Denne Bart Petitclerc

Denne Bart Petitclerc
Denne Bart Petitclerc
Born May 15, 1929(1929-05-15)
Montesano, Washington, United States
Died February 3, 2006(2006-02-03) (aged 76)
Los Angeles, California, United States
Occupation Author, Journalist, War Correspondent, Producer, Screenwriter
Spouse Wanda Petitclerc (m. 1970–2006) «start: (1970)–end+1: (2007)»"Marriage: Wanda Petitclerc to Denne Bart Petitclerc" Location: (linkback://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Denne_Bart_Petitclerc)

Denne Bart Petitclerc (May 15, 1929 - February 3, 2006[1]) was an American journalist, war correspondent, author, television producer, and screenwriter.

Contents

Biography

Born in Montesano, Washington, Petitclerc was five years when old when his father, Edmund Petitclerc, reportedly took him to Seattle to see the angel atop the Bon Marché department store Christmas tree. His father told young Petitclerc to watch the angel and would be right back. He abandoned the family and never returned.[2]

His mother, Grace Petitclerc (née Meyers), abandoned with two children, decided to place Petitclerc and his older sister in an orphanage in San Jose in order to go to school. His mother would earn a doctorate and teach at UC Berkeley. She also wrote books about educating handicapped children.

Career

In the 1950s while living and working in Florida, Petitclerc wrote a fan letter to writer Ernest Hemingway. He received a response from Hemingway and they became friends. On one of their fishing trips Hemingway alluded to a yet unfinished book he believed would make a great film.

Le Mans book cover.

Later Petitclerc would adapt Hemingway’s novel and wrote the screenplay for the film Islands in the Stream.[1] Petitclerc worked for several newspapers including the San Francisco Chronicle and the Miami Herald. In 1950, he became a Korean War correspondent for the San Francisco Chronicle.

In the 1960s he wrote his first script for the television show Bonanza and soon was working on the long time series. He became the show’s executive story editor. In 1969 he created for NBC Then Came Bronson, a one-hour drama television show about a motorcycle riding news reporter searching for the meaning of life. He also helped launch The High Chaparral (1967–1971) for NBC. He wrote the pilot and other episodes.[3]

His book Le Mans 24 was a novelization of the film Le Mans starring Steve McQueen.

Speaking of Petitclerc in the Los Angeles Times Peter Bart, editor in chief of Variety said, "He was a master at translating, keeping the essence of Hemingway's attitudes and ideas but framing them into lines that an actor could speak on the screen."

Petitclerc wrote several movies for television and the screenplay for the 1972 feature film Red Sun with Charles Bronson and Toshirō Mifune. Other credits include the television movies Key West, Men of the Dragon, The Woman Who Sinned, The Vivero Letter and The Cowboy and The Ballerina.

In 1969, Petitclerc donated his collection of Hemingway's letters to Sonoma State University in Rohnert Park, California.

Later years and death

Petitclerc was led to Ketchum, Idaho by Ernest Hemingway who moved there in the early 1960s. Petitclerc lived there for the last thirty-five years of his life. He died on February 3, 2006 in Los Angeles due to complications from lung cancer.[1]

According to Variety, Petitclerc was working on Papa, a film based on his relationship with Hemingway at the time of his death. When he died the film was in development.[4]

Award nomination

Books

  • Rage of Honor. Doubleday: 1966.
  • Le Mans 24. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich: 1971. ISBN 0151498202.
  • Destinies. Simon and Schuster: 1981. (Co-author Peter Bart.) ISBN 0671246771.

References

External links


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