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Avery Corman

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Avery Corman (born November 28, 1935)[1] is an American novelist. He is known for the books Oh, God! (1971) and Kramer Versus Kramer (1977), each adapted into a successful film.

Career

Corman is the author of the novels Oh, God! (1971), the basis for the 1977 film; The Bust-Out King (1977); Kramer Versus Kramer (1977), adapted into the Academy Award-winning 1979 film; The Old Neighborhood (1980); 50 (1987); Prized Possessions (1991); The Big Hype (1992); A Perfect Divorce (2004); and The Boyfriend from Hell (2006).[1] He is the author of a memoir titled My Old Neighborhood Remembered (2014).[1] He also wrote the text for Bark in the Park! Poems for Dog Lovers (2019), a children's picture book.

Critic Stefan Kanfer said in Time about Corman's novel 50: "Avery Corman has a literary gift for dialogue and predicament. Sealed in a time capsule, 50 could tell future generations more about contemporary middle-aged mores than a library of sociological theses." The combination of the novel Kramer Versus Kramer and the film changed the attitude of the public and the courts about divorce and custody in the United States and internationally. Greg Ferrara, on Turner Classic Movies' web site, wrote: "His story would explode accepted views on custody and parenting...Kramer vs. Kramer didn't just set box office records for family drama, it changed the very way people thought about divorce, family and child custody]."[2]

Corman is also the author of articles and essays in several publications, including The New York Times.

After seeing a 2010 stage adaptation of Kramer vs. Kramer in Paris written by Didier Caron [fr] and Stephane Boutet [fr], Corman wrote his own play based on his novel. The stage adaptation of Kramer Versus Kramer by Corman was produced in Greece, Hungary, Italy, and the Netherlands in 2012.

Personal life

Corman was born in the Bronx, New York. He is a graduate of the New York City public schools; he attended DeWitt Clinton High School in the Bronx.[3] After graduating from New York University in 1956, he worked in magazine publishing, then became a freelance writer of educational films and humor articles. He then wrote his first novel.

A gift by Corman to the City of New York of a restored basketball court in his childhood schoolyard became the catalyst for the creation of the City Parks Foundation. Established in 1989, the foundation has become a multimillon dollar nonprofit creating and funding parks programs throughout New York City, and Corman has served on its board of directors since the foundation's inception.

He was married for 37 years to Judy Corman (née Lishinsky), who died in 2004.[1] At the time of her death, she was senior vice president, director of corporate communications and media relations at Scholastic, Inc. Judy Corman masterminded the publicity for the launch and subsequent publications of the Harry Potter books in the United States.[4] She was a 2001 winner of a Matrix Award from New York Women in Communications. The Cormans' two children are Matthew, a screenwriter, and Nicholas, who works in business development in Silicon Valley.

Novels

  • Oh, God! (1971)
  • The Bust-Out King (1977)
  • Kramer Versus Kramer (1977)
  • The Old Neighborhood (1980)
  • 50 (1987)
  • Prized Possessions (1992)
  • The Big Hype (1992)
  • A Perfect Divorce (2004)
  • The Boyfriend from Hell (2006)

Memoir

  • My Old Neighborhood Remembered (2014)

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Avery Corman." Contemporary Authors Online. 2015. Gale. Retrieved via Biography in Context database, 2019-04-14.
  2. ^ Ferrara, Greg. "Kramer vs. Kramer: The Essentials." TCM/Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved 2019-04-14.
  3. ^ Gardner, Ralph, Jr. (July 1, 2014). "Back to the Bronx With 'Kramer vs. Kramer' Writer Avery Corman" (preview only; subscription required). The Wall Street Journal. "Mr. Corman was an undistinguished student—both at P.S. 33 and later at DeWitt Clinton High School." Retrieved 2019-04-14.
  4. ^ Corman, Avery. "Modern Love: Moving Through Grief, Chair by Chair.", The New York Times. March 15, 2012.