Advertisement

Apology offered over 1947 Hollywood 'communist blacklist'

Reading Time:2 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
'The Hollywood Reporter' founder Billy Wilkerson and son Willie Wilkerson in 1952. Photo: AP

The son of founder Billy Wilkerson is apologising for his father's and the trade paper's role in the 1947 "Hollywood blacklist" that destroyed the careers of writers, actors and directors accused of having communist ties.

Advertisement

In an article published on Monday by , Willie Wilkerson, 61, calls the blacklist era "Hollywood's Holocaust" and says, "On the eve of this dark 65th anniversary, I feel an apology is necessary."

He says his father supported the blacklist to exact revenge against the Hollywood titans he felt denied him entry to their club when he wanted to establish a movie studio in the late 1920s. Billy Wilkerson founded in 1930. After the second world war, he used the paper as a vehicle for a series of editorials attacking communist sympathisers and their influence in Hollywood.

"In his maniacal quest to annihilate the studio owners, he realised the most effective retaliation was to destroy their talent," Willie Wilkerson writes. "In the wake of this emerging hysteria surrounding communism, the easiest way to crush the studio owners was to simply call their actors, writers and directors communists. Unfortunately, they would become the collateral damage of history. Apart from being charged with contempt, for refusing to name names, none of these individuals committed any crimes."

Studios dominated the industry and denied work to those named on the blacklist. Some writers worked under pseudonyms. Many actors and their families moved overseas.

Advertisement

"Any man or woman who, under the guise of freedom of speech, or the cloak of the Bill of Rights, or under the pseudo protection of being a liberal, says things, causes things to be said, or who actually is involved with many of the conspiracies that have now infested this great land of ours, has no place among us, be he commie or what," Billy Wilkerson wrote on November 5, 1947. "He or she should be rushed out of our business."

Advertisement