Irving Mansfield

Irving Mansfield
Born
Irving Mandelbaum

(1908-07-23)July 23, 1908
DiedAugust 25, 1988(1988-08-25) (aged 80)
OccupationProducer, publicist, writer
Spouse(s)Jacqueline Susann
(1939-1974; her death)
Beverly Robinson (1983-1988; his death)
ChildrenGuy Mansfield

Irving Mansfield (July 23, 1908 – August 25, 1988) was an American producer, publicist and writer. He is best remembered as the husband of novelist Jacqueline Susann and for his promotion of Susann's enormously popular books.

Early life and career

Irving Mansfield was born Irving Mandelbaum on July 23, 1908 in Brooklyn, to Jacob and Polish-born Annie Mandelbaum.[citation needed] Mansfield graduated from New York University in the early 1930s.[citation needed]

After working in public relations for several years, Mansfield became a producer with CBS in 1946 and developed Arthur Godfrey's Talent Scouts, This Is Show Business and The Jane Froman Show, among other programs.

Mansfield gave up his career to help his wife promote her book, Valley of the Dolls, which was published in 1966 and became the best-selling novel of the year. Mansfield continued to work with his wife in promoting her subsequent novels, The Love Machine (1969) and Once Is Not Enough (1973), both among the top three sellers of their respective years. Mansfield also executive-produced movie versions of his wife's novels The Love Machine (1971) and Jacqueline Susann's Once Is Not Enough (1975), as well as a 1981 television mini-series version of Valley.[1]

Personal life

Mansfield met Jacqueline Susann, then an aspiring stage actress, in the late 1930s while he was working as a press agent. Susann was impressed by his ability to place "items" about her in the theater and society pages of New York newspapers, and they were married on April 2, 1939. Susann gave birth to their only child, Guy Hildy Mansfield, on December 6, 1946. At the age of three, Guy was diagnosed as autistic.

In an interview with People magazine in 1983, Mansfield described his son and how he found out his son was autistic:

Guy was eventually institutionalized, although the Mansfields never revealed the true reason for his absence from home, fearing he would be stigmatized should he eventually recover.

Despite persistent rumors of Susann's infidelity, the couple was devoted to each other, and remained married until Susann's death from cancer on September 21, 1974, at the age of 56. After her death, Mansfield alone promoted her novella Dolores (William Morrow, 1976) which became another huge best seller (according to Publishers Weekly, Dolores was the third best-selling novel of its year). In 1983, learning of an upcoming biography of Susann, Mansfield published his own book, Life with Jackie (Bantam), written with Jean Libman Block.

In 1983, he married Beverly Robinson, who survived him at his death.

Description

Editor Michael Korda gave this description of Irving Mansfield, ".. talked and acted as if he were a character straight out of Guys and Dolls, and was comfortable only at place's like Lindy's, the Stage Delicatessen, and Sardi's (although late in life he managed to settle into the West Coast equivalent: a bungalow and a cabana at the Beverly Hills Hotel and a table at the Polo Lounge).[3]

Death

Mansfield died on August 25, 1988, at his home in Manhattan after suffering a heart attack. He was 80. In addition to his second wife, he was survived by his son. His funeral service was held on August 28 at the Riverside Chapel in Manhattan.[4]

References

  1. ^ Rothstein, Mervyn (August 26, 1988). "Irving Mansfield, 80, a Publicist, Author and Television Producer". The New York Times. Retrieved April 9, 2015.
  2. ^ Kahn, Toby. Widower Irving Mansfield Reveals the Family Secrets of Wife Jacqueline Susann. People. March 23, 1983. Retrieved January 12, 2017.
  3. ^ Korda, Michael (1999). Another life : a memoir of other people (1st ed.). New York: Random House. pp. 245–269. ISBN 0679456597. OCLC 40180750.
  4. ^ Folkart, Burt (August 27, 1988). "Jacqueline Susann's Husband : Publicity Agent Irving Mansfield, 80". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved April 9, 2015.

External links


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