:''for others of similar name, see
Daniel Mannix (disambiguation)''
'Daniel Pratt Mannix IV', usually called 'Daniel P. Mannix' (
October 27 1911-
January 29 1997), was a
Pennsylvania-born author and journalist whose best-known work is the 1967 novel ''
The Fox and the Hound'' on which the
Disney film ''
The Fox and the Hound'' was based.
His work ranged through animal stories for children, books about hunting, and sensational adult topics (which have given him a cult readership) such as
Aleister Crowley, a sympathetic account of circus
freaks, the
Hellfire Club, the history of
torture, and the
Roman Games.
According to Martin M Winkler's book, ''Gladiator: Film and History'', Mannix's 1958 non-fiction book ''Those about to Die'' (republished in
2001 as ''The Way of the Gladiator'') was the inspiration for
David Franzoni's screenplay for the movie
''Gladiator''.
Mannix's varied career included time spent as a sword swallower and fire eater in a circus, as described in his account ''Step Right Up'' (aka ''Memoirs of a Sword Swallower''); a professional hunter; and a collector of wildlife for zoos and circuses. Mannix was also a skilled stage magician, magic historian, and collector of illusions and apparatus.
He served as a naval lieutenant with the Photo-Science Laboratory in
Washington, D.C. during
World War II.
He founded the
Munchkin Convention of the
International Wizard of Oz Club.
Daniel P. Mannix was also the last person alive to see
Grace Olive Wiley before she was bitten by a poisonous snake
[1].
References
Solomon, John (2004). Gladiator from Screenplay to Screen. In Winkler, Martin M. (Ed.), ''Gladiator: Film and History'', pp. 1–15. Blackwell Publishers. ISBN 1-4051-1042-2.
External links
★
Variety.com obituary
★
Sword Swallowers, Slaves and Great Beasts: The Books of Daniel P. Mannix
★
Sanders The Great: Book review of Memoirs of a Sword Swallower
★
★ Text available online for
"Those about to die"