Harold Robbins

American author
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Also known as: Harold Francis Rubins
Quick Facts
Original name:
Harold Francis Rubin
Born:
May 21, 1916, New York City, New York, U.S.
Died:
October 14, 1997, Palm Springs, California (aged 81)

Harold Robbins (born May 21, 1916, New York City, New York, U.S.—died October 14, 1997, Palm Springs, California) was an American author credited with popularizing a prurient style of mass-market fiction that traded on the public appetite for tales of profligate Hollywood stars and glamorous criminals.

Robbins was known to have fabricated numerous episodes that were repeated by journalists and others who documented his storied existence, paying little attention to consistency or plausibility. The particulars of his life were not untangled until a decade after his death. The childhood he invented for himself was particularly colourful: he claimed to have been raised in a Catholic orphanage and then adopted by a poor Jewish family. He also maintained that he had earned extra money as a child prostitute. In fact, the orphanage where he claimed to have been abandoned never existed. Robbins was actually raised in Brooklyn with three half-siblings by his Jewish birth father, who was a pharmacist, and his stepmother; his birth mother had died shortly after he was born. The family moved to Manhattan following the onset of the Great Depression.

Though Robbins claimed that he had dropped out of high school and joined the navy, he actually graduated in 1934 and supported himself with various jobs in the food service industry. A report that he had made millions on crop futures and lost them betting on the sugar market during this period is also likely apocryphal. About 1940 he began working as a clerk for Universal Pictures in New York, and two years later he became budget director. Robbins wrote his first novel, Never Love a Stranger (1948; film 1958), while working for the studio. The book chronicles a young New York boy’s life of crime and dissolution. It was among several other works (by different authors) containing scenes of sex and violence that became the subject of an obscenity trial in Philadelphia the next year. The books were ultimately ruled not obscene.

Robbins continued to write, producing novels that included The Dream Merchants (1949; television film 1980), a seamy chronicle of the early days of the film industry, and A Stone for Danny Fisher (1952), a story about a Jewish boy’s struggle to succeed in Depression-era New York City. The latter work was widely interpreted as something of a roman à clef. It was the basis for the Elvis Presley vehicle King Creole (1958).

Robbins left Universal to write full-time in 1957. His most successful novel, The Carpetbaggers (1961; film 1964), featured characters loosely based on tycoon Howard Hughes and actress Jean Harlow, and it epitomized the blend of sex, crime, and exuberant vulgarity typical of his oeuvre. The profits from the book—which ultimately sold millions of copies—allowed Robbins to live in the style of his jet-setting protagonists. He spent lavishly on boats, homes, travel, drugs, and prostitutes while maintaining a steady output of pulpy romps, many of which drew on real-life people and events. Among his notable successes were Where Love Has Gone (1962; film 1964), which echoes the killing of actress Lana Turner’s abusive boyfriend by her daughter; The Adventurers (1966; film 1970), about a playboy entangled in South American revolutionary politics; The Betsy (1971; film 1978), which concerns a family of automobile tycoons; and Dreams Die First (1977), a chronicle of the debaucheries of a bisexual criminal. While critics reveled in deriding his works as potboilers and “airport novels,” more than 750 million of them were reported to have been sold.

Following a 1982 stroke and a 1985 seizure that led to crippling bone injuries, Robbins found himself unable to maintain his output. Though wheelchair-bound and in constant pain, he rallied following his third marriage and, with the assistance of his wife, issued sequels to several of his earlier novels in the 1990s. He nonetheless died in much-reduced circumstances. A steady stream of material was published posthumously under Robbins’s name, most of it either based on outlines written by Robbins himself or entirely ghostwritten. Among those volumes were The Predators (1998), Heat of Passion (2003), and The Betrayers (2004).

Richard Pallardy