1918/00/00 |
Dorothy Parker, Robert Benchley and Robert E Sherwood begin lunching at the Algonquin Hotel on a near-daily basis, due its proxicmity to the offices of Vanity Fair where they all work. |
Member |
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Algonquin Hotel |
New York City |
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1930/00/00 |
"Laments for the Living" is published. |
Author |
Laments for the Living (short story collection) |
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1930/00/00 |
"A Telephone Call" by Dorothy Parker is published. |
Author |
A Telephone Call (short story) |
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1933/00/00 |
"After Such Pleasures" is published. |
Author |
After Such Pleasures (short story collection) |
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1936/00/00 |
At the behest of Otto Katz, a covert Soviet Comintern agent and operative of German Communist Party agent Willi Muenzenberg, Parker helps to found the Hollywood Anti-Nazi League, which the FBI suspects of being a Communist Party front. |
Vocation |
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1939/00/00 |
"Here Lies" is published. |
Author |
Here Lies (short story collection) |
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1941/09/20 |
"The Standard of Living" by Dorothy Parker is published in The New Yorker. |
Author |
The Standard of Living (Short Story) |
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1942/00/00 |
"Collected Stories" is published. |
Author |
Collected Stories (short story collection) |
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1950/06/22 |
"Red Channels: The Report of Communist Influence in Radio and Television" is published by the right-wing journal Counterattack, pamphlet names 151 actors, writers, musicians, broadcast journalists, and others as Communist. |
Hollywood Blacklist |
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1951/08/22 |
Dorothy Parker of 216 S Westgate, West Los Angeles, checks into the Chateau Marmont. |
Guest |
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Chateau Marmont, LA |
Los Angeles |
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