Famous for crafting Yiddish lexicon, Leo Rosten is well known for acquainting Americans with the Jewish culture and language
@Humorist, Facts and Personal Life
Famous for crafting Yiddish lexicon, Leo Rosten is well known for acquainting Americans with the Jewish culture and language
Leo Rosten born at
He married Priscilla Ann ‘Pam’ Mead, a fellow graduate student at University of Chicago in March 1935. The marriage ended in divorce in 1959. He is survived by two daughters, one son from this marriage.
On January 5, 1960, he married Gertrude Zimmerman, who passed away in 1995.
Rosten was born into a Yiddish-speaking family in Lodz, Poland to a trade unionist couple, Samuel C. Rosenberg and Ida Freundlich Rosenberg. They immigrated to Chicago, USA when he was just three.
Raised in Chicago, he grew up in a working-class Jewish milieu where both English and Yiddish were spoken. Books and language fascinated him since childhood, and he began writing stories when he was just nine.
In 1930, he graduated from the University of Chicago and received his doctorate from the same institution in 1937. He completed his post graduation from the London School of Economics.
Unable to find work during the Great Depression, he taught English for recent immigrants at night, which later became a source of inspiration for his most famous work ‘Hyman Kaplan’.
He held a series of wartime government positions including deputy director of the Office of War Information and chief of the office of War Information’s motion pictures division.
In late 1940s, he worked for the Rand Corporation, a non-profit institution offering research and analysis to the United States armed forces.
In 1949, he joined the staff of ‘Look’ magazine in New York where he worked till 1971.
He also taught at Yale University, Columbia and the New School of Social Research, New York City. He was a visiting professor of political science at the University of California, Berkeley in 1960.
He wrote many fiction and nonfiction throughout his career, but was best known for his book “The Education of H Y M A N K A P L A N, inspired by a former night-school student from his own teaching days. It was published in 1937 under the pseudonym Leonard Q. Ross and inspired one of the most unforgettable comic characters of 20th century fiction. However, its two sequels, ‘The Return of H Y M A N K A P L A N (1950)' and O K A P L A N! My K A P L A N! (1976) were not received well in literary circles.
He is also popular for his other work ‘The Joys of Yiddish’, which was published in 1968. It is an abounding glossary of Yiddish, Hebrew and Yinglish words encountered in English. It also gives a sneak peek at Jewish culture including habits, holidays, history, ceremonies, folklore, cuisines et cetera. It was later expanded to ‘The Joys of Yinglish’ in 1989.
He was an excellent screenwriter of numerous screenplays, including ‘The Dark Corner’, a film noir starring Mark Stevens; ‘Lured’, featuring Lucille Ball; ‘Captain Newman, M.D.’, ‘Mechanized Patrolling’, ‘They got me covered’, ‘The velvet touch’, ‘All through the night’, ‘The Conspirators’, ‘Sleep, My Love’, ‘Double Dynamite’, ‘Walk east on beacon’, and ‘Mister Cory’.