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Quiz about Ben Hecht
Quiz about Ben Hecht

Ben Hecht Trivia Quiz


They don't make writers like Hecht anymore! Journalist, playwright, screenwriter, novelist...he was a legend in his own time, but forgotten now. Good luck!

A multiple-choice quiz by tjoebigham. Estimated time: 4 mins.
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Author
tjoebigham
Time
4 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
134,140
Updated
Dec 03 21
# Qns
20
Difficulty
Average
Avg Score
13 / 20
Plays
291
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Question 1 of 20
1. What was Hecht's lifespan? Hint


Question 2 of 20
2. He was born in New York, lived for a time in Chicago, but what Midwestern city did he grow up in? Hint


Question 3 of 20
3. How many siblings did Hecht have? Hint


Question 4 of 20
4. What did he do as a boy that inspired some of his later writings? Hint


Question 5 of 20
5. On what newspaper did he begin his journalistic career? Hint


Question 6 of 20
6. How many years was he a newsman? Hint


Question 7 of 20
7. What is the name of the poet Hecht collaborated with on a play and novel, and later had a famed "feud" with? Hint


Question 8 of 20
8. How many novels did Hecht write? Hint


Question 9 of 20
9. How many stage plays did he pen? Hint


Question 10 of 20
10. Hecht based his most famous play, "The Front Page" on his days as a journalist (along with partner MacArthur). When did it debut and how many times has it been filmed? Hint


Question 11 of 20
11. Name the number of screenplays Hecht wrote or "doctored" in his lifetime. Hint


Question 12 of 20
12. Hecht directed or co-directed some of his scripts.


Question 13 of 20
13. What name did Hecht take from one of his novels to use in one of his scripts? Hint


Question 14 of 20
14. Which one of his co-writers on "Scarface" would Hecht later re-team with? Hint


Question 15 of 20
15. How many times was he married and how many children did he have? Hint


Question 16 of 20
16. What did he title his autobiography? Hint


Question 17 of 20
17. Later in his life, Hecht hosted a short-lived TV show.


Question 18 of 20
18. What celebrity was Hecht going to ghostwrite an autobiography for? Hint


Question 19 of 20
19. What other screenwriting feat could Hecht boast of? Hint


Question 20 of 20
20. A lagniappe: what the heck does "Hecht" mean in German? Hint



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Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. What was Hecht's lifespan?

Answer: 1893-1964

Hecht's life spanned from the birth of the movies he would one day write for to the Space Age.
2. He was born in New York, lived for a time in Chicago, but what Midwestern city did he grow up in?

Answer: Racine, Wisconsin

Hecht's father Joseph, a designer of women's clothes, worked first in New York, then Chicago, then finally settled in Racine, where Ben grew to adolescence.
3. How many siblings did Hecht have?

Answer: one brother

Little brother Peter was Hecht's only sibling.
4. What did he do as a boy that inspired some of his later writings?

Answer: circus acrobatics

With little brother Pete, Hecht did an acrobatic act in a traveling circus, that would later inspire the musical he wrote with Charles MacArthur, "Jumbo" (he also scripted the movie "Circus World"). Also, Hecht studied violin as a boy and was a high school cheerleader.
5. On what newspaper did he begin his journalistic career?

Answer: Chicago Daily Journal

Hecht eventually rose from reporter to columnist; his columns were collected in "1001 Afernoons in Chicago," and two other volumes.
6. How many years was he a newsman?

Answer: ten

For a full decade Hecht reported Chicago news...and often faked items when real news didn't happen!
7. What is the name of the poet Hecht collaborated with on a play and novel, and later had a famed "feud" with?

Answer: Maxwell Bodenheim

Besides poetry, Bodenheim wrote such novels as "Naked on Roller Skates." He and Hect co-wrote the play "Master Poisoner" and the novel "Cutie." Later Hecht wrote a roman a clef about Bodenheim, "Count Bruga," that so riled the poet that he began the long feud between them. Bodenheim later drifted into alcoholism and oblivion and was murdered along with his wife in Greenwich Village in 1954.

Hecht spoke kindly of Bodenheim from then on.
8. How many novels did Hecht write?

Answer: 14

They are: "Eric Dorn" (1921), "Fantazius Mallare" (1922, an attempt at an 1890s style Decadent fantasy), "Gargoyles" and "The Florentine Dagger" (both 1923), "Cutie" (1924, written with Bodenheim), "Humpty Dumpty," Kingdom of Evil" (sequel to "Mallare") and "Broken Necks" (all 1926), "Count Bruga" and "A Jew In Love" (both 1931), "Miracle in the Rain" (1943), "I Hate Actors" (1944), "The Sensualists" (1959) and "In The Midst Of Death" (posthumous, 1964).
9. How many stage plays did he pen?

Answer: 18

Hecht's plays are: "Wonder Hat" (1916), "Hero of Santa Maria" (1917), "Master Poisoner" (with Bodenheim, 1918), "The Egoist" and "Hand of Shiva" (both 1920), "The Stork" (1925), "Man-eating Tiger" (1927), "Christmas Eve" (1928, debuted 1939), "The Front Page" (with MacArthur, 1928), "The Great Magoo" (1932), "Jumbo" (with MacArthur, 1935), "To Quito and Back" (1937), "Ladies and Gentlemen" (1939), "Lily of The Valley" (1942), "Tribute to Allantry" (1943), "The Common Man" (1944), "Winkleberg" (1958) and "Simon" (1962).
10. Hecht based his most famous play, "The Front Page" on his days as a journalist (along with partner MacArthur). When did it debut and how many times has it been filmed?

Answer: 1928, 4

The film versions are: Lewis Milestone's 1930 film, Howard Hawks' 1940 classic "His Girl Friday'" Billy Wilder's 1974 version ith Lemmon and Matthau, and the 80's version "Switching Channels." Hawks' film, switching the gender of reporter Johnson to a woman, is the real gem.
11. Name the number of screenplays Hecht wrote or "doctored" in his lifetime.

Answer: 140

Among the classics Hecht worked on were "Scarface" (1930), "Nothing Sacred" (1937), "Wuthering Heights" (with MacArthur,1939) and "Gunga Din" (also 1939).
12. Hecht directed or co-directed some of his scripts.

Answer: True

Hecht's directorial efforts are: "Crime Without Passion" form his own story, 1933, with Claude Rains (his follow-up to his "Invisible Man" debut), "Once in a Blue Moon," "The Scoundrel" with Noel Coward as a heartless publisher barred from Heaven unless someone mourns him, and "Soak the Rich" spoofing college radicalism (1934-35), "Angels Over Broadway" a Runyonesque tale of Broadway gamblers from 1943, "Specter of the Rose" a 1947 ballet picture and "Actors and Sin," his 1952 directorial swan song.
13. What name did Hecht take from one of his novels to use in one of his scripts?

Answer: Mallare

Hecht gave the name Mallare, from the main character in his "Fantazius Mallare" to the heartless publisher played by Noel Coward in "The Scoundrel." Bolshere is from "A Jew In Love", Egelhofer and Burns from "Front Page." Hecht based Anthony Mallare on Horace Liveright.
14. Which one of his co-writers on "Scarface" would Hecht later re-team with?

Answer: Seton I. Miller

Miller was the only one Hecht teamed again with, on the 1942 pirate film "The Black Swan" with Tyrone Power. The last name is an in-joke: Oliver Stone lensed the 80's remake, but in "Nothing Sacred", scripted by Hecht, the editor played by Walter Connolly is...Oliver Stone!
15. How many times was he married and how many children did he have?

Answer: twice; two girls

Once to Marie Armstrong, which gave him daughter Edwina, then to Rose Caylor, which gave him daughter Jenny. Both girls acted in his films: Edwina in "Once in a Blue Moon," and Jenny in "Actors and Sin."
16. What did he title his autobiography?

Answer: A Child of the Century

Published in 1954, "A Child of the Century" is a big, discursive account of Hecht's experiences, opinions, and philosophy.
17. Later in his life, Hecht hosted a short-lived TV show.

Answer: True

For one season, 1958-59, Hecht hosted his own talk show on national TV.
18. What celebrity was Hecht going to ghostwrite an autobiography for?

Answer: Marilyn Monroe

Unfortunately, the deal with the Monroe book fell through, and it was not until the 80's that the book was published.
19. What other screenwriting feat could Hecht boast of?

Answer: He won the first screenwriting Oscar

Hecht won the first screenwriting Oscar for "Two Arabian Knights" in 1928.
20. A lagniappe: what the heck does "Hecht" mean in German?

Answer: pike

"Hecht" is German for pikefish; many Yiddish families had the name. Hope you enjoyed the quiz!
Source: Author tjoebigham

This quiz was reviewed by FunTrivia editor DakotaNorth before going online.
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