Review
"The Ben Hecht Show...is now immortalized in a book of the same name...Hecht at his most relaxed, about what you would get if you ever sat next to him on a plane" -- Movie Collector's World
"Hecht's shake-and-quake style is preserved [here] on paper" -- Chicago Tribune
"a compendium of pithy, powerful commentary" -- Booklist/RBB
Product Description
On February 15, 1958, writer Ben Hecht (1893-1964), a flamboyant and caustic social critic, appeared on The Mike Wallace Interview. Wallace and his producer, Ted Yates, agreed that Hecht's personality was provocative enough to be the basis of a television show. The Ben Hecht Show was born. For 22 weeks, Ben Hecht held forth on a variety of subjects, enraging some, engaging many. Here is a sample of Hecht's stories and essays from his short-lived television show. Entertaining, defiant, realistic, and iconoclastic, these are the impolitic thoughts of a man who tried to awaken the public from the "optical opiate" of 1950s television.






