Awards & Winners

Norman Mailer

Date of Birth 31-January-1923
Place of Birth Long Branch
(Monmouth County, New Jersey)
Nationality United States of America
Also know as Norman Kingsley Mailer, Andreas Wilson, Norman Kingsley Mailer
Profession Writer, Journalist, Novelist, Screenwriter, Essayist, Playwright, Film Editor, Film Producer, Film director, Actor, Poet
Quotes
  • There's a subterranean impetus towards pornography so powerful that half the business world is juiced by the sort of half sex that one finds in advertisements.
  • The horror of the Twentieth Century was the size of each new event, and the paucity of its reverberation.
  • I usually need a can of beer to prime me.
  • I think it's bad to talk about one's present work, for it spoils something at the root of the creative act. It discharges the tension.
  • In America all too few blows are struck into flesh. We kill the spirit here, we are experts at that. We use psychic bullets and kill each other cell by cell.
  • The final purpose of art is to intensify, even, if necessary, to exacerbate, the moral consciousness of people.
  • In America few people will trust you unless you are irreverent.
  • Writing books is the closest men ever come to childbearing.
  • A modern democracy is a tyranny whose borders are undefined; one discovers how far one can go only by traveling in a straight line until one is stopped.
  • Ultimately a hero is a man who would argue with the gods, and so awakens devils to contest his vision. The more a man can achieve, the more he may be certain that the devil will inhabit a part of his creation.
  • Masculinity is not something given to you, but something you gain. And you gain it by winning small battles with honor.
  • There is nothing safe about sex. There never will be.
  • America is a hurricane, and the only people who do not hear the sound are those fortunate if incredibly stupid and smug White Protestants who live in the center, in the serene eye of the big wind.
  • Because there is very little honor left in American life, there is a certain built-in tendency to destroy masculinity in American men.
  • Once a newspaper touches a story the facts are lost forever, even to the protagonists.
  • Hip is the sophistication of the wise primitive in a giant jungle.
  • The difference between writing a book and being on television is the difference between conceiving a child and having a baby made in a test tube.
  • The desire for success lubricates secret prostitution's in the soul.
  • Each day a few more lies eat into the seed with which we are born, little institutional lies from the print of newspapers, the shock waves of television, and the sentimental cheats of the movie screen.
  • Giving a camera to Diane Arbus is like putting a live grenade in the hands of a child.
  • The sickness of our times for me has been just this damn thing that everything has been getting smaller and smaller and less and less important, that the romantic spirit has dried up, that there is no shame today. We're all getting so mean and small and petty and ridiculous, and we all live under the threat of extermination.
  • Left-wingers are incapable of conspiring because they are all egomaniacs.
  • Every moment of one's existence one is growing into more or retreating into less. One is always living a little more or dying a little bit.
  • There is one expanding horror in American life. It is that our long odyssey toward liberty, democracy and freedom-for-all may be achieved in such a way that utopia remains forever closed, and we live in freedom and hell, debased of style, not individual from one another, void of courage, our fear rationalized away.
  • I'm hostile to men, I'm hostile to women, I'm hostile to cats, to poor cockroaches, I'm afraid of horses.
  • One's condition on marijuana is always existential. One can feel the importance of each moment and how it is changing one. One feels one's being, one becomes aware of the enormous apparatus of nothingness -- the hum of a hi-fi set, the emptiness of a pointless interruption, one becomes aware of the war between each of us, how the nothingness in each of us seeks to attack the being of others, how our being in turn is attacked by the nothingness in others.
  • If a person is not talented enough to be a novelist, not smart enough to be a lawyer, and his hands are too shaky to perform operations, he becomes a journalist.
  • What characterizes a member of a minority group is that he is forced to see himself as both exceptional and insignificant, marvelous and awful, good and evil.
Norman Kingsley Mailer was an American novelist, journalist, essayist, playwright, film maker, actor and political candidate. His first novel was The Naked and the Dead, published in 1948. His best work was widely considered to be The Executioner's Song, which was published in 1979, and for which he won one of his two Pulitzer Prizes. In addition to the Pulitzer Prize, Mailer's book Armies of the Night was awarded the National Book Award. Along with the likes of Truman Capote, Hunter S. Thompson and Tom Wolfe, Mailer is considered an innovator of creative nonfiction, a genre sometimes called New Journalism, which superimposes the style and devices of literary fiction onto fact-based journalism. Mailer was also known for his essays, the most renowned of which was The White Negro. He was a major cultural commentator and critic, both through his novels, his journalism, his essays and his frequent media appearances. In 1955, Mailer and three others founded The Village Voice, an arts and politics oriented weekly newspaper distributed in Greenwich Village.

Awards by Norman Mailer

Check all the awards nominated and won by Norman Mailer.

1994


Nominations 1994 »

Award Nominated Nominated Work
Neustadt International Prize for Literature

1987


Razzie Award for Worst Director
Honored for : Tough Guys Don't Dance
(Tied with Elaine May for Ishtar.)

Nominations 1987 »

Award Nominated Nominated Work
Razzie Award for Worst Director Tough Guys Don't Dance
Razzie Award for Worst Screenplay Tough Guys Don't Dance
Based on his novel

1983


Nominations 1983 »

Award Nominated Nominated Work
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Writing - Miniseries, Movie or Dramatic Special The Executioner's Song

1981


Nominations 1981 »

Award Nominated Nominated Work
National Book Award for Fiction (Paperback) The Executioner's Song

1980


Pulitzer Prize for Fiction
Honored for : The Executioner's Song

Nominations 1980 »

Award Nominated Nominated Work
Pulitzer Prize for Fiction The Executioner's Song
National Book Award for Fiction (Hardcover) The Executioner's Song

1969


National Book Award for Arts and Letters (Nonfiction)
Honored for : Armies of the Night
Pulitzer Prize for General Non-Fiction
Honored for : Armies of the Night

Nominations 1969 »

Award Nominated Nominated Work
National Book Award for Arts and Letters (Nonfiction) Armies of the Night
National Book Award for History and Biography (Nonfiction) Miami and the Siege of Chicago: An Informal History of the Republican and Democratic Conventions of 1968

1968


Nominations 1968 »

Award Nominated Nominated Work
National Book Award for Fiction Why Are We in Vietnam?