The Disenchanted is a 1950 American novel by Budd Schulberg .
5-505: The novel is about a young screenwriter, Shep, who collaborates on a screenplay about a college winter festival with a famous novelist, Manley Halliday, who was successful in the 1920s but is now considered over the hill. It was reportedly based on Schulberg's experiences writing the film Winter Carnival with F. Scott Fitzgerald . Sheilah Graham wrote the novel contained "a one-dimensional portrait of Scott. It showed him at his very worst, whining, antagonistic, boastful, exhausted. It simply
10-407: The fadeout years of a once-great literary giant. Its dialog and action pour salt on the open wounds of a career shattered by a dissipating influence it could not control. Tense, at times stirring drama and exceptionally well acted, this isn’t “entertainment” in the more frivolous sense of the word but it should have substantial appeal to playgoers who appreciate something more." A feature film version
15-479: The script, an experience that led to Schulberg's novel The Disenchanted . Publicity-loving heiress Jill Baxter ( Ann Sheridan ) returns to Dartmouth College for its Winter Carnival. Years earlier, she had been named Queen of the Carnival. Now, after a divorce from her exotic husband, she revisits Hanover, New Hampshire and reunites with the boyfriend ( Richard Carlson ), now a tweedy professor, that she had dumped for
20-424: Was announced by Seven Arts Productions but it was never made. Winter Carnival (film) Winter Carnival is a 1939 comedy-drama film directed by Charles Reisner and starring Ann Sheridan , Richard Carlson and Helen Parrish . Jill Baxter returns to her college for the annual Winter Carnival and falls in love with an old boyfriend. Budd Schulberg and F. Scott Fitzgerald , among others worked on
25-546: Was not true. When he was drunk, perhaps, but Budd had also seen Scott sober... He was not the miserable man in Schulberg’s book. How could Budd, who professed to love Scott, who seemed to regard himself as his heir, present such a dreadful image of him to the world?" The novel was adapted for a stage play by Schulberg and Harvey Breit. This debuted on Broadway in 1958, starring Jason Robards , Rosemary Harris and George Grizzard . Variety called it "a bare-knuckle chronicle of
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