Norman Rosten

Norman Rosten (January 1, 1913 – March 7, 1995) was an American poet, playwright, and novelist.

Life
Rosten was born to a Polish Jewish family in New York City and grew up in Hurleyville, New York. He was graduated from Brooklyn College and New York University, and the University of Michigan, where he met Arthur Miller. Each won the Avery Hopwood Award.

In 1979, Brooklyn's borough president Howard Golden named Rosten as the poet laureate of Brooklyn.

Among Rosten's work outside the field of poetry, he wrote the libretto for Ezra Laderman's opera Marilyn. He also wrote the screenplay for Sidney Lumet's film Vu du Pont, adapting Miller's A View from the Bridge. He visited Mickey Knox in Rome.

Rosten was a poetry consultant for Simon and Schuster Publishers. It was through that role that he came to know fellow poet Andrew Glaze. The two became friends and Glaze later dedicated his book I am the Jefferson County Courthouse to Rosten.

His work appeared in The New Yorker.

Rosten died in New York City from congestive heart failure on March 7, 1995, at the age of 81.

Awards

 * 1940 Yale Series of Younger Poets Competition
 * 1941 Guggenheim Fellowship

Poetry

 * Return Again, Traveler, Yale University Press, 1940
 * The big road: a narrative poem, Rinehart & Company, Inc., 1946
 * Imagine Seeing You Here: a world of poetry, lively and lyrical
 * Thrive Upon the Rock, Trident Press, 1965
 * In Guernica
 * In Guernica
 * In Guernica

Plays

 * First Stop to Heaven, 1941
 * (premiere 1956)
 * Mardi Gras
 * The Golden Door

Novels

 * Under the Boardwalk, Prentice-Hall, 1968
 * Over and Out, G. Braziller, 1972

Non-fiction

 * Marilyn: An Untold Story, New American Library, 1973
 * Marilyn among Friends, with photographer Sam Shaw. UK: Bloomsbury (1987)