Harold Robbins
Harold Robbins was born on May 21, 1916 in USA. Harold Robbins's big-screen debut came with Never Love a Stranger directed by Robert Stevens in 1958.
Harold Robbins summed up his career best in a 1971 ITV documentary: "I'm the world's best writer--there's nothing more to say". This phenomenally successful author--over 750,000,000 copies of his books were sold worldwide, and most were adapted successfully for the screen--started life as a foundling in a Roman Catholic orphanage before being shuttled between foster homes. At fifteen, he left home to begin a series of low-paying jobs, including working as a numbers runner. At twenty, after buying options on farmers' produce, Robbins was a millionaire, but a move into sugar futures wiped him out. He next took a job as a shipping clerk with Universal Pictures warehouse in New York and was soon promoted to executive director for budget and planning. On a bet with a studio executive, Robbins wrote his personal favorite novel, Never Love a Stranger (Knopf, 1948), and other early works which achieved minor critical success. He soon devolved into a writer of more popular novels involving celebrity, sex, and violence, to the scorn of critics. His writings after 1960 reflected his personal life: six marriages, wild Hollywood parties, drug abuse. A stroke in 1982 left him with aphasia, although he continued to write, publishing his last novel, Tycoon, in 1997.
Birthday
May 21, 1916Place of Birth
New York City, New York, USA
Awards
1 wins & 0 nominations
Movies & TV Shows
- 20014.9
- 1983
writer
3.0 - 1978
writer
6.1 - 1978
writer, producer
5.2 - 1970
writer
5.3 - 1969
writer
5.1 - 1966
writer
6.9 - 1964
writer
6.1 - 1958
writer
6.9 - 1958
writer, producer
5.4