Difference between revisions of "The Stars Are Right: Frank Lovejoy"

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(Newspaper Articles)
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===Newspaper Articles===
 
===Newspaper Articles===
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Lovejoy is a staff writer for the [[The Stars Are Right: The Irish Rose: Detroit Evening Times | Detroit Evening Times]]. Enclosed is a selection of articles written by him about the Irish Rose Matter.
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''Main article: [[The Stars Are Right: The Irish Rose: Newspaper Articles | Newspaper Articles]]''
  
 
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====Newspaper Articles====
 
Lovejoy is a staff writer for the [[The Stars Are Right: The Irish Rose: Detroit Evening Times | Detroit Evening Times]]. Enclosed is a selection of articles written by him about the Irish Rose Matter.
 
 
''Main article: [[The Stars Are Right: The Irish Rose: Newspaper Articles | Newspaper Articles]]''
 
 
* [[The Stars Are Right: The Irish Rose: Saloonkeeper Slain As Gang War Erupts | Saloonkeeper Slain As Gang War Erupts]] - August 5, 1932
 
* [[The Stars Are Right: The Irish Rose: Irish Rose Medico A Mystery | Irish Rose Medico A Mystery]] - August 6, 1932
 
* [[The Stars Are Right: The Irish Rose: Second "Doctor" In Rose Murder Identified | Second "Doctor" In Rose Murder Identified]] - August 7, 1932
 
* [[The Stars Are Right: The Irish Rose: Cream of Society Fills Rose While Gang War Brews | Cream of Society Fills Rose While Gang War Brews]] - August 8, 1932
 
* [[The Stars Are Right: The Irish Rose: Macklin's Girl Speaks! | Macklin's Girl Speaks!]] - August 9, 1932
 
* [[The Stars Are Right: The Irish Rose: Strange Incident at Curtisville Church | Strange Incident at Curtisville Church]] - August 10, 1932
 
* [[The Stars Are Right: The Irish Rose: Kansas City Connection Discovered in Irish Rose Murder | Kansas City Connection Discovered in Irish Rose Murder]] - August 11, 1932
 
* [[The Stars Are Right: The Irish Rose: International Connection Discovered in Irish Rose Murder | International Connection Discovered in Irish Rose Murder]] - August 12, 1932
 
* [[The Stars Are Right: The Irish Rose: White Slavery in the Motor City! | White Slavery in the Motor City!]] - August 16, 1932
 
* [[The Stars Are Right: The Irish Rose: Heroic Doctor Speaks! | Heroic Doctor Speaks!]] - August 17, 1932
 
* [[The Stars Are Right: The Irish Rose: Gangland Doctors Experimenting On Kidnaped Children | Gangland Doctors Experimenting on Kidnaped Children]] - August 18, 1932
 
* [[The Stars Are Right: The Irish Rose: Our Nightmare Ordeal! | "Our Nightmare Ordeal!"]] - August 21, 1932
 
 
* Interview with Parkhurst
 
* Interview with Parkhurst
 
* [[The Stars Are Right: The Irish Rose: Charnel House in Kansas City | Charnel House in Kansas City]] - August 29, 1932
 
* [[The Stars Are Right: The Irish Rose: Charnel House in Kansas City | Charnel House in Kansas City]] - August 29, 1932

Revision as of 19:45, 20 October 2013

Times-Logo-(full).png
Frank Lovejoy
Name: Frank Lovejoy                                                 Str: 13               
Occupation: Journalist                                              Con: 08            
Nationality: American                                               Siz: 12                           
Gender: Male                                                        App: 12   
Age: 32 (August 28, 1900)                                           Dex: 07   
Height: 5'8"                                                        Pow: 12      
Weight: 157 lbs                                                     Int: 15   
Hair Color: Brown                                                   Edu: 16 
Who is dis jabroni?

Played by Andrew Cole.

FRANK LOVEJOY ARCHIVES

General Information

This page contains links to transcribed source material generated for and about Frank Lovejoy.


CAUTION!! MAY CONTAIN SPOILERS ABOUT OTHER CHARACTERS AND CURRENT PLOT THREADS.

Biography

The Bloomfield Public Library in the winter of 1914.

Born on August 28, 1900 as the third child of ten, Frank Lovejoy chafed at the oppressively blank horizons of his Bloomfield, Iowa home. An avid reader, he dreamed of mountains, oceans and cities, and vaguely resented the burdens placed on him as the oldest surviving child. His parents, Ralph and Jenny Lovejoy, both the children of immigrants, encouraged his ambitions as much as they could, but were able to spare little of his time. Frank left school after completing the eighth grade to help his father in running his grocery store, making deliveries in the store van. Leaving school hurt deeply, but he continued his education as best he could, drawing heavily on the town's Carnegie library. Frank came to view this library, which opened on August 8, 1913, as an early birthday present from the steel magnate.

With the outbreak of the Great War in Europe, Frank saw his chance, and served as a driver for the American Volunteer Motor Ambulance Corps from 1916 until the end of the war. There he met other established and aspiring writers like John de Passos and Olaf Stapledon; Stapledon's position as a conscientious objector to the conflict was especially fascinating to Lovejoy, who adopted similar anti-military positions following his service.

Following the armistice, Lovejoy, along with other Americans who had contributed to the war effort, was offered a place at Oxford. The high school dropout jumped at the chance. After graduating with a degree in History in 1923, he drifted around Europe for a few years, supporting himself as a correspondent for various American newspapers and magazines, among them the Chicago Star and the Detroit Evening Times. Although he tried his hand at writing fiction, producing a handful of short stories and a formless, nervous novel, Lovejoy was a better reader of fiction than a producer of it. He proved a popular newspaperman, however, and so in 1926 he accepted a job as a feature writer for the Chicago Star and returned to the States to pen Night Beat, a column focusing on the disaffected personalities and communities that thrived in the White City after hours. The rash of unexplained occurrences in February, 1929 was an especially fertile time for Night Beat; Lovejoy was widely syndicated, and his May 22 column titled 'I Wish You Were Dead' was shortlisted for the Pulitzer Prize in Editorial Writing.

Cover design by Guy Fry

The stock market crash of 1929 cut deeply into the public's taste for the cavalcade of freaks, loners and dipsos that Lovejoy had chronicled with sympathy for nearly four years. The Star discontinued Night Beat, but offered to keep him on staff as a regular reporter for a substantially reduced salary. With more pride than sense, he declined, and returned to Bloomfield to try his hand at writing another book. Night Beat, a memoir of his Chicago years, was critically well-received but failed to sell well.

An intriguing mixture of fact, fable and speculation, [Night Beat] offers occult thrills, but fails to find a common thread uniting the weirdos and wastrels that (apparently) throng the labyrinthine streets of night-time Chicago.
—the Chicago Star's drily ironic review.

With money tight, and chafing again at the limited opportunities of Bloomfield, Lovejoy accepted a job at the Detroit Evening Times in April of 1931. Although now a regular columnist instead of a feature writer, Lovejoy continues to cover the night side of society, prying into the speakeasies, slums and Curtisvilles of the Motor City.

TIMELINE

FRANK LOVEJOY 1932 DOCUMENTS

Front page of the Detroit Evening Times, August 16, 1932

Newspaper Articles

Lovejoy is a staff writer for the Detroit Evening Times. Enclosed is a selection of articles written by him about the Irish Rose Matter.

Main article: Newspaper Articles

Date Title Author Publication
1928-11-21 Influenza Outbreak Calls For Quarantine Unknown Kansas City Star
1932-08-05 Saloonkeeper Slain As Gang War Erupts Frank Lovejoy Detroit Evening Times
1932-08-06 Irish Rose Medico A Mystery Frank Lovejoy Detroit Evening Times
1932-08-07 Second "Doctor" In Rose Murder Identified Frank Lovejoy Detroit Evening Times
1932-08-08 Cream of Society Fills Rose While Gang War Brews Frank Lovejoy Detroit Evening Times
1932-08-09 Macklin's Girl Speaks! Frank Lovejoy Detroit Evening Times
1932-08-10 Strange Incident at Curtisville Church Frank Lovejoy Detroit Evening Times
1932-08-11 Kansas City Connection Discovered in Irish Rose Murder Frank Lovejoy Detroit Evening Times
1932-08-12 International Connection Discovered in Irish Rose Murder Frank Lovejoy Detroit Evening Times
1932-08-16 White Slavery in the Motor City! Frank Lovejoy Detroit Evening Times
1932-08-17 Heroic Doctor Speaks! Frank Lovejoy Detroit Evening Times
1932-08-19 Gangland Doctors Experimenting on Kidnaped Children Frank Lovejoy Detroit Evening Times
1932-08-21 "Our Nightmare Ordeal!" Frank Lovejoy Detroit Evening Times

Correspondence

Correspondence regarding newspaper articles may be addressed to Frank Lovejoy, Box 13, c/o the Detroit Evening Times.

Date Title Author Received Via
1931-01-15 F. Huber to M. de Bonnevault Franz Huber Unknown
1932-01-15 F. Huber to M. de Bonnevault, list of correspondence Franz Huber Unknown
1932-08-08 Note to F. Lovejoy Unknown Box 13
1932-08-09 Note to F. Lovejoy Unknown Crank Box 13
1932-08-09 Note to F. Lovejoy Unknown Box 13
1932-08-10 H. Flynn to F. Lovejoy, telegram Heather Flynn Box 13
1932-08-11 D. Ferris to F. Lovejoy, letter Daphne Ferris Box 13
1932-08-17 D. Rose Darby to F. Lovejoy Delancy Rose Darby Box 13
1932-08-19 C. de la Fére to F. Lovejoy Antonio Grimaldi Box 13
1932-08-00 Boyar Rulianov to V. Grayson P. Rulianoff Courier Network
Unknown H. Flynn to M. de Bonnevault Heather Flynn Unknown

Legal Documents

Date Title Author Received Via
1930-00-00 Treaty between C. Ellis and F. Christian et al. Carl Ellis Meridon Caine

Personal Records

Date Title Author Received Via
1932-08-21 G. Parkhurst to F. Lovejoy Gregory Parkhurst Personal Interview

Other Correspondence

In addition, several other documents have come into his possession:

FRANK LOVEJOY 1932 JOURNAL