Revision as of 09:22, 19 June 2021 edit2404:0:802b:693:0:21:1d7b:6d01 (talk) →Early life: Added contentTags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit← Previous edit | Revision as of 14:46, 21 June 2021 edit undo108.252.165.210 (talk) Corrected spelling of first name (see memoir Unstrung Heroes); source; added name of mother (ibid.)Next edit → | ||
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'''Franz Lidz''' (born 24 September 1951) is an American writer, journalist and pro basketball executive. | '''Franz Lidz''' (born 24 September 1951) is an American writer, journalist and pro basketball executive. | ||
A former senior writer for '']'',<ref>"", – ''Sports Illustrated''</ref><ref name="autogenerated700">"", 05.06.13 – ''Sports Illustrated''</ref> he's a '']'' columnist, a '']'' film, science and archeology essayist,<ref>"", 09.29.02 – ''New York Times''</ref><ref>"", 02.14.20 – ''New York Times''</ref><ref>"", 04.11.20 – ''New York Times''</ref><ref>"", 03.22.21 – ''New York Times''</ref><ref>"", 06.18.21 – ''New York Times''</ref> and a onetime vice president for the ].<ref>, 2016–'17. (Free PDF download). Use search term "''Franz Lidz''"</ref><ref>, ''Smithsonian magazine''</ref> His childhood memoir ''Unstrung Heroes'' was adapted into ] in 1995.<ref name="autogenerated771">", 09.21.95 – ''Philadelphia Inquirer''</ref><ref name = nyt>, 03.04.91 – ''New York Times''</ref><ref>,- ''New York Times''</ref><ref>, 09.03.95 – ''New York Times''</ref> | A former senior writer for '']'',<ref>"", – ''Sports Illustrated''</ref><ref name="autogenerated700">"", 05.06.13 – ''Sports Illustrated''</ref> he's a '']'' columnist, a '']'' film, science and archeology essayist,<ref>"", 08.09.98 – ''New York Times''</ref><ref>"", 09.29.02 – ''New York Times''</ref><ref>"", 02.14.20 – ''New York Times''</ref><ref>"", 04.11.20 – ''New York Times''</ref><ref>"", 03.22.21 – ''New York Times''</ref><ref>"", 06.18.21 – ''New York Times''</ref> and a onetime vice president for the ].<ref>, 2016–'17. (Free PDF download). Use search term "''Franz Lidz''"</ref><ref>, ''Smithsonian magazine''</ref> His childhood memoir ''Unstrung Heroes'' was adapted into ] in 1995.<ref name="autogenerated771">", 09.21.95 – ''Philadelphia Inquirer''</ref><ref name = nyt>, 03.04.91 – ''New York Times''</ref><ref>,- ''New York Times''</ref><ref>, 09.03.95 – ''New York Times''</ref> | ||
== Early life == | == Early life == | ||
Lidz was born in ], to Sidney, a Jewish ] who designed the first transistorized portable tape recorder (the Steelman Transitape) |
Lidz was born in ], to Sidney, a Jewish ] who designed the first transistorized portable tape recorder (the Steelman Transitape),<ref>, 07.28.81 – ''New York Times''</ref><ref>{{YouTube|ofQ5X67p8E8|"STEELMAN Transitape portable reel-to-reel tape recorder"}}, 1959</ref> and Selma, a homemaker. His father gave him early exposure to authors like ], ] and ].<ref>"", 09.13.98 – ''New York Times''</ref><ref name="autogenerated702">"", 04.08.91 – ''Sports Illustrated''</ref> | ||
At age nine, still named |
At age nine, still named Stephen before later legally taking Franz as his first name, he moved to the ] suburbs.<ref name="autogenerated77">", 04.07.91 – ''Philadelphia Inquirer''</ref><ref>, '']'', 05.17.15</ref><ref>, '']'', 05.27.15</ref> Lidz attended high school in ]<ref name="autogenerated1">"" – 05.10.82 – ''Sports Illustrated''</ref><ref name="autogenerated3">"" – 03.09.87 – ''Sports Illustrated''</ref> and college at ],<ref name="autogenerated181">"" 03.26.84 – ''Sports Illustrated''</ref> where he was a theater major.<ref name="autogenerated12">"", 02.19.91 – ''Baltimore Sun''</ref> | ||
== Career == | == Career == |
Revision as of 14:46, 21 June 2021
Franz Lidz | |
---|---|
Born | Franz Ira Lidz (1951-09-24) 24 September 1951 (age 73) New York City, United States |
Occupation |
|
Notable works | Unstrung Heroes (1991) Ghosty Men (2003) Fairway To Hell (2008) |
Spouse | Maggie Lidz (1976–present) |
Children | Gogo, Daisy |
Franz Lidz (born 24 September 1951) is an American writer, journalist and pro basketball executive.
A former senior writer for Sports Illustrated, he's a Smithsonian magazine columnist, a New York Times film, science and archeology essayist, and a onetime vice president for the Detroit Pistons. His childhood memoir Unstrung Heroes was adapted into a Hollywood film of the same title in 1995.
Early life
Lidz was born in Manhattan, to Sidney, a Jewish electronics engineer who designed the first transistorized portable tape recorder (the Steelman Transitape), and Selma, a homemaker. His father gave him early exposure to authors like Samuel Beckett, Harold Pinter and Eugène Ionesco.
At age nine, still named Stephen before later legally taking Franz as his first name, he moved to the Philadelphia suburbs. Lidz attended high school in Cheltenham and college at Antioch College, where he was a theater major.
Career
Lidz was a novice reporter at the weekly Sanford Star, where he wrote a column and covered police and fire beats. He left Maine to become a crime reporter and write a column called "Insect Jazz" for an alternative newspaper in Baltimore. He later became an editor of Johns Hopkins University Magazine.
In 1980, he joined the staff of Sports Illustrated, even though he had never read the magazine and had covered only one sporting event in his life – a pigeon race in Shapleigh, Maine. Lidz remained on the writing staff for 27 years. In 2007 he jumped to the short-lived business monthly Conde Nast Portfolio, and then WSJ. magazine before landing at Smithsonian in 2012. Among his most controversial magazine features are essays on Neanderthals; Hannibal, George Steinbrenner and the New York Yankees' line of succession; the hijinks of onetime Los Angeles Clippers owner Donald Sterling; and a groundbreaking S.I. cover story with NBA player Jason Collins in which Collins became the first active male in one of the four major North American team sports to announce he was gay.
Notable works
Unstrung Heroes
Unstrung Heroes is about Lidz's childhood, with his mother, father and his dad's four older brothers. He had previously written about two of the uncles in Sports Illustrated.
In his review of Unstrung Heroes in the New York Times, Christopher Lehmann-Haupt called the memoir "unusual and affecting... a melancholy, funny book, a loony tune played with touching disharmony on mournful woodwinds and a noisy klaxon." Jonathan Kirsch of the Los Angeles Times likened the memoir to a "miniature Brothers Karamazov. There's not a false moment in the book, and that is high praise indeed." The Village Voice called Unstrung Heroes: "Astonishing, hilarious, angry, poignant, always pointed."
In 1995, Unstrung Heroes was adapted into a film of the same title. The setting was switched from New York City to Southern California, and the four crazy uncles were reduced to an eccentric odd couple. Asked what he thought of the script, Lidz said: "It’s very neatly typed". He was unhappy with the adaptation, but was prevented by his contract from publicly criticizing it. "My initial fear was that Disney would turn my uncles into Grumpy and Dopey," he told New York magazine. "I never imagined my life could be turned into Old Yeller." In a later essay for the New York Times, he said that the cinematic Selma had died not of cancer, but of 'Old Movie Disease'. "Someday somebody may find a cure for cancer, but the terminal sappiness of cancer movies is probably beyond remedy."
Ghosty Men
Ghosty Men (2003) is the story of the Collyer brothers. Lidz has said that he was inspired by the real-life cautionary tales that his father told him, the most macabre of which was the story of the Collyer brothers, the hermit hoarders of Harlem. The book also recounts the parallel life of Arthur Lidz, the hermit uncle of Unstrung Heroes, who grew up near the Collyer mansion.
In his review for the Washington Post, Adam Bernstein wrote, "The Collyer Brothers made compelling reading then, as they do now in this short, captivatingly detailed book."
Fairway to Hell
Fairway to Hell is a 2008 memoir centering on Lidz' unusual golfing experiences: encountering nudists, llama caddies and celebrities like the heavy metal band Judas Priest. Bill Littlefield reviewed the book on the National Public Radio show Only A Game, saying "His estimable wit is also evident in Fairway To Hell."
Collaborations
Lidz has written numerous essays for The New York Times with novelist and former Sports Illustrated colleague Steve Rushin. Three of them appear under the title Piscopo Agonistes in the 2000 collection Mirth of a Nation: The Best Contemporary Humor.
Lidz has been a commentator for Morning Edition on NPR, and was a guest film critic on the syndicated Siskel & Ebert, following Gene Siskel's passing. The segment did not air. He also appeared on David Letterman's show.
Personal life
Lidz lives in Ojai, California with his wife, Maggie, an author and onetime historian at the Winterthur Museum in Delaware. They have two daughters.
References
- "Classic Archives: Franz Lidz", – Sports Illustrated
- "Jason Collins", 05.06.13 – Sports Illustrated
- "FILM; Sorry, Uma, There's Only One Emma", 08.09.98 – New York Times
- "FILM; The Scenery, Though, He Won't Chew", 09.29.02 – New York Times
- "Here Lies the Skull of Pliny the Elder, Maybe", 02.14.20 – New York Times
- "At the Sourdough Library, With Some Very Old Mothers", 04.11.20 – New York Times
- "How the World’s Oldest Wooden Sculpture Is Reshaping Prehistory", 03.22.21 – New York Times
- "She Fell Nearly Two Miles And Walked Away", 06.18.21 – New York Times
- Detroit Pistons Media Guide: Executive Staff, 2016–'17. (Free PDF download). Use search term "Franz Lidz"
- Franz Lidz, Smithsonian magazine
- ^ "Lost In Translation, 09.21.95 – Philadelphia Inquirer
- Books of The Times; Reality Was Relative and the Relatives Were Nuts, 03.04.91 – New York Times
- Search: Franz Lidz,- New York Times
- Film: Unstrung And Calling The Shots, 09.03.95 – New York Times
- Sidney Lidz – Obituary, 07.28.81 – New York Times
- "STEELMAN Transitape portable reel-to-reel tape recorder" on YouTube, 1959
- "Beginning at the Ending at the Bates Motel", 09.13.98 – New York Times
- ^ "From the Editor", 04.08.91 – Sports Illustrated
- "A Writer's Relative Chaos: How Crazy Were Franz Lidz's Uncles? We're Glad You Asked That . . ., 04.07.91 – Philadelphia Inquirer
- Arn Tellem and Franz Lidz Are Going to the Hall of Fame, Philadelphia Magazine, 05.17.15
- Franz Lidz & Arn Tellem entering Hall together, Philadelphia Daily News, 05.27.15
- ^ "Letter From The Publisher" – 05.10.82 – Sports Illustrated
- "Letter From The Publisher" – 03.09.87 – Sports Illustrated
- "Letter from the Publisher" 03.26.84 – Sports Illustrated
- "Lidz weaves a tale of family, life on fringes", 02.19.91 – Baltimore Sun
- "Odds are, these guys are real characters", 09.21.95 – Baltimore Sun
- "Redford movie may be filmed locally", 01.23.91 – Baltimore Sun.
- ^ "The Sport of Drunken Hairy Scots", 05.07.08 – Philadelphia Inquirer
- "Gil Rogin Resurfaces", 09.24.10 – AARP, The Magazine
- The Virtuoso of the Canorama: Gil Rogin Ran SI at Its Peak, But His Fiction Might Make Him Immortal, 09.22.10 – The New York Observer
- "Almost Famous", 08.15.16 – Sports Illustrated
- "Upstairs, Downstairs and In Between", 12.01.11 – WSJ.
- WHAT DO WE REALLY KNOW ABOUT NEANDERTHALS?, May, 2019 Smithsonian magazine
- "How (and Where) Did Hannibal Cross the Alps?", July 2017 - Smithsonian magazine
- Baseball After The Boss, 08.02.07 – Conde Nast Portfolio
- Portfolio Diagnoses Steinbrenner, but New York Post gives a Second Opinion, 08.07 – New York Observer
- The Journalist Who Revealed How Ill George Steinbrenner Was}}, 07.13 – AOL'
- How's the Boss? Steinbrenner Looks Dreadful Archived 13 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine, 08.03.07 – Gothamist
- The Nack: Great Reporting, Vivid Writing, 12.15.08 – Bronx Banter
- "Up and Down in Beverly Hills, 04.17.00 – Sports Illustrated
- Donald Sterling Has Been Lost In Another Century For Some Time, 04.27.14 – Chicago Sun-Times
- "Sterling's offensive behavior was no secret for years, 04.30.14 – Sports Illustrated
- "Why NBA center Jason Collins is coming out now, 04.29.13 – Sports Illustrated
- "The story behind Jason Collins' story: How it happened, 04.29.13 – Sports Illustrated
- How Sports Illustrated Broke the Jason Collins Story, 04.29.13 – New York Times
- SUMMER FILMS: CREATURE FEATURES; The Ongoing Adventures of Moose and Squirrel, 04.20.00 – New York Times
- To Our Readers", 09.25.95 – Sports Illustrated
- "My Uncle, The Collector: A Hobbyist on a Shoestring", 01.25.87 – Sports Illustrated
- "Uncle Harry Never Lost A Fight But He Never Really Fought One, Either, 12.20.82 – Sports Illustrated
- Books of The Times; Reality Was Relative and the Relatives Were Nuts, 03.04.91 – New York Times
- The Unlikely Heroics of Unstrung Heroes, 02.20.91 – Los Angeles Times
- "Unstrung Heroes", February 1991 – Random House
- The star and author of 'Unstrung Heroes', 09.22.95 – Entertainment Weekly
- Nancy Jo Sales (18 September 1995). "Undone Heroes". New York Magazine. New York Media, LLC. p. 58.
- In a Higher State of Being (That Is, Dying), 01.10.99 – New York Times
- The Paper Chase, 10.26.03 – New York Times
- A Trashy Read / Hoarding hermits? A typist's true tale, 11.02.03 – Newsday
- Author delves into his inner hoarder His eccentric uncle led him to write about the Collyer brothers, 05.16.04 – Philadelphia Inquirer
- If Anything Should Inspire..., 01.04.04 – Washington Post
- Heavy Metal Rockers Find Peace And Quiet—and Rock Fans—on The Links, 11.27.86 – Sports Illustrated
- "Fairway to Hell", April 2008 – ESPN
- Books In Review, 05.30.08 – Only A Game, NPR
- We Know What You'll See Next Summer.., 11.15.98 – New York Times
- Here A Comic Genius, There A Comic Genius, 01.30.00 – New York Times
- How to Tell a Bad Movie From a Truly Bad Movie, 08.05.01 – New York Times
- News Briefs, 11.19.98 – The Tuscaloosa News
- A Shot at Thumb-Wrestling With Roger, 04.16.00 – New York Times
- The Uses of Irreverance, Fall, 2020 - Ojai Quarterly, pgs. 38-41
- Requiem For A Jumble of Artworks, 02.21.10- The New York Times
- The Amazing Costumes of Downton Abbey, 02.18.14- Slate
- The duPonts: Houses and Gardens in the Brandywine, December 2009 Delaware Today
- Meeting Maggie, February 2009 O, The Magazine
- "Introducing Miss Daisy, 06.23.03 – Sports Illustrated
- Where the wild things are – inside the tent 11.21.04 Los Angeles Times
- Gogo Lidz: Staff Writer, Newsweek
- Daisy Lidz, Thor Ritz, 07.23.10 – New York Times
External links
Categories:- 21st-century American novelists
- 21st-century American memoirists
- American male novelists
- Antioch College alumni
- Living people
- 1951 births
- People from Sanford, Maine
- People from Cheltenham, Pennsylvania
- Smithsonian (magazine) people
- Journalists from New York City
- 21st-century American male writers
- Novelists from New York (state)
- American male non-fiction writers
- Sportswriters from New York (state)