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Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer 1954 10" LP Stan Purdy Crime Jazz Noir Sleaze

Description: Mickey Spillane, Stan Purdy And His Orchestra – Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer Label:V (2) – VL 3501Format:Vinyl, LP, 10"Country:USReleased:1954Genre:Jazz, Non-Music, Stage & ScreenStyle:Cool Jazz, DialogueA1Tonight, My LoveVoice Actor – Betty AckermanWritten-By, Voice Actor – Mickey SpillaneB1VeldaB2Oh, MikeB3The WomanB4The Mike Hammer ThemeCopyright © – The Fifth Corp.Composed By, Conductor – Stan PurdyIllustration – G.R. WilsonOrchestra – Stan Purdy And His OrchestraTitle on the labels is "Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer Story"Matrix / Runout (Stamped in dead wax on side A): TV21737 1AMatrix / Runout (Stamped in dead wax on side B): TV21736 1B Frank Morrison Spillane (/spɪˈleɪn/; March 9, 1918 – July 17, 2006), better known as Mickey Spillane, was an American crime novelist, called the "king of pulp fiction".[2] His stories often feature his signature detective character, Mike Hammer. More than 225 million copies of his books have sold internationally. Spillane was also an occasional actor, once even playing Hammer himself in the 1965 film The Girl Hunters.[3][4] Early lifeFrank Morrison Spillane was born March 9, 1918, in Brooklyn, New York, and primarily raised in Elizabeth, New Jersey, Spillane was the only child of his Irish bartender father, John Joseph Spillane, and his Scottish mother, Catherine Anne. During his late adolescence, his family returned to Brooklyn, where he graduated from Erasmus Hall High School in 1936.[5] He started writing while in high school, briefly attended Fort Hays State College in Kansas and worked a variety of jobs, including summers as a lifeguard at Breezy Point, Queens, and a period as a trampoline artist for the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus.[6] Photo of Spillane from Greenwood Army Air Field yearbook for 1943During World War II, Spillane enlisted in the Army Air Corps, becoming a fighter pilot and a flight instructor.[7] He was first stationed at the air base in Greenwood, Mississippi, where he met and married first wife Mary Ann Pearce in 1945.[8] He also met two younger writers, Earle Basinsky and Charlie Wells, who would become his protégés; each published two hardboiled-noir novels in the Spillane style in the early 1950s.[9][10] CareerComic booksSpillane claims that he started being published as an author of slicks where he was credited under house names, then went "lower" to the pulps,[11] then went lower still as a writer for comic books.[12] While working as a salesman in Gimbels department store basement in 1940, he met tie salesman Joe Gill, who later found a lifetime career in scripting for Charlton Comics. Gill told Spillane to meet his brother, Ray Gill, who wrote for Funnies Inc., an outfit that packaged comic books for different publishers.[13] Spillane soon began writing an eight-page story every day. He concocted adventures for major 1940s comic book characters, including Captain Marvel, Superman, Batman, and Captain America. In the early 1940s, working for Funnies, Inc., he wrote two-page text stories which were syndicated to various comic book publishers, including Timely Comics. At one point, Spillane estimated he wrote fifty of these "short-short stories," which were intended to fulfill a postal regulation requiring comic books to have at least two pages of text to qualify for a second-class mailing permit.[citation needed] While most comic books writers toiled anonymously, Spillane's byline appeared on most of his prose "filler" stories. 26 stories were collected in Primal Spillane: Early Stories 1941–1942 (Gryphon Books, 2003). A new, expanded edition of Primal Spillane was released by Bold Venture Press in 2018, the new volume contained an additional fifteen stories, including the previously unpublished "A Turn of the Tide".[citation needed] Novels Mike Lancer in Green Hornet Comics #10 (December 1942) art by Harry SahleSpillane joined the United States Army Air Corps on December 8, 1941, the day after the attack on Pearl Harbor. In the mid-1940s he was stationed as a flight instructor in Greenwood, Mississippi, where he met and married Mary Ann Pearce in 1945. The couple wanted to buy a country house in the town of Newburgh, New York, 60 miles north of New York City, so Spillane decided to boost his bank account by writing a novel. He wrote I, the Jury in just 9 days.[6] At the suggestion of Ray Gill, he sent it to E. P. Dutton.[citation needed] With the combined total of the 1947 hardcover and the Signet paperback (December 1948), I, the Jury sold 6-1/2 million copies in the United States alone. I, the Jury introduced Spillane's most famous character, hardboiled detective Mike Hammer. Although tame by some standards, his novels featured more sex than competing titles, and the violence was more overt than the usual detective story. Covers tended to feature scantily dressed women or women who appeared as if they were about to undress. In the beginning, Mike Hammer's chief nemeses consisted of gangsters, but by the early '50s, this broadened to communists and deviants.[4] An early version of Spillane's Mike Hammer character, called Mike Lancer, ilustrated by Harry Sahle, was published in Harvey Comics' Green Hornet Comics #10 (Dec. 1942).[14][15] In 1946, Spillane submitted in a script for a detective-themed comic book.[16] "Mike Hammer originally started out to be a comic book. I was gonna have a Mike Danger comic book," Spillane said in a 1984 interview.[17] Two Mike Danger comic-book stories were published in 1954 without Spillane's knowledge. These were published with other material in "Byline: Mickey Spillane," edited by Max Allan Collins and Lynn F. Myers, Jr. (Crippen & Landru publishers, 2004). The Mike Hammer series proved hugely successful during the 1950s and 1960s, but the books were excoriated by the literary establishment. Malcolm Cowley of The New Republic called Spillane "a dangerous paranoid, sadist, and masochist" and even his own editors sometimes found his novels distasteful. Spillane for his part was unmoved by critics, saying "You can sell a lot more peanuts than caviar" and "The literary world is made of second rate writers writing about other second rate writers." Attractively low prices (25 cents for a paperback copy, later raised to 50 cents) helped sales, and the 1956 informative guide Sixty Years of Best Sellers found that the six novels Spillane had written up to that point were among the top ten best selling American fiction titles of all time.[citation needed] The Signet paperbacks displayed dramatic front cover illustrations. Lou Kimmel created the cover paintings for My Gun Is Quick, Vengeance Is Mine, One Lonely Night, and The Long Wait. The cover art for Kiss Me, Deadly was by James Meese.[citation needed] Acting Spillane in the 1974 Columbo episode "Publish or Perish".Spillane portrayed himself as a detective in Ring of Fear (1954), and rewrote the film without credit for John Wayne's and Robert Fellows's Wayne-Fellows Productions. The film was directed by screenwriter James Edward Grant. Several Hammer novels were made into movies, including Kiss Me Deadly (1955). In The Girl Hunters (1963) filmed in England, Spillane himself appeared as Hammer, one of the few occasions in film history in which an author of a popular literary hero has portrayed his own character. Spillane was scheduled to film The Snake as a follow-up, but the film was never made.[18] On October 25, 1956, Spillane appeared on The Ford Show, Starring Tennessee Ernie Ford, with interest on his Mike Hammer novels.[19] In January 1974, he appeared with Jack Cassidy in the television series Columbo starring Peter Falk in the episode "Publish or Perish". He portrayed a writer who is murdered.[20] In 1995 and 1997, he appeared in the low budget films Mommy and its sequel, Mommy 2: Mommy's Day. In 1969, Spillane formed a production company with Robert Fellows who had produced The Girl Hunters to produce many of his books, but Fellows died soon after and only The Delta Factor was produced.[21] During the 1980s, he appeared in Miller Lite beer commercials.[22] In the 1990s, Spillane licensed one of his characters to Tekno Comix for use in a science-fiction adventure series, Mike Danger. In his introduction to the series, Spillane said he had conceived of the character decades earlier but never used him.[17] ReceptionEarly reaction to Spillane's work was generally hostile. Malcolm Cowley dismissed the Mike Hammer character as "a homicidal paranoiac."[23] John G. Cawelti called Spillane's writing "atrocious," and Julian Symons called Spillane's work "nauseating."[23] By contrast, Ayn Rand publicly praised Spillane's work at a time when critics were almost uniformly hostile. She considered him an underrated if uneven stylist and found congenial the black-and-white morality of the Hammer stories. However, Rand condemned the political views expressed by Spillane in his Tiger Mann novel Day of the Guns, describing the book's cynical protagonist and his "semi-governmental gang" as being "shocking and rationally indefensible", as Rand opposed the use of force unlimited by any framework of rights.[24] Spillane's work was later praised by Max Allan Collins, William L. DeAndrea,[4] and Robert L. Gale.[23] DeAndrea argued that although Spillane's characters were stereotypes, Spillane had a "flair for fast-action writing," that his work broke new ground for American crime fiction, and that Spillane's prose "is lean and spare and authentically tough, something that writers like Raymond Chandler and Ross Macdonald never achieved."[4] German painter Markus Lüpertz claimed that Spillane's writing influenced his own work, saying that Spillane ranks as one of the major poets of the 20th century. American comic book writer Frank Miller has mentioned Spillane as an influence for his own hardboiled style. Avant-Garde musician John Zorn composed a piece influenced by Spillane's writing titled Spillane.[citation needed] Awards and accoladesIn 1983, Spillane received the lifetime achievement award from the Private Eye Writers of America.[25] He also received an Edgar Allan Poe Grand Master Award in 1995.[26][27] In popular cultureWalt Kelly wrote two parodies of Hammer's work which satirized his spare, disjointed style, overblown first person narration, and teetering, barely controlled paranoia: "The Bloody Drip" and "The Bloody Drip Writhes Again", both starring Albert the Alligator as the detective Meat Hamburg. They were published in the following "Pogo" collections: "The Bloody Drip" by Mucky Spleen (1953, Uncle Pogo's So-So Stories)"Gore Blimey: The Bloody Drip Writhes Again" (1955, The Pogo Peek-a-Book)Spillane was also parodied several times in Mad Magazine. The April 1959 issue carried a piece called "If Mickey Spillane Wrote Nancy" (the comic strip Nancy, by Ernie Bushmiller).[28] The television series MASH had an episode devoted to Mickey Spillane and his books. In the film Full Metal Jacket, Gny. Sgt. Hartman, after providing Pvt. Joker with his Marine Corps assignment as a military journalist, asks him, "Do you think you're Mickey Spillane? Do you think you are some kind of f**king writer?” In 1987, New York avant-garde jazz musician John Zorn published Spillane, an album composed of three "file-card pieces", as well as a work for voice, string quartet and turntables. Zorn wrote Spillane on a series of index cards, each containing an outline or instruction for the musicians that was intended to evoke scenes from one of Spillane's novels.

Price: 49.99 USD

Location: Utica, New York

End Time: 2024-12-05T13:48:28.000Z

Shipping Cost: 6.5 USD

Product Images

Mickey SpillaneMickey SpillaneMickey Spillane

Item Specifics

Restocking Fee: No

Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer

All returns accepted: Returns Accepted

Item must be returned within: 60 Days

Refund will be given as: Money Back

Artist: Stan Purdy

Speed: 33 RPM

Record Label: V Records

Release Title: Mike Hammer

Case Type: Cardboard Sleeve

Color: Black

Material: Vinyl

Type: LP

Format: Record

Record Grading: Very Good Plus (VG+)

Release Year: 1954

Sleeve Grading: Very Good (VG)

Record Size: 10"

Style: 1950s, Cool Jazz

Genre: Jazz

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