I don’t know that anyone really thinks about him any more, but Gene Fowler was a journalist and Hollywood writer in the 1930’s and 40’s who was famous for his wit. The other day I was trying to remember a poem he wrote about himself becoming rich. I couldn’t find a copy of it online, so I took it upon myself to transcribe it.
It’s found in H. Allen Smith’s book Lost in the Horse Latitudes. I present it here with Smith’s introduction.
The poem that follows is about Gene Fowler and was written by Gene Fowler and it treats of the attitude of Mr. Fowler’s friends on learning that he had hit the Hollywood jackpot. It was written some years ago just after Mr. Fowler had gone to work for Darryl Zanuck. Mr. Zanuck got it in the mail one day just as it is here:
HOLLYWOOD HORST WESSEL
The boys are not speaking to Fowler
Since he’s been the wine of the rich;
The boys are not speaking to Fowler–
That plutocrat son of a bitch.For decades he stood with the bourgeois,
And starved as he fumbled his pen.
He lived on the cheapest of liquor
And, aye, was the humblest of men.And even though women forswore him
And laughed when he fell into pails,
He went over big on the Bow’ry,
The toast of the vagabond males.The wrinkles were deep in his belly,
The meat on his thigh bones was lean.
Malaria spotted his features;
The stones that he slept on were mean.Then Midas sneaked up to the gutter
Where old Peasant Folwer lay flat,
And the King of Gelt tickled the victim,
Who rose with a sold-gold pratt.Gone! Gone was the fervor for justice,
And fled was the soul of this man;
This once fearless child of the shanty
Was cursed with an 18-K can.He hankered for costlier raiment
And butlers who’d served the elite.
He tore down the old family privy
And purchased a Haviland seat.Ah, God, how this parvenu strutted,
And smoked only dollar cigars.
His jock straps were lined with chinchilla,
His drawers were the envy of stars.Ah, where was the once-valiant spokesman
Who gave not a care nor a damn?
Alas, when they scaled his gray matter
It weighed hardly one epigram.The boys are not nodding to Fowler
Since he rose from the alms-asking ditch;
The boys do not cotton to Fowler–
That sybarite son of a bitch!Being both an admirer and friend of Mr. Fowler, Mr. Zanuck was indignant. He telephoned Mr. Fowler at once. He said that some dirty bum, jealous of Mr. Fowler’s popularity and success, had written a nasty poem about him. He read it to Mr. Fowler over the phone.
“Good, isn’t it?” commented Mr. Fowler.
“Good, hell!” replied Mr. Zanuck. “I think it’s almost libelous.”
“I still think it’s good,” said Mr. Fowler. “I wrote it myself. I wrote it as spokesman for the general public.”
Some lines of this have been going through my head today, and I’m glad to find the whole poem, with HAS’s comments, just as I remember them from Horse Latitudes. Thank you.
I’m glad you found it useful. Both H. Allen & Fowler were very creative and witty writers.
Are you sure you’ve got the second line right?
I remember it as
Since he’s dined on the wine of the rich.
“Since he’s been the wine of the rich” makes little sense.
But if that’s how H. Allen Smith has it, that’s what it must have been.
If you have a chance, you might look at Smith’s “Life in a Putty Knife Factory.” It’s better than “Lost in the Horse Latitudes.”
I will give that second line a look next time I’m back in the States and have access to my library – thanks for pointing it out!
On my last trip to the States I double checked the line in my edition and found it as transcribed above. Mine is an omnibus edition of Smith’s three reporting books (Putty Knife, Low Man, and Horse Latitudes), so there is the possibility that in the reprinting there are errors. Mr. McMichael’s memory would seem to make more sense than what is above.
..and let us not for a moment forget the original Smith vehicle, “Low Man on a Totem Pole”. I read these as a teen ager and carried copies with me all through WWII, exposing as many of my buddies to them as possible. They just don’t make ’em like that any more.
….and then there was Max Shulman…..long, long before Dobie Gillis.
…incidentally, I believe the line in question actually reads, “since he’s been on the wine of the rich”; the addition of “on” completes the thought logically.
But it doesn’t scan with ‘on’ inserted. Besides, I remember the line as, “Since he’s been the toast of the rich,” which is the contextual meaning of the line if “wine” is correct.
I was thinking of this poem today and thought i’d look for it on the Internerd. Viola!* There it is! H. Allen Smith is one of my boyhood heroes–anyone who writes a book called “The Compleat Practical Joker” must be. Alas, I’ve lost my copy, but “Life in a Putty Knife Factory” is but steps away from me as I write this. Thank you for your keeping alive great American 20th Century literature.
Yeah, it’s voila, but only a few people know that, and they mostly spell it vwallah.