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Jed Harris

Jed Harris (February 25, 1900 – November 15, 1979) was an Austrian-born American theatrical producer and director who rose to prominence on in the and as a wunderkind, producing and directing a string of hit plays that defined the era's dramatic landscape. Born Jacob Horowitz in , , he immigrated to the with his family in 1901, grew up in , and briefly attended before dropping out around 1920 to pursue theater. Over a career spanning three decades, Harris was involved in more than 30 productions, blending sharp commercial instincts with artistic vision to launch works by playwrights such as , , and . Harris's breakthrough came in 1926 with Broadway, a gritty drama he produced on a modest budget of $11,000 that grossed over $1.3 million and ran for 603 performances, establishing him as a financial and creative force. In an astonishing 18-month period, he followed with three more successes: Coquette (starring ), The Royal Family (a veiled satire on the ), and (a fast-paced that became a cornerstone of portrayals). His directorial credits included innovative stagings like the 1930 revival of Anton Chekhov's , the 1933 production of The Green Bay Tree (featuring in his debut), and later masterpieces such as (1938), (1947), and (1953). These works not only achieved critical acclaim and long runs but also influenced modern theater through their emphasis on and . Despite his professional triumphs, Harris was notorious for a flamboyant and often ruthless personality that earned him the moniker "theatre monster" among peers, marked by insecurity, eccentric demands, and a penchant for self-sabotage that alienated collaborators and limited his later output. His high production costs and refusal to court investors contributed to financial struggles after the early , though he maintained prestige in the industry, even borrowing luxuries like yachts to impress figures such as . Personally, Harris had a long romantic liaison with actress , with whom he had a son, and was married three times, including to actress (1941–1943). Inducted into the Theater Hall of Fame, his legacy endures as a paradoxical figure of brilliance and volatility whose productions shaped Broadway's golden age.

Early Life

Birth and Immigration

Jed Harris was born Jacob Horowitz on February 25, 1900, in , (now ), to a Jewish family. His parents were Meyer Horowitz and Esther Schurtz Horowitz. In 1901, at the age of one, the family immigrated to the . The Horowitz family initially settled in Newark, New Jersey, where young Jacob, known to his schoolmates by that name, attended South Side High School.

Education and Early Influences

Harris immigrated to the United States with his family in 1901, settling in , where his father worked as a cobbler. Growing up in a strict immigrant household marked by his father's rigidity and his mother's gentleness, he attended local schools in Newark, completing high school at South Side High, where he was known to classmates as Jacob Horowitz. In 1917, at the age of 17, Horowitz enrolled at , where he initially proved a studious "bookworm." However, he grew disenchanted with academic life and dropped out in 1920 without earning a , reportedly telling a professor, "I'm neither rich enough nor dull-witted enough to endure this awful place." Following his departure from Yale, Harris moved to , changed his name from Jacob Horowitz—first to , meaning "beloved of ," and then to the more concise Jed Harris—for professional purposes in the theater industry, and immersed himself in Manhattan's vibrant cultural scene. This period marked his self-directed entry into the world of , drawing inspiration from the energy of and surrounding entertainment districts, though he held no formal training in the field.

Career

Broadway Productions and Directing

Jed Harris entered Broadway as a producer with his debut production of Weak Sisters in 1925, a drama that ran for about a month at the . By 1926, at age 26, he achieved rapid success with , a gritty play by Philip Dunning and that captured the underworld of nightlife and became a major hit, running for 603 performances and grossing over $1.3 million. This was followed by three more consecutive successes in quick succession: Coquette (1927), starring in her breakthrough role as a ; The Royal Family (1927), a Kaufman-Ferber comedy satirizing the Barrymore acting dynasty; and (1928), the fast-talking newsroom drama by and that defined journalistic frenzy and ran for 278 performances. These four hits, produced within 18 months, established Harris as a wunderkind, earning him over $100,000 monthly and solidifying his reputation for spotting commercially viable, witty scripts. In the 1930s, Harris transitioned prominently into directing while continuing to produce, amassing a total of 31 credits through 1956. His early directing efforts included revivals like (1930), where he guided to acclaim in a sensitive portrayal of the Chekhov classic. A pinnacle came with (1938), Thornton Wilder's Pulitzer Prize-winning meditation on small-town life, which Harris both produced and directed; he innovated its staging by minimizing sets to three platforms and using minimal props, emphasizing the play's poetic simplicity and universal themes during its 336-performance run. Harris's collaborations with playwrights like Hecht and on highlighted his affinity for sharp, rapid-fire dialogue and ensemble-driven narratives, while his work with Wilder on and a 1937 revival of (adapted by Wilder for ) showcased his ability to foster innovative, character-focused interpretations. His directing approach was marked by a firm hand in rehearsals, prioritizing efficiency and artistic precision, though his demanding nature sometimes strained relationships, as seen in the short-lived (1933) with . Harris's peak in the and focused on fast-paced comedies and dramas that thrived on witty banter and dynamic group interactions, such as Serena Blandish (1929) and The Green Bay Tree (1933), the latter a sensitive handling of themes of and ambition featuring in his Broadway debut. In the 1940s, Harris directed acclaimed productions such as The Heiress (1947), Ruth and Augustus Goetz's adaptation of Washington Square, which won the and ran for 410 performances. However, his career saw mixed results after the 1940s amid shifting audience tastes toward more introspective works and his own personal conflicts, such as the moderate run of Red Gloves (1948, 113 performances) and the shorter-lived The Traitor (1949, 85 performances). He marked a sporadic return to drama with directing Arthur Miller's The Crucible (1953), a stark examination of the that ran for 197 performances despite mixed reception. His final Broadway effort, producing and directing Child of Fortune (1956), closed after three weeks, signaling the end of his active theater involvement.

Film and Television Work

In the 1940s, Jed Harris transitioned from his dominant Broadway career to , contributing to the adaptation of his 1928 stage production into the 1940 screwball comedy , directed by and starring and . Although uncredited in the final film, Harris's involvement stemmed from his original production of the Ben Hecht and play, which provided the foundational rapid-fire dialogue that defined the movie's pacing and wit. Harris's film work intensified in the early with writing credits for two productions. He provided the original story for The Light Touch (), a comedy-drama directed by and starring and , which explored themes of and moral ambiguity in . Later, Harris co-wrote the story for Night People (1954), a 20th Century-Fox thriller directed by and featuring as a U.S. intelligence officer in divided ; the film earned an Academy Award nomination for Best Motion Picture Story at the 27th Oscars. Harris also ventured into television during this period, serving as producer for the ABC dramatic anthology series The Billy Rose Show (1950–1951), which adapted short stories and anecdotes hosted by the Broadway impresario , reflecting Harris's theater roots in a nascent medium. His final major credit came as and co-writer (adaptation) for Operation Mad Ball (1957), a military comedy directed by and starring , based on Arthur Carter's play about a chaotic Army base party. Overall, Harris's screen output was limited to approximately four key projects across film and television, spanning the to mid-1950s, where his Broadway-honed emphasis on sharp, dialogue-driven narratives influenced the rhythmic intensity of these works, particularly in adapting properties to visual .

Personal Life

Marriages and Romantic Relationships

Jed Harris's romantic relationships were characterized by short-lived marriages and extramarital affairs, often intertwined with his intense theatrical career and contributing to a for personal volatility. All three of his marriages ended in , reflecting patterns of emotional turbulence and professional pressures that strained his partnerships. His affairs, meanwhile, highlighted his charismatic yet self-destructive appeal to women in the entertainment world. Harris married Anita Green on December 11, 1925, shortly after his breakthrough on , but the union dissolved amid the escalating demands of his producing schedule; they separated informally soon after the wedding and formalized the in 1929. His second marriage, to actress in 1939 following a year of , lasted until 1941 and featured occasional professional intersections, such as Platt's stage work during Harris's directing peak, though it was overshadowed by his reported abusive treatment of her. The couple's brief overlap in theater circles underscored Harris's tendency to blur personal and professional boundaries in romances. In 1957, Harris wed actress Bebe Allen in a low-profile ceremony, but the ended in divorce after less than a year, marking his shortest union and one that drew little public attention compared to his earlier relationships. Earlier, in the late , Harris engaged in a passionate affair with actress while producing her in the play Serena Blandish, a liaison that remained discreet but never progressed to despite its intensity. In his later years, during the 1970s, Harris shared companionship with Patricia Lynn Burroughs, living with her from 1976 until his death in 1979; Burroughs, who conducted extensive research on his career for her 1978 PhD dissertation, provided a stable presence in his final period. Harris earned a lasting notoriety as a womanizer, with multiple documented extramarital involvements—often with actresses—that fueled public scandals and personal instability, exacerbating the failures of his marriages and alienating those close to him.

Family and Children

Jed Harris fathered two children from extramarital relationships, both of whom experienced his distant and often harsh parenting style. His first child was an illegitimate son, Jones Harris, born on October 16, 1929, in to during their affair; the couple never married. Jones was raised primarily by Gordon after she returned to , while Harris provided financial support but offered limited emotional involvement or direct participation in his upbringing. Jones later pursued a career as a freelance researcher and passed away in August 2024 at the age of 94. Harris's second child was a daughter, Harris, born on April 27, 1941, to actress , his second wife; their marriage dissolved later that year. Public details about Abigail's life remain scarce, with little documented information on her personal or professional path. As a , Harris was widely regarded as neglectful and intimidating, fostering estrangements with both children due to his volatile temper and emotional unavailability. Biographies describe how his son Jones bore the brunt of this temperament, enduring and minimal adult interaction, while his overall contributed to familial rifts marked by and absence. This behavior was attributed to the of genius"—a pattern of inherited volatility and self-destructive intensity that afflicted Harris's family dynamics, as explored in detailed accounts of his life. Harris had no further children, and in his final years, he lived in relative isolation with companion Patricia Lynn Burroughs from 1976 until his death in 1979; she later authored a dissertation on his theatrical .

Legacy

Accolades and Honors

Jed Harris's contributions to and film earned him notable accolades, primarily through the successes of his productions rather than individual lifetime honors. As producer and director of Thornton Wilder's Our Town, which premiered in 1938, Harris was instrumental in a work that won the , recognizing its innovative portrayal of everyday American life. The play's critical and commercial triumph, under Harris's guidance, solidified his reputation as a key figure in shaping mid-20th-century theater. In the realm of awards tied directly to his Broadway efforts, Harris's 1947 production of , adapted from Henry James's Washington Square, garnered two at the second annual ceremony in 1948: in a Play for Basil Rathbone's portrayal of Austin Sloper, and Best Costume Design for Mary Percy Schenck's period-appropriate designs. This recognition highlighted the production's artistic excellence, though subsequent revivals of Harris-associated works, such as later stagings of , would earn additional for collaborators, underscoring the enduring impact of his original visions. Harris ventured into film with writing credits that attracted Academy Award attention. For the 1954 thriller Night People, directed by Nunnally Johnson and starring Gregory Peck, Harris co-wrote the original story with Tom Reed, earning a nomination for Best Writing, Motion Picture Story at the 27th Academy Awards. This nod acknowledged the screenplay's tense Cold War narrative set in Berlin, though it did not result in a win. Despite his role in producing and directing over 30 Broadway shows from 1925 to 1956—many of which innovated staging, casting, and thematic boldness in the 1920s and 1930s—Harris received few personal honors during his lifetime, attributed in part to his abrasive personality and professional feuds. Posthumously, in 1981, he was inducted into the American Theatre Hall of Fame by a vote of drama critics and editors, joining luminaries for his transformative influence on American stagecraft. Theatre histories continue to credit him with revolutionizing Broadway's commercial and artistic landscape during its golden age.

Memoir, Controversies, and Cultural Impact

In 1979, shortly before his , Harris published his A Dance on the High Wire: A Memoir of the Theater through Crown Publishers, offering candid and exuberantly immodest reflections on his career and the theatrical world he dominated. The book provided unfiltered insights into his collaborations and rivalries, though it drew for its sharp, often vitriolic tone toward prominent figures in the industry. Harris's reputation as the "Wolf of Broadway" stemmed from his ruthless and eccentric conduct, which alienated colleagues and contributed to his professional isolation. Known for creating unnecessary conflicts and abrasive interactions—such as his difficult dealings with actors like —he earned a lasting image as a theatrical tyrant whose genius was marred by self-destructive tendencies, including crippling insecurities that led to prolonged inactivity after directing Child of Fortune in 1956. By offending numerous producers and refusing to compromise, Harris found it increasingly difficult to secure directing work, rendering him effectively unemployable on Broadway by the late . Harris's influence extended beyond the stage into , where his notorious persona inspired fictional archetypes of the tyrannical producer. The 1947 novel The Saxon Charm by Frederic Wakeman, later adapted into a 1948 film starring Robert Montgomery, was purportedly based on Harris's manipulative style and personal excesses. Additionally, actor claimed that modeled the character—debuting in the 1933 short —after Harris, whom Olivier described as equally loathsome in his own experiences; Olivier even drew on Harris's sly, predatory demeanor for his portrayal of Richard III in the 1955 film. Despite his flaws, Harris's contributions to modern theatre remain underrated, particularly his taut, expertly timed direction that quickened pacing and dialogue delivery, influencing subsequent generations of staging techniques. Biographer Martin Gottfried's 1984 work Jed Harris: The Curse of Genius highlighted this duality of brilliance and personal ruin, portraying Harris as a figure whose innovative approaches to productions like The Front Page and Our Town left an indelible mark amid the controversies. The death of his son, Jones Harris, in July 2024 at age 94 marked a poignant close to the family legacy tied to Harris's tumultuous life.

References

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