Monday, April 22, 2024

Famous authors who were next-door neighbors

Harper Lee's perennial classic To Kill a Mockingbird and Truman Capote's nonfiction novel In Cold Blood were defining literary works of the 1960s and beyond, so it makes a certain kind of sense that their origins are closely entwined.

Truman Capote and Harper Lee were next-door neighbors as kids.

Famous Figures

H arper Lee's perennial classic To Kill a Mockingbird and Truman Capote's nonfiction novel In Cold Blood were defining literary works of the 1960s and beyond, so it makes a certain kind of sense that their origins are closely entwined. In addition to being longtime friends, the two authors were also next-door neighbors as kids. Born in New Orleans, Capote moved to Monroeville, Alabama, at age 4. There, he met Lee — a girl two years his junior who became his protector from neighborhood bullies. It wasn't long before Capote moved to New York City, but the two friends stayed close enough that each based fictional characters on the other: To Kill a Mockingbird's Dill was inspired by Capote, while Idabel Thompkins, a tomboy in Capote's debut novel Other Voices, Other Rooms, was based on Lee.

They were so close, in fact, that some believed Capote was To Kill a Mockingbird's true author — a pernicious rumor that academics and historians have long dismissed. In fact, the runaway success of Mockingbird, which was a National Book Award finalist and won the Pulitzer Prize, led to severe jealousy on Capote's part. Lee later wrote, "I was his oldest friend, and I did something Truman could not forgive: I wrote a novel that sold." She helped Capote research In Cold Blood nevertheless, but was not thanked in the acknowledgments section, a slight that hurt her deeply.

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By the Numbers

Copies of To Kill a Mockingbird sold

40 million

Pages of notes Capote took while researching In Cold Blood

8,000

Oscars won by the film adaptation of To Kill a Mockingbird sold (out of eight nominations)

3

Words in the article that inspired Capote to write In Cold Blood

300

Did you know?

Lee and Capote's friendship has been dramatized several times.

The long and turbulent relationship between Truman Capote and Harper Lee has been depicted in a number of films. Philip Seymour Hoffman and Catherine Keener played the two writers in 2005's Capote, for which Hoffman won the Academy Award for Best Actor and Keener received a Best Supporting Actress nomination. Toby Jones and Sandra Bullock portrayed them in the following year's Infamous (an adaptation of George Plimpton's Truman Capote: In Which Various Friends, Enemies, Acquaintances, and Detractors Recall His Turbulent Career). Both films are about the writing of In Cold Blood, a six-year process to which Lee contributed greatly by helping with research and accompanying Capote when he initially interviewed residents of Holcomb, Kansas, to get their perspective on the murders that inspired the book.

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