Formerly Famous: Ursula Parrott

The Woman Accused (1933), starring Cary Grant and Nancy Carroll, was an unusual picture in that it was co-written, as is trumpeted in the movie’s opening credits, by “ten of the world’s greatest authors”: Rupert Hughes, Vicki Baum, Viña Delmar, Irvin S. Cobb, Gertrude Atherton, J. P. McEvoy, Zane Grey, Ursula Parrott, Polan Banks, and Sophie Kerr.

That roster of once-prominent scribes moves one to ponder the fleeting nature of fame. How many of those names are familiar to the average person today? An entirely unscientific survey we conducted found that most folks recognize exactly one: Zane Grey. The others, it seems, are all but forgotten. It’s as if Stephen King, David Sedaris, Dan Brown, Dean Koontz, J. K. Rowling and another handful of today’s most prominent authors teamed to write a serialized novel that was then made into a movie. Would movie buffs in the year 2090, while watching that picture, scratch their heads over the identities of these writers?

We did a little digging on The Woman Accused‘s ten authors and found Parrott most intriguing. She was sort of the Candace Bushnell of her day, trafficking in proto-chick lit that examined the trials and tribulations endured by the “New Woman” of the 1920s and the freshly minted morals by which she lived.

Born in Boston in 1899, Parrott graduated from Radcliffe. She moved to Greenwich Village in 1920, where she married the first of her four husbands, Lindesay Marc Parrott, in 1922. The Parrotts divorced in 1925. Parrott wrote what she knew in composing her first novel, Ex-Wife, in 1929. The book’s subject matter was so scandalous in its time that it was initially published anonymously. Despite that (or perhaps because of it), it sold more than 100,000 copies the first year. Ex-Wife tells the tale of Pat and Peter, a married couple in their twenties who are convinced they needn’t follow the old rules in the pursuit of marital bliss. But when Peter, who has strayed, learns that Pat has done the same (just once, and in a tipsy moment of emotional weakness), his attitude toward her behavior is no longer so modern.

The rest of the novel is devoted to Pat’s coming to terms with her new status as an ex-wife. From our 21st century perspective, Pat’s post-split behavior is not especially shocking—she allows herself a few dispassionate flings and submits to the abortion of a pregnancy for which Peter is responsible. Having moved out of the apartment she shared with Peter, Pat rooms with Lucia, a woman in her thirties who, having already undergone the transition from wife to ex-wife, serves as a soothing and encouraging mentor to Pat. They are two fashionable, well-read, cosmopolitan women navigating an existence that more closely resembles life in 2011 than one might expect.

Author Francine Prose, in her introduction to the 1989 reissue of Ex-Wife wrote: “It’s striking how much of Ex-Wife seems far less dated than many of [F. Scott] Fitzgerald‘s Jazz Age stories”—and it’s true. Pat’s daily life comes off as remarkably similar to those led by so many urban, urbane women today.

MGM paid the then-extravagant sum of $20,000 fro the film rights to Ex-Wife, though the resulting picture, 1930’s The Divorcee, starring Norma Shearer and Chester Morris, is at best a loose adaptation of Parrott’s novel. That didn’t keep her from answering the door when Hollywood again came knocking. Between 1930 and 1936, eight more pictures were made based on Parrott’s novel and stories.

As a writer, Parrott was at her most successful between 1929 and the early 1940s. Her son has estimated that she earned in the neighborhood of $700,000—between $8-$10 million in today’s dollars—over that span. But Parrott spent the money as quickly as she made it, and when her career began a slow but steady slide in the ’40s, there was little left to show for her successes.

Like her fiction, Parrott’s life was not without its marital disruptions and scandals. Wed and divorced four times, she found herself hauled into court in 1943 for helping a young soldier escape from military prison. What’s more, the soldier was accused of trafficking in marijuana. Parrott was also reportedly the victim of numerous attempts at blackmail, and in 1953 she was again in the news when, as Time magazine reported, “her hotel presented a $225.20 bill and refused to accept her check.” Parrott spent 30 hours in a jail in Delaware County, Pennsylvania, with her French poodle, Coco.

In 1957, Ursula Parrott died of cancer at age 58. Her final days were spent in the charity ward of a New York City hospital. Today, the once-celebrated Parrott is so little remembered that only recently was she finally given an entry at Wikipedia, that online repository for otherwise forgotten figures. When first we composed this account, in the summer of 2010, no entry for her was to be found there.

This article originally appeared in the Fall/Winter 2010 issue of Zelda, the Magazine of the Vintage Nouveau.

  • Pinterest
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Google
  • Tumblr
  • LinkedIn
  • Reddit
  • Pocket
  • Print
  • Email

07 Jul 11 | Tags: Candace Bushnell, Chester Morris, Dan Brown, David Sedaris, Dean Koontz, Deaware County, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Francine Prose, Gertrude Atherton, Greenwich Village, Irvin S. Cobb, J. K. Rowling, J.P. McEvoy, Lindesay Marc Parrott, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, MGM, Norma Shearer, Polan Banks, Radcliffe College, Rupert Hughes, Sophie Kerr, Stephen King, Time magazine, Ursula Parrott, Vicki Baum, Viña Delmar, Zane Grey
| Cladrite Culture, Formerly Famous | Read on | Comment (1)

You think that money is everything
And yet it's anybody's spring.
Go make a fortune, become a king
And still it's anybody's spring.

And if you flash a bank roll
Do you suppose the brook would care?
Or that a rose would say
'There goes a millionaire!'?
It's more than diamonds around a ring
Because it's anybody's spring.

You may be born with the silver spoon
And yet it's anybody's moon.
You couldn't buy a ticket
To hear the first robin sing.
It's free because
It's anybody's spring.

—It's Anybody's Spring; music by James Van Heusen; words by Johnny Burke 1945


  • Home
  • How to listen
  • Support Cladrite Radio
  • Get Cladrite Radio gear
  • About us
  • Contact us

Help Keep Cladrite Radio Alive and Streaming!

Take part in our fundraising campaign as our streaming contract renewal approaches.

Yesterday’s T-Shirts, Today!

Cladrite.com--Yesterday's T-shirts, Today
Tell a Friend Be our fan on Facebook Follow us on Twitter Follow us on Google+ Follow us on Instagram View our Pinterest page Our YouTube Channel Follow us on Tumblr Subscribe in a reader Subscribe via email
Save NYC

Search This Site

Blogroll

  • CharlesPhoenix.com
  • Cladrite Designs
  • Craig's Big Bands and Big Names
  • Dear Old Hollywood
  • Greenbriar Picture Shows
  • Hollywood Heyday
  • Lesley M. M. Blume
  • Magazine History: A Collector's Blog
  • Manhattan User's Guide
  • NYC Tenement Museum
  • Old Magazine Articles
  • On This Day in Jazz Age Music
  • Restaurant-ing through history
  • RuthEtting.com
  • Shorpy
  • Silver Screen Suppers
  • Songbook
  • The Astounding B Monster
  • The Candy Wrapper Archive
  • The Fedora Lounge
  • The Vitaphone Project
  • Tips on Tables
  • Trouble in Paradise
  • Vitaphone Varieties
  • Zelda


Here are the last twenty movies we've seen:
No Man of Her Own (1950)_****
Bachelor Mother (1939)_***
Among the Missing (1934)_***
Sans Lendemain (There's No Tomorrow, 1939)_****
So This Is College (1929)_***
Rogue's Yarn (1957)_**
McLintock! (1963)_**
Naked Alibi (1954)_***
A Child Is Born (1939)_***
Conspiracy (1930)_***
Dulcy (1940)_***
They Made Her a Spy (1939)_***
The Gorilla (1939)_**
I Died a Thousand Times (1955)_***
Men Call It Love (1931)_***
The Easiest Way (1931)_***
Alibi Ike (1935)_***
The Drop (2014)_****
Having Wonderful Crime (1945)_***
Rachel and the Stranger (1948)_***

Recent Posts

  • Remembering Shirley Temple on Her 90th Birthday
  • Nora Bayes: Paying Tribute to a Legendary Performer
  • Remembering May Robson on Her 160th Birthday
  • Remembering William Holden on His 100th Birthday
  • Remembering Billie Holiday on Her 103rd Birthday
  • Remembering Bette Davis on Her 110th Birthday
  • Remembering Lon Chaney on His 135th Birthday
  • Remembering Dennis O’Keefe on His 110th Birthday
  • Remembering Hideko Takamine on Her Birthday
  • Remembering Roscoe Arbuckle on His 131st Birthday
  • Remembering Joan Crawford on Her 112th (or so) Birthday
  • Remembering Chico Marx on His 131st Birthday
  • Happy 101st Birthday, Dame Vera Lynn!
  • Remembering Nat “King” Cole on His 99th Birthday
  • Remembering George Brent on His 114th Birthday

© Cladrite Radio · RSS Feed
Theme Old Lamp Design by WordPress Pro WP SEO

loading Cancel
Post was not sent - check your email addresses!
Email check failed, please try again
Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email.
loading Cancel
Post was not sent - check your email addresses!
Email check failed, please try again
Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email.