Wyatt Emory Cooper
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Wyatt Emory Cooper (September 1, 1927 – January 5, 1978) was an American author, screenwriter, and actor. He was the fourth husband of Vanderbilt family heiress and socialite Gloria Vanderbilt and the father of CNN anchor Anderson Cooper.[1]
Life and career
Cooper had his childhood in Pleasant Grove, Mississippi, United States.[2] Cooper was from a poor family with deep Southern roots, and later moved to New Orleans, Louisiana, as a young child. He graduated from the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA), where he majored in theater arts and began a career in acting.[3]
In his thirties, Cooper lived in Los Angeles, attended both UCLA and UC Berkeley, and worked as a screenwriter. While residing in West Hollywood, then an unincorporated area of Los Angeles County, Cooper lived near Dorothy Parker and her husband Alan Campbell. A close friendship developed, and a year after Parker's death in 1967, Cooper published an incisive and widely read profile in Esquire magazine, titled, "Whatever You Think Dorothy Parker Was Like, She Wasn't".[4]
His writing includes the 1962 film The Chapman Report, the 1972 film The Glass House, and the 1975 book Families: A Memoir and a Celebration.[5]
Personal life
On December 24, 1963, he married heiress Gloria Vanderbilt, becoming her fourth husband. The couple frequently appeared on the national "best-dressed" list.[3] They had two sons: Carter Vanderbilt Cooper (1965–1988)[6] and Anderson Hays Cooper (born 1967), who is an anchor for CNN.[7]
Cooper wrote in his 1975 memoir, "It is in the family that we learn almost all we ever know of loving. In my sons' youth, their promise, their possibilities, my stake in immortality is invested." He died in Manhattan on January 5, 1978, at age 50, during open heart surgery, after having a heart attack the previous December.[3]
References
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- ↑ Wyatt Cooper at IBDB
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1". - Read online from Google Books
- ↑ a b c Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Cooper, Wyatt. "Whatever You Think Dorothy Parker Was Like, She Wasn't." Esquire. July 1968. pp. 56–61, 110–14
- ↑ Wyatt Cooper Dies; Screenplay Writer, The New York Times, Section B, Page 13, January 6, 1978
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Written works
- Families: A Memoir and a Celebration (Harper & Row, 1975) Template:ISBN
External links
- Template:Trim/ Wyatt Emory Cooper at IMDbTemplate:EditAtWikidataScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". (as Wyatt Cooper)
- Template:PAGENAMEBASE at the Internet Broadway DatabaseTemplate:EditAtWikidataTemplate:WikidataCheck (as Wyatt Cooper)
- Pages with script errors
- 20th-century American male actors
- 1927 births
- 1978 deaths
- American male non-fiction writers
- American male screenwriters
- American male stage actors
- 20th-century American memoirists
- Anderson Cooper
- Male actors from Mississippi
- People from Meridian, Mississippi
- People from Quitman, Mississippi
- Screenwriters from Mississippi
- Screenwriters from New York (state)
- University of California, Berkeley alumni
- University of California, Los Angeles alumni
- Vanderbilt family
- Writers from New Orleans
- Writers from New York City
- 20th-century American male writers
- 20th-century American screenwriters
- Burials at the Vanderbilt Family Cemetery and Mausoleum