Cyril Wolf Mankowitz (7 November 1924 – 20 May 1998) was an English writer, playwright and screenwriter. He is particularly known for three novels— Make Me an Offer (1952), A Kid for Two Farthings (1953) and My Old Man's a Dustman—and other plays, historical studies, and the screenplays for many successful films which have received awards including the Oscar, Bafta and the Cannes Grand Prix.[1]
His background provided Mankowitz with the material for his most successful book A Kid for Two Farthings (1953). This was adapted as a film by the director Carol Reed in 1955; Mankowitz himself wrote the screenplay. In 1958 he wrote the book for the West End musical Expresso Bongo[3] which was adapted into a film starring Cliff Richard and Laurence Harvey the following year.[4] Its director Val Guest suggested to Harvey that it might be a good idea to model his film role of Johnny Jackson on Mankowitz's own character, and so Harvey arranged a couple of lunches with the unsuspecting writer to study him at close hand, resulting in the character on film sounding something like Mankowitz.[5] Mankowitz himself appears in the film's opening credit sequence, wearing a sandwich board that bears his writer credit. In 1958 he wrote the scripts for the ITVsitcomEast End, West End set in London's East End and starring Sid James.
In 1962, Mankowitz offered to introduce his friend Cubby Broccoli to Harry Saltzman,[7] holder of the film rights to James Bond, when Broccoli mentioned he desired to make the Bond series his next film project. Broccoli and Saltzman then formed Eon Productions and began co-producing the first Bond film, Dr No, for which Mankowitz was hired as one of the screenwriters. After viewing early rushes, Mankowitz feared that the film would be a disaster and damage his reputation, and insisted on having his name removed from the film's credits.[citation needed] He later also collaborated on the screenplay for the non-Eon 1967 Bond movie Casino Royale. He wrote the script for Yorkshire Television's serial Dickens of London (1976) and the book of the same name based on his research when writing the series.
Mankowitz was an original investor in the Partisan Coffee House, a meeting place for the New Left just off Soho Square, which functioned from 1958 to 1962. During the late 1960s he was part-owner of the Pickwick Club in Great Newport Street, off Charing Cross Road in central London, where the Peddlers, a pop group led by Roy Phillips, were resident.
Mankowitz also had a reputation as a playwright. Several of his plays started as either films or television plays. His plays include The Samson Riddle, The Bespoke Overcoat, The Hebrew Lesson (for the stage premiere it was retitled The Irish Hebrew Lesson), It Should Happen to a Dog and The Mighty Hunter.[8]
Personal life
In 1944, Mankowitz married Ann Seligmann, a psychoanalyst; the couple met at Cambridge University.[9] They had four sons; the eldest of whom, Gered, is a photographer. His sister, Barbara Mankowitz, was eminent in the china trade in London.[10]
Files placed in the public domain during August 2010 revealed that for a decade after the Second World War, Mankowitz was suspected by security service MI5 of being a communist agent. The investigation was dropped after he cancelled a visit to Russia in 1957.[11]
Anthony J. Dunn: The worlds of Wolf Mankowitz: between elite and popular cultures in post-war Britain, London [u.a.] : Vallentine Mitchell, 2013, ISBN978-0-85303-906-8