The Algonquin Round Table - Influential Literary Circle of the 1920s

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Discover the legendary Algonquin Round Table, a group of renowned artists, writers, and critics who met daily at the Algonquin Hotel in the 1920s. Learn about its iconic members and their contributions to modern literature, journalism, and culture, as they cultivated wit, irreverence, and modernist sensibility in their work.

  • Algonquin Round Table
  • 1920s literature
  • New York literary scene
  • influential authors

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  1. The Algonquin Round Table AKA The Vicious Circle

  2. What was the Algonquin Round Table? Group of artists, writers, dramatists, actors, and critics who met at the Algonquin Hotel for lunch every day. Began in 1919 (post WWI) and continued through the 1920s. Many (including Parker) worked for Vanity Fair or The New Yorker (which was started in 1925) .

  3. Who were its members?

  4. Who were its members? Franklin Pierce Adams, daily columnist The Conning Tower for the New York Tribune Robert Benchley, humor writer and critic ( How to Sleep, Treasurer s Report ) Heywood Broun, columnist and sportswriter (married to Ruth Hale) Marc Connelly, playwright, Green Pastures George S. Kaufman, playwright (collaborator with Edna Ferber) Dorothy Parker, writer of light verse and fiction

  5. Members, continued Harold Ross, founder and editor of The New Yorker Robert Sherwood, author and playwright Alexander Woollcott, critic and later radio personality (The Man Who Came to Dinner) Harpo Marx Tallulah Bankhead Edna Ferber, author (So Big, Giant)

  6. Why should we know about these authors? Cultivated a sophisticated and caustic urban sensibility that pushed against the sentimental pieties of an earlier age. Important because of the quality of irreverence and wit that they brought to journalism, criticism, etc. Brought a kind of popular modernity and modernist sensibility to a market that was dominated by Liberty, The Saturday Evening Post, and so on through publishing in The New Yorker, The American Mercury (edited by H. L. Mencken), and so on. Took seriously and promoted the work of Gertrude Stein, Ernest Hemingway, Ring Lardner, and so on.

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