Finding aid for the Millen Brand Collection


Title:
Millen Brand Collection
Repository:
Bowling Green State University - Browne Popular Culture Library
Phone: 419-372-2450
http://www.bgsu.edu/colleges/library/pcl
Creator:
Millen Brand
Dates:
1969
Quantity:
.5 linear feet
Abstract:
Millen Brand was a novelist, screenwriter, juvenile author, poet, and contributor to various literary magazines and anthologies. His most popular works dealt with the care of mental patients. Book jacket manuscripts form the core of the collection. In 1969, Millen Brand first began transferring his manuscripts to the Browne Popular Culture Library, Bowling Green State University.
Identification:
PCL MS-27
Location:
Browne Popular Culture Library
Language:
The records are in English

Biography of Millen Brand

Millen Brand was born in Jersey City, New Jersey, on January 19, 1906. He married Pauline Leader, an author, in 1932. They had three children. In 1943 he married Helen Mendelsohn and they had one daughter. Both marriages ended in divorce. Brand was a graduate of Columbia University School of Journalism, 1929, with a B.A. and B. Lit. He worked for the New York Telephone Company as a writer from 1929-1937. From 1940-1950, he was a lecturer at the University of New Hampshire and the Writing Center, New York University. He worked as an editor for Crown Publishers, New York, New York, from 1953-1974. He also worked as a psychiatric aide in treatment centers and with private physicians for a year and a half. Some of his poems have been published in the New Yorker. He and Frank Partos wrote the screenplay for The Snake Pit, 20th Century-Fox, 1948. In 1953 Brand refused to tell a hearing of the United States Senate Investigation sub-committee, under the late Senator Joseph R. McCarthy, whether he had engaged in what were termed by the sub-committee as "treasonable activities". Later that year, he was one of sixteen authors named in a confidential State Department directive banning their works in United States Information Service libraries abroad. Earlier plans to make a movie of his 1947 novel, Albert Sears, did not come about; RKO Pictures dismissed Adrian Scott, writer-producer, and Edward Dmytryk, director, for refusing to tell a Congressional Panel whether they were members of the Communist Party. They formed a corporation to film the novel, but went to prison for their refusal to cooperate with the committee. The Snake Pit, 1948, was nominated for an Academy Award for best script and best picture. Brand was co-recipient of the Robert Meltzer plaque and Screenwriters Guild award for The Snake Pit. Millen Brand died after a short illness in New York City on March 19, 1980.

Scope and Content

The Millen Brand Collection houses the book jacket manuscripts for twenty books. Included are related materials such as book review correspondence to John Dodds, for Listen to the Silence by David Elliott and promotional one-liners. Two pages of miscellaneous manuscripts are housed at the end of the collection. Researchers specifically interested in the process of book jacket writing will find this collection of research value.

Series Description

The collection consists of the following series.Literary ProductionsDescriptionLiterary Manuscripts1969, n.d. Arranged alphabetically by title of work. This series includes book jacket manuscripts. Promotional one liners for some of the books are included. Two pages of miscellaneous manuscripts are found at the end of the collection.

Restrictions on Use

The collection is open for research, but the photocopying of manuscripts must comply with applicable copyright laws.

Indexing Terms

The following terms have been used to index the description of this collection in the library's online public access catalog.

Persons:

Brand, Millen, 1906-1980

Preferred Citation

The Millen Brand Collection, PCL MS-27, Ray and Pat Browne Popular Culture Library, Bowling Green State University. [Date Accessed].

Other Finding Aid

The Bowling Green State University Popular Culture Library online finding aid:
http://www.bgsu.edu/colleges/library/pcl/pclms27.html