Edgar Rice Burroughs(1875-1950)
- Writer
- Producer
His father had been a major in the Union army during the Civil War.
Edgar Rice Burroughs attended the Brown School then, due to a
diphtheria epidemic, Miss Coolie's Maplehurst School for Girls, then
the Harvard School, Phillips Andover and the Michigan Military Academy.
He was a mediocre student and flunked his examination for West Point.
He worked a variety of jobs all over the country: a cowboy in Idaho, a
gold miner in Oregon, a railroad policeman in Utah, a department
manager for Sears Roebuck in Chicago. He published "A Princess of Mars"
under the title "Under the Moons of Mars" in six parts between February
and July of 1912. The same "All-Story Magazine" put out his immediately
successful "Tarzan of the Apes" in October of that year. Two years
later the hardback book appeared, and on January 27, 1918, the movie
opened on Broadway starring Elmo Lincoln as
Tarzan. It was one of the first movies to gross over $1,000,000.
Burroughs was able to move his family to the San Fernando Valley in
1919, converting a huge estate into Tarzana Ranch. He was in Pearl
Harbor December 7, 1941 and remained in Hawaii as a war correspondent.
Afterward he returned home with a heart condition. On March 19, 1950,
alone in his home after reading the Sunday comics in bed, he died. By
then he had written 91 novels, 26 of which were about Tarzan. The man
whose books have sold hundreds of millions of copies in over thirty
languages once said "I write to escape ... to escape poverty".