews/000123.23sturrot.html The Man Who Believed in Nothing ] ] Crouse has been working on fiction for the past several years and his story "Sphinxes" appeared in the Spring 2003 issue ofZeotrope Magazine . [ [http://www.all-story.com/issues.cgi?show=back Zoetrope: All-Story: Back Issue ] ]Citations
External links
* [http://www.mediabistro.com/articles/cache/a3133.asp Interview with Timothy Crouse]
* [http://www.pbs.org/.../jan-june00/coverage_2-17.html PBS interview with Crouse]
* [http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A37323-2004Aug26.html Jonathon Yardley reviews "Boys on the Bus" for the Washington Post]
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