Trumbo
But Trumbo didn't stop writing. He simply stopped being "Dalton Trumbo." For over a decade, he became a "ghost," churning out scripts under a dizzying array of pseudonyms—most notably and Hugo Butler . Writing in the Dark (and the Tub)
Trumbo was a man of contradictions. By the 1940s, he was one of the highest-paid screenwriters in the world, living on a sprawling ranch with a private lake. Yet, he was also a card-carrying member of the Communist Party. This duality didn't sit well with everyone; his fellow blacklisted writer Arlen Hird famously ribbed him for "talking like a radical but living like a rich guy". Trumbo
Trumbo's physical writing process was as legendary as his political one. A notorious night owl, he spent hours in a bathtub, a wooden tray across the porcelain, typing away until dawn with a cigarette in one hand and a scotch in the other. It was in this unconventional office that he wrote some of his most iconic works, including the original story for Roman Holiday . But Trumbo didn't stop writing
Roman Holiday (1953) and Trumbo (2007) | classicfilmblog.com By the 1940s, he was one of the
Trumbo’s response was characteristically sharp: "The radical fights with the purity of Jesus, but the rich guy wins with the cunning of Satan". He wasn't looking for martyrdom; he was looking to win. Eleven Months and a Lifetime of Exile
The absurdity reached a fever pitch in 1957 when "Robert Rich" won an Academy Award for The Brave One . When no one stepped forward to claim the Oscar, the industry's worst-kept secret—that the blacklisted writers were still the best in the business—became impossible to ignore. Breaking the Silence
The "winning" stopped abruptly in 1947. As one of the , Trumbo refused to answer questions from the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) regarding his political affiliations, citing First Amendment protections. That defiance cost him 11 months in federal prison and his livelihood in the film industry.