Andrew Glaze Papers, 1948-1964


Summary Information
Title: Andrew Glaze Papers
Inclusive Dates: 1948-1964

Creator:
  • Glaze, Andrew, 1920-
Call Number: U.S. Mss 51AN

Quantity: 0.8 c.f. (2 archives boxes)

Repository:
Wisconsin Historical Society Archives / Wisconsin Center for Film and Theater Research
Contact Information

Archival Locations:
Wisconsin Historical Society (Map)

Abstract:
Papers of a poet-playwright, including drafts and revisions of plays and teleplays, a small amount of correspondence, drafts of a few poems, miscellaneous notes, and photographs.

Language: English

URL to cite for this finding aid: http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1711.dl/wiarchives.uw-whs-us0051an
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Biography/History

Andrew Glaze, American poet and playwright, was born in Nashville, Tennessee, in 1920, and grew up in Birmingham, Alabama. He was graduated from Harvard College in 1942, whereupon he entered the Army, in Army Air Corps Communications, and rose to the rank of lieutenant.

Following his military service, Glaze did graduate work at Stanford University, and was a Fellow at the Breadloaf Writer's Conference in 1946. At the close of his graduate studies, he returned to Birmingham, where for nine years he was a courthouse reporter for the Birmingham Post-Herald. He then undertook a position as a writer for the British Travel Association in New York City, a post he held for four additional years.

Glaze's earlier literary efforts have been chiefly distinguished in the field of poetry. He is the winner of the Eunice Tietjens Memorial Prize, given by Poetry in 1950; and of an award from Poetry Introductions in 1958. His work has appeared in the New Yorker, Virginia Quarterly Review, Saturday Review, Paris Review, New Directions XII, and New World Writing IX.

In 1959, Glaze determined to concentrate on serious playwriting. He had, however, been writing both plays and television scripts for over ten years previous to this time, his two earliest plays being The Puppet Master, 1947, and The Seduction of Mrs. Prawn, 1948-49. To date, none of his work has been produced, but he is confident that the play, We Are All Liars, which he is currently putting into final form, will reverse this record. Nor has Glaze been neglecting his poetry, for in 1963 he was at work on his first complete book of verse, and he continues to write and to receive recognition in this medium.

In 1949, Glaze married Dorothy Elliott, had two children, and was subsequently divorced. He currently resides in New York.

Scope and Content Note

This collection consists primarily of play and television script manuscripts covering the period 1948-1964. Play manuscripts, with the exception of The Seduction of Mrs. Prawn and Want Me, are in the form of unorganized, unnumbered hand and typewritten sheets, and were placed in alphabetical order but otherwise were left in exactly the sequence as received from the donor. Except for the two works cited above, the Manuscripts Library does not as yet have the final acting versions for any of these plays.

Many of the television scripts following the plays arrived in their own binders, and are likewise placed in alphabetical order. Following are unsorted draft sheets for a number of poems which Glaze worked on during the approximate period 1962-63, and the collection concludes with folders of miscellaneous notes and photographs.

Administrative/Restriction Information
Acquisition Information

Presented by Andrew Glaze, New York, N.Y., August 6, 1964.


Processing Information

Processed by WHB, 1964.


Contents List
Plays
Box   1
Miss Pete, 1962, “several versions,” Folder 1-3
Box   1
The Seduction of Mrs. Prawn, 1948-49
Box   1
The Underman, n.d., “several versions”
Box   1
Want Me, 1962
Box   1
We Are All Liars, 1964, “first version”
Who Stole the Lollipop, 1962
Box   2
Correspondence, n.d.
Box   2
Manuscript, Folder 1-2
TV Scripts
Box   2
Miss Lucy, 1958, early version of We Are All Liars
Box   2
The No `Count Man, 1958
Box   2
The Pandora Box, 1956
Box   2
The Rat, 1958
Box   2
Virgie, 1956
Box   2
Untitled, 1963; based on The Rat
Box   2
Poems, drafts, n.d.
Box   2
Miscellanous notes, n.d.
Box   2
Photographs