WILLIAM PETER BLATTY

'William Peter Blatty' (born January 7, 1928) is an American writer. He wrote the novel ''The Exorcist'' (1971) and the subsequent screenplay version for which he won an Academy Award .

Contents
Early Life
Career
External links
See Also

Early Life


Blatty was born in New York City to Lebanese parents; his father left home when William was six years old. Raised in relative poverty by his deeply religious Catholic mother, he apparently lived at twenty-eight different addresses during his childhood. He attended several Catholic and Jesuit schools before finding his ''raison d'etre'' and attended Georgetown University to study English.

Career


In the mid-1950s, Blatty was a contestant on the quiz show ''You Bet Your Life'', winning about $500: enough money to enable him to devote more time to writing professionally.
In 1960 Blatty published ''Which Way to Mecca, Jack?'', which dealt humorously with his work at the United States Information Agency in Lebanon. He then published the comic novels ''John Goldfarb, Please Come Home'' (1963), ''I, Billy Shakespeare'' (1965) and ''Twinkle, Twinkle, "Killer" Kane'' (1966).
In the 1960s Blatty collaborated with director Blake Edwards, writing scripts for comedy films such as ''A Shot in the Dark'' (1964), ''What Did You Do in the War, Daddy?'' (1966), ''Gunn'' (1967), and ''Darling Lili'' (1970). Without Edwards, Blatty also worked on comedy screenplays as "Bill Blatty", one notable credit being the Danny Kaye film ''The Man from Diners Club''.
Later Blatty resumed novel writing. Allegedly retiring to a remote and rented chalet in woodland off Lake Tahoe, Blatty wrote ''The Exorcist'', a story about a twelve-year-old girl being possessed by a powerful demon. It would eventually be translated by himself and the director William Friedkin into one of the most famous and controversial mainstream horror movies of all time. According to Blatty, parts of the screenplay were unintentionally written in an apartment with the number 666.
In 1978, Blatty re-hashed ''Twinkle, Twinkle, "Killer" Kane'', a story about ex-soldiers in a mental institution during the Vietnam War, as ''The Ninth Configuration''; and in 1980 he wrote, directed, and produced a film version. The film, a blend of farce and psychological drama with a religious undercurrent, thoroughly perplexed audiences and was a flop. It has since acquired a rather sizable cult following.
In 1983, he wrote a novel called ''Legion'', a sequel to ''The Exorcist'' which later became the basis of the film ''The Exorcist III''. Blatty originally wanted the movie version to be titled ''Legion'' but the film producers wanted it to be more closely linked to the original. The first sequel, '' (1977) was disappointing both critically and commercially. Blatty had no involvement in this first sequel and his own follow-up ignored it entirely.
Blatty's autobiography is titled ''I'll Tell Them I Remember You''. A critical essay on Blatty's work can be found in S. T. Joshi's book ''The Modern Weird Tale'' (2001).

External links



TheNinthConfiguration.com - A website dedicated to William Peter Blatty, The Ninth Configuration & Legion

More about Blatty

Blatty's bibliography


See Also



List of horror fiction authors

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