Age, Biography and Wiki
Mickey Spillane (Frank Morrison Spillane) was born on 9 March, 1918 in Brooklyn, New York, USA, is a Writer, Actor. Discover Mickey Spillane's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is He in this year and how He spends money? Also learn how He earned most of Mickey Spillane networth?
Popular As |
Frank Morrison Spillane |
Occupation |
writer,actor |
Age |
88 years old |
Zodiac Sign |
Pisces |
Born |
9 March 1918 |
Birthday |
9 March |
Birthplace |
Brooklyn, New York, USA |
Date of death |
17 July, 2006 |
Died Place |
Murrells Inlet, South Carolina, USA |
Nationality |
United States |
We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 9 March.
He is a member of famous Writer with the age 88 years old group.
Mickey Spillane Height, Weight & Measurements
At 88 years old, Mickey Spillane height not available right now. We will update Mickey Spillane's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.
Physical Status |
Height |
Not Available |
Weight |
Not Available |
Body Measurements |
Not Available |
Eye Color |
Not Available |
Hair Color |
Not Available |
Who Is Mickey Spillane's Wife?
His wife is Jane Rogers Johnson (31 October 1983 - 17 July 2006) ( his death), Sherri Spillane (6 November 1964 - 7 April 1983) ( divorced), Mary Ann Pearce (1945 - 1962) ( divorced) ( 4 children)
Family |
Parents |
Not Available |
Wife |
Jane Rogers Johnson (31 October 1983 - 17 July 2006) ( his death), Sherri Spillane (6 November 1964 - 7 April 1983) ( divorced), Mary Ann Pearce (1945 - 1962) ( divorced) ( 4 children) |
Sibling |
Not Available |
Children |
Not Available |
Mickey Spillane Net Worth
His net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Mickey Spillane worth at the age of 88 years old? Mickey Spillane’s income source is mostly from being a successful Writer. He is from United States. We have estimated
Mickey Spillane's net worth
, money, salary, income, and assets.
Net Worth in 2023 |
$1 Million - $5 Million |
Salary in 2023 |
Under Review |
Net Worth in 2022 |
Pending |
Salary in 2022 |
Under Review |
House |
Not Available |
Cars |
Not Available |
Source of Income |
Writer |
Mickey Spillane Social Network
Instagram |
|
Linkedin |
|
Twitter |
|
Facebook |
|
Wikipedia |
|
Imdb |
|
Timeline
Named the main character in his last crime novel, "Dead Street" (2007), after his close friend Jack Stang. The two had been friends since the 1940s and appeared in the film Ring of Fear (1954) together. Spillane had even hoped that Stang would play Mike Hammer in a film, and financed a screen test for Stang in the 1950s.
Biography/bibliography in: "Contemporary Authors". New Revision Series, Vol. 125, pp. 361-366. Farmington Hills, MI: Gale, 2004.
" As late as 1999 Spillane told an audience at London's National Film Theatre, "Authors write, writers get paid. " When he was asked about his literary influences, Spillane replied, "Dollars". Spillane was brought up in the grimy industrial town of Elizabeth, NJ, in what he described as a "very tough" neighborhood. His mother provided him with balance inside the confines of the home, where he became a voracious reader, devouring all of the works of Alexandre Dumas and Herman Melville by the time he was 11 years old. While still a high school student, he "went professional" at the age of 14, writing for the Elizabeth Daily Journal.
Still a civil pilot after the war, Spillane claimed he had put in 11,000 hours in the air by 1999.
Joseph McCarthy, when asked in 1999 if he approved of what McCarthy had done, Spillane replied, "McCarthy was a nit-head. He didn't know what was going on. He was a slob.
His last novel, "Black Alley" (1996), was published in 1996. In retirement Spillane reportedly suffered a stroke.
He revived the Hammer franchise with "The Killing Man" in 1989, but Spillane, now in his 70s, was not a big seller.
He lived, until his death, in Myrtle Beach, SC, with third wife Jane Rodgers Johnson, whom he married in 1983. He was an active Jehovah's Witness into his 80s, going from house to house to spread his faith and distribute copies of the "The Watchtower.
Mickey Spillane, the king of the pulp novelists in the post-WW II period, sold an estimated 200 million copies globally. He was born Frank Morrison Spillane in Brooklyn, New York. Young Frank's mother was a Protestant who bestowed on him his middle name "Morrison", but his Irish Catholic father, barkeep John Joseph Spillane, allegedly had his son baptized with the middle name "Michael", a traditional name for Irishmen (so common, in fact, that the nickname derived from it, "Mick", served as a derogatory term for Irishmen in both the US and England). "Women liked the name Mickey", Spillane said, explaining why he chose the moniker that eventually became one of the world's best-selling novelists. In 1980 seven of the top 15 all-time bestselling fiction books published in the U. S. had been written by Spillane. Despite the fact that his books were international bestsellers, as a writer Spillane was almost universally reviled by literary critics. He and his novels were attacked not only for their alleged illiteracy but were denounced by the U. S. Senate's Kefauver Commission as promoting juvenile delinquency. Explaining the extraordinary appeal of his novels, Spillane simply said, "People like them. " He countered his critics by saying they were jealous of his success. "I'm a writer, not an author," was Spillane's mantra all through his literary life. "The difference is a writer makes money.
Spillane took another hiatus from writing novels between 1973 and 1989, although he did write at two well-reviewed children's books, "The Day the Sea Rolled Back" (1979) and "The Ship That Never Was" (1982). He wrote the novels from the point of view of a child, he said, which explained their success.
Though no longer a best-selling author, Spillane retained his fame during the 1970s due to his appearances in Miller Lite beer TV commercials. Although not a teetotaler, Spillane did not drink much, preferring an occasional beer over hard liquor, and he never smoked.
With the "Day of the Guns" in 1964 Spillane created a new series featuring secret agent Tiger Mann, a globetrotting spy who was America's answer to James Bond.
In 1961 he returned to writing with "The Deep", arguably the best of the Mike Hammer novels.
Like Hammer, Mann was anti-Communist in the extreme and wiped out Reds with relish during the Cold War years of the 1960s. However, during Spillane's absence during the 50s, Ian Fleming (whom Spillane dismissed as "a gourmet") and other writers had stolen his thunder: the Tiger Mann series and Spillane's other non-series novels did not enjoy the vast sales of the '50s.
The second part of Spillane's formula - sex - had lost its steam in the 1960s, after the collapse of censorship led to a proliferation of raw pornography and the availability of much more graphic, though serious, novels for the more thoughtful reader. The Hammer novels did well in the visual media: there were two television series and multiple movies.
Novelist-philosopher Ayn Rand extolled Spillane, while movie cowboy John Wayne gave him a Jaguar XK140 roadster in 1956, a car he still had a half-century later (and in top working order). While Cold War critics often tried to make a link between Spillane and notorious Red-baiter Sen.
The only distinguished film made from Spillane's works was Robert Aldrich's late noir Kiss Me Deadly (1955), now a cult classic. Spillane hated the film, which transmogrified the narcotics dealer plot of the novel into the theft of an atomic bomb (a true Cold War plot), which he found ludicrous.
"Spillane stopped writing for nearly a decade after converting to the Jehoavah's Witnesses in 1952. At this point he didn't need to write, as the royalties from the millions of copies of his books earned him a substantial income.
In the potboiler "One Lonely Night" (1951), hammer wields a "Chicago typewriter" - a submachine gun - to tap out one-way tickets to heaven for 40 Commie heavies and fellow-travelers. Though he eschewed politics in real life, he regarded himself as a patriot and was admired by prominent right-wingers for his anti-Communist stand.
Other Hammer books with the same formula of murderous mugs and even more dangerous, double-crossing malevolent dames followed: "Vengeance in Mine" (1950), "My Gun is Quick" (1950), "The Big Kill" (1951), and "Kiss Me, Deadly" (1952). Hammer was not only a two-fisted he-man, but each of those mailed fists typically clutched a large-caliber automatic. No dainty. 32 Colts--the pistol of choice for the sophisticated detectives of the '20s and '30s--for Mike Hammer. His hirsute ham-fist sported a. 45 ACP, the service pistol of the GI generation. Mike Hammer was a true bellwether of the times, for rather than just go after criminals or garden-variety gangsters like self-respecting operatives of the '30s, he went after "Reds" and "Commies", the nation's bogeymen, and women who were stealing atomic secrets, adulterating Hollywood films with Red propaganda.
Spillane published his first Mike Hammer pulp, the infamous "I, the Jury', in 1947. Written in nine days, the book introduces Hammer as a tough-talking, hard-drinking bruiser.
Reportedly needed quick cash to buy some land for a house in 1946, so he wrote the detective novel "I, The Jury" in less than a month. Although he had been a professional writer for magazines, "I, The Jury" was his first novel. It sold over three million copies and made him a celebrity due to his frank combination of sex and violence. He went on to write several more novels with his main character from "I, The Jury", hard-living private eye Mike Hammer. Several actors have played Hammer over the years in the movies and on television. Spillane even portrayed Hammer himself in The Girl Hunters (1963) and parodied his own image in some funny Miller Lite beer commercials in the 1970s.
In 1945 he married Mary Ann Pearce, the first of his three wives. The couple had two sons and two daughters. After leaving the military, he briefly worked in the Barnum and Bailey Circus as a trampoline artist and adept knife-thrower. Subsequently he worked for the FBI as an undercover operative to crack a narcotics ring (the subject of the novel "Kiss Me, Deadly", not the atomic bomb plot of the movie). He claimed in interviews that he had been shot twice and had been knifed once. Eventually he went back to writing. Influenced by Carroll John Daly, the pulp writer who created the seminal private eye Race Williams, Spillane made the P. I. genre his own.
In 1935 he began submitting his work to magazines before aiming lower and learning his craft by writing for comic books, including such popular titles as "Batman", "Captain Marvel", "Captain America" and "Superman". "[It was] a great training ground for writers," Spillane explained. "You couldn't beat it. "After high school Spillane went to Kansas State College on a football scholarship before dropping out. He joined the Army Air Corps the day after Pearl Harbor, but never left the US, spending the war years flying fighter planes and teaching air cadets how to fly.
His work was in the vein of the "hard-boiled" Black Mask school of pulp fiction of the 1930s. As a pulp writer, Spillane's mantra was "violence will outsell sex every time. " By combining them he created a formula for success that begat a book publishing phenomenon. Spillane's innovation was to inject gory violence into P. I. stories for a generation of 16 million men who had just been through the most violent war in history. After the war, the popularity of slick magazines was eroding due to the booming market in paperbacks, pulp fiction that sold for 25 cents a copy. These new mass-market novels featured lurid covers that would attract a customer at what became the ubiquitous steel-wire racks filled with paperbacks that sprouted up at bus stations, lunch counters, shops and newsstands all over the world. Spillane's style was perfect for the new post-war fiction market. He attributed his success to Roscoe Fawcett of Fawcett Gold Medal Books, who envisioned a market for original novels instead of the reprints of classic works that dominated the paperback market during World War II. Gold Medal started to market novels written directly for paperback, and by injecting gore into the PI genre, both Fawcett and Spillane won a gold medal for their staggering sales. Second wife Sherri Malinou was a model who Spillane noticed when she was featured on the cover of one of his books. Raymond Chandler said of Spillane, "Pulp writing at its worst was never as bad as this stuff. " Spillane's books always featured a great hook in the opening pages, as he believed that "the first page sells the book". His narratives are first-person spoken monologues, directly addressed to the reader. Hammer is less a detective in the guise of Dashiell Hammett's Continental Op or Raymond Chandler's Philip Marlowe than he is a vigilante, always ready to partake in a bit of the old ultra-violence.