Age, Biography and Wiki
Norman Mailer (Norman Kingsley Mailer) was born on 31 January, 1923 in Long Branch, New Jersey, USA, is a Writer, Actor, Director. Discover Norman Mailer'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 Norman Mailer networth?
Popular As |
Norman Kingsley Mailer |
Occupation |
writer,actor,director |
Age |
84 years old |
Zodiac Sign |
Aquarius |
Born |
31 January, 1923 |
Birthday |
31 January |
Birthplace |
Long Branch, New Jersey, USA |
Date of death |
10 November, 2007 |
Died Place |
New York City, New York, USA |
Nationality |
United States |
We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 31 January.
He is a member of famous Writer with the age 84 years old group.
Norman Mailer Height, Weight & Measurements
At 84 years old, Norman Mailer height not available right now. We will update Norman Mailer'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 Norman Mailer's Wife?
His wife is Norris Mailer (11 November 1980 - 10 November 2007) ( his death) ( 2 children), Carol Stevens (7 November 1980 - 8 November 1980) ( divorced) ( 1 child), Beverly Bentley (28 December 1963 - 21 March 1980) ( divorced) ( 2 children), Lady Jean Campbell (4 May 1962 - 16 December 1963) ( divorced) ( 1 child), Adele Morales (19 April 1954 - 1962) ( divorced) ( 2 children), Beatrice Silverman (7 January 1944 - 1952) ( 1 child)
Family |
Parents |
Not Available |
Wife |
Norris Mailer (11 November 1980 - 10 November 2007) ( his death) ( 2 children), Carol Stevens (7 November 1980 - 8 November 1980) ( divorced) ( 1 child), Beverly Bentley (28 December 1963 - 21 March 1980) ( divorced) ( 2 children), Lady Jean Campbell (4 May 1962 - 16 December 1963) ( divorced) ( 1 child), Adele Morales (19 April 1954 - 1962) ( divorced) ( 2 children), Beatrice Silverman (7 January 1944 - 1952) ( 1 child) |
Sibling |
Not Available |
Children |
Not Available |
Norman Mailer Net Worth
His net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Norman Mailer worth at the age of 84 years old? Norman Mailer’s income source is mostly from being a successful Writer. He is from United States. We have estimated
Norman Mailer'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 |
Norman Mailer Social Network
Instagram |
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Wikipedia |
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Timeline
He is nominated for a 2013 New Jersey Hall of Fame in the General Category.
When he died in 2007 at the age of 84, Mailer towered above all other American writers of his and subsequent generations,according to his "New York Times" obituary. A primal life force whose writing elucidated the human condition among America and Americans better than any of his contemporaries for better than three decades, Mailer likely will rank with Herman Melville and Hemingway as among the greatest writers produced by the United States.
Biography/bibliography in: "Contemporary Authors". New Revision Series, Vol. 130, pp. 273-282. Farmington Hills, MI: Thomson Gale, 2005.
Member of the 'Official Competition' jury at the 40th Cannes International Film Festival in 1987.
In 1983, Mailer was nominated for an Emmy for Outstanding Writing in a Limited Series or a Special for his work, three years after his 1979 "novel" (Mailer had characterized his "The Armies of the Night" as "The novel as history, history as a novel") had won him his second Pulitzer Prize, for Fiction.
As concerns Hollywood, Mailer wrote a novel about Hollywood ("The Deer Park") and the first "serious" biography of Marilyn Monroe, which got him (and Monroe) the cover of the July 16 1973 edition of "Time Magazine.
("Armies" had conquered him his first, for General Non-Fictionm in 1969.
For 10 years after the publication of "The Deer Park" until "An American Dream" (serialized in "Esquire Magazine" in 1964, rewritten and published as a novel in 1965), Mailer eschewed tackling another novel. Instead, he turned to journalism and revolutionized what had been one of the ghettos of American letters. If there had been no Norman Mailer, perhaps there would have been a "New Journalism", but it would have been poorer as he was its greatest exponent. "New Journalism" was a moniker hung on a particularly personal type of reflection added to the pedantic Who, What, Where & How? of traditional reporting. Rather than exile himself from the story in the interest of an impossible-to-obtain "neutrality" that is so dear to the mainstream American newspaper and magazine culture currying favor with advertisers beyond the truss & body building equipment slums of the old "Men's magazines", Mailer injected himself into the story and wrote about how he was effected by events.
Norman Mailer, the Brooklyn-born and -bred writer who fought for what he characterized as the "heavyweight championship" of American letters after the 1961 death of Ernest Hemingway, never came close to his dream of writing the Great American novel, but he was a colossus of American culture and literature in the 1960s, '70s and '80s.
Although denied the Nobel Prize that he had long coveted (winner of two Pulitzer Prizes, Mailer believed that the near-fatal stabbing of his second-wife Adele Morales by himself in 1960 attributed to his failure to win the big prize), Mailer will be the writer that future generations go to to understand the America of the late 1940s through at least the early '80s.
His seminal article about the 1960 Democratic National Convention in Los Angeles, "Superman Comes to the Supermarket" (Superman being John F. Kennedy and the Supermarket the Los Angeles where the DNC was held, as well as the new post-War America at large") might very well be considered as the starting point of the New Journalism.
The article was published in the November 1960 issue of "Esquire Magazine. " Tom Wolfe and other masters of the "New Journalism," which stressed a kind of irreverence towards the subject, soon followed. In an American society that is still enthralled to Victorian-era concepts of class (Virginia Woolf denounced authors who wrote for money, a reflection of the aristocratic disdain for anyone who made rather than inherited money as vulgarians whose seed was tainted by contact with the till), Mailer's achievement was looked down upon. Rather than being hailed for revolutionizing American letters, Mailer was treated patronizingly by the Literary Establishment.
Yet, the serious literary novel now is as nearly dead as all the Cassandras of the 1960s and '70s prognosticated, replaced by "non-fiction" memoirs, in which writers no longer hide behind fictive personas to tell stories, but take full-credit for living lives as full of foul incidents as any novel ever published. (That many of these "true tales" are fiction is beside the point. ) Ironically, Norman Mailer, who longed to write the Great American novel, likely must bear the lion's share of responsibility for the death of the novel and the rise of the confessional "non-fiction" book, as he elevated "mere journalism" into an art form.
Reporting became and art when Mailer married his beautiful writing with naked confession that made him a world-class celebrity in the 1960s and '70s, featured as a regular staple on television talk shows. Simply put, without Norman Mailer, there would not be American literature as we know it.
" He made three improvisational films in the late 1960s: Wild 90 (1968), Beyond the Law (1968) and Maidstone (1970) and directed the 1987 adaptation of his own neo-noir novel Tough Guys Don't Dance (1987).
"Advertisements for Myself" (1959), "An American Dream (1966)" (1965), "The Armies of the Night" (1969) and "Executioners Song, The (1980) (TV)_" -- one compendium of odds and ends interlaced with Mailer's musings, one novel, and two books of "journalism" that he classified as novels -- will be mandatory on the reading lists of universities 100 years in the future.
He despised the 1958 movie made from The Naked and the Dead (1958), but had better luck with The Executioner's Song (1982) (1979), for which he wrote the screenplay for the 1982 telefilm.
His next two novels, "Barbary Shore" (1951) and "The Deer Park" (1954) were artistic and commercial failures.
His experiences as an infantryman would be the genesis of his 1948 novel "The Naked and The Dead", one of the first of the World War II novels written by the men who had fought it.
Published in 1948, "The Naked and The Dead" was a bestseller and made its 25 year old author famous and relatively well-off, financially. Mailer would never have to toil at any craft other than writing for the rest of the nearly 60 years allotted to him.
Mailer took his degree in 1943, was drafted into the Army the following year and served briefly with a rifle company in the Philippines.
Mailer would never have termed the generation that went to war in 1941-45 "The Greatest Generation", a concept alien to such post-war writers as Mailer's erstwhile friend James Jones (author of "From Here to Eternity", "Catch-22" author Joseph Heller, or populist American historian Howard Zinn, all of whom served in the War. The officers and enlisted men of Mailer's novel "The Naked and the Dead" are not saints, nor are they on noble missions, let alone quests for something as abstract as "democracy". Democracy is not a staple of Norman Mailer's Army. The officers, as a class, represent an insidious form of fascism -- in kind, if not degree -- in this war against fascism.
Mailer entered Harvard College in 1939 at the age of 16 to study engineering at a time when there was still a quota on Jews at the Ivy League universities, to keep them the province of the WASPs that still controlled the control up to and through World War II. (Mailer would be a commentator on WASPs and their loosening grip on America and American culture in the post-World War II period. He saw the space project and the landing of a man on the moon as the apotheosis of WASP culture. ) He fell in love with literature at Harvard, and began his first attempts at creative writing.
Norman Mailer was born in January 1923 in Long Branch, New Jersey, to Fanny (Schneider), who ran a nursing/housekeeping agency, and Isaac Barnett Mailer, an accountant. His family was Jewish.