MacKinlay Kantor

Biographical information

RolesCompeted in Olympic Games
SexMale
Full nameBenjamin MacKinlay (Benjamin McKinlay-)•Kantor
Used nameMacKinlay•Kantor
Born4 February 1904 in Webster City, Iowa (USA)
Died11 October 1977 in Sarasota, Florida (USA)
NOC United States

Biography

MacKinlay Kantor worked as the editor of the “Webster City Daily News” during his childhood. He had already written his first collection of poems at 17-years-old. During World War II, Kantor reported from London as a war correspondent for a Los Angeles newspaper. He then won the prestigious Pulitzer Prize in 1956 for his novel Andersonville, about the Confederate prison camp.

Kantor later worked as a major novelist and screenwriter. The films The Best Years of Our Lives which won 7 Oscars in 1946, Gettysburg and If the South Had Won the Civil War were made based on his scripts. His novels mainly focused on the American Civil War, and organized crime in 1920s Chicago.

The Voice of Bugle Ann was published as a book in 1935 and was made into a movie the following year with Lionel Barrymore and Maureen O’Sullivan. The story is about a fox hunter and a sheep farmer in rural Missouri whose conflicts escalate when the best dog in the pack called “Bugle Ann” disappears.

Results

Games Discipline (Sport) / Event NOC / Team Pos Medal As
1936 Summer Olympics Art Competitions USA MacKinlay Kantor
Literature, Epic Works, Open (Olympic) AC