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Besides getting his savings and personal effects, Damon Runyon's second wife, Patrice Amati Runyon, was also promised half the income generated by all his literary output for the rest of her life.
Jan 1, 2016 · The Silver Slipper, one of the many clubs Runyon frequented, employed a sultry “Spanish” dancer by the name of Patrice Amati del Grande, and she had caught Damon’s eye years earlier. Runyon had been covering the border raids of the Mexican bandit Pancho Villa in 1916 for Hearst’s American .
Writer, journalist. Years active. 1900–1946. Alfred Damon Runyon (October 4, 1880 [1] [2] – December 10, 1946) was an American journalist and short-story writer. [3] He was best known for his short stories celebrating the world of Broadway in New York City that grew out of the Prohibition era. To New Yorkers of his generation, a "Damon ...
The Damon Runyon papers contain correspondence, writings, photographs, scrapbooks, films, and other papers documenting the literary and personal activities of American author Damon Runyon. Correspondence consists chiefly of telegrams to Runyon and his second wife, Patrice Amati, from friends and others, and telegrams from Runyon to Patrice ...
Feb 22, 2009 · A Critic at Large. Talk It Up. By Adam Gopnik. February 22, 2009. Runyon’s distinctive idiom—half overheard, half cooked up—captured a slang that yearned to be fancy, like two-tone shoes....
twenty years later. Runyon then married a dancer named Patrice Amati Del Grande, who divorced him some six months before his death in December 1946.) For thirty-five years Runyon was a top sportswriter and featured columnist on the Hearst papers, a dapper man-about-town, and friend to those within and outside the law. (When Al Capone went off to