Charles Fulton Oursler Sr. (January 22, 1893 – May 24, 1952) was an American journalist, playwright, editor and writer.[2] Writing as Anthony Abbot, he was an author of mysteries and detective fiction.[3] His son was the journalist and author
Will Oursler (1913–1985).
Background
Oursler was born and grew up in
Baltimore, Maryland, the son of a poor city transit worker. His childhood passions were reading and stage magic. He was raised in a devout
Baptist family, but at 15, he declared himself an
agnostic. While still in his teens, he got a reporter's job for the Baltimore American.[4]
In the 1920s, Oursler aided
Harry Houdini in his crusade against fraudulent
mediumship. He himself crusaded under the pseudonym Samri Frikell.[6] He was the author of the book Spirit Mediums Exposed (1930), which revealed the techniques of fraud mediums.[7]
John Mulholland wrote that Samri Frikell was the pen name of Oursler when he wrote on the subject of magic and spiritualism. He made it by combining the names of two magicians,
Samri Baldwin and
Wiljalba Frikell.[8]
He was supervising editor of the various magazines and newspapers published by
Bernarr Macfadden, from 1921 to 1941. Macfadden urged him to drop the "Charles" from his name. He became editor of Liberty after Macfadden acquired it in 1931. In the fall of 1939, Fulton Oursler, as editor of Liberty, printed a piece in his magazine called "Alcoholics and God," which brought a rush of 800 frantic inquiries into the New York office of
Alcoholics Anonymous, as it was to be known.[9]
Oursler left
Macfadden Publications shortly after Macfadden was ousted from the company. Oursler's tenure with the company was continuous from 1921 to 1941, except for a brief period following the success of The Spider (1928).
Oursler wrote a number of novels. These include Sandalwood (1925), Stepchild of the Moon (1926) and The World's Delight (1929). He also wrote detective stories and magazine articles under the pseudonym Anthony Abbot, as well as several plays, the most famous of which was the gimmick-filled The Spider (1928), co-written with
Lowell Brentano and later filmed twice, in 1931 and
1945. The great success of the play attracted four plagiarism suits, which were successfully defended by Oursler's private attorney,
Arthur Garfield Hays.
Personal life
While still in his teens, Oursler married Rose Karger. They had two children. The marriage ended in divorce.[14]
In 1925, Oursler married
Grace Perkins, who had been raised Catholic but lapsed in her teens. They had two children, April and Tony. They practiced no religion and did not raise their children in any faith.[14] Perkins, a former actress, was a prodigious contributor to the Macfadden magazines. Several of her novels were made into films.[15]
In 1935, the Oursler family toured the Middle East and spent a week in the
Holy Land. On the journey home, Oursler started writing a book titled A Skeptic in the Holy Land. "I started out being very skeptical," he wrote later, "but in the last chapter I almost converted."[16] He assumed that once the book was published, he would forget about religion. However, perceiving the growing threat of
Nazism and
Communism, he found himself increasingly drawn to
Christian ethics. Astounded at how little people knew about the life and teaching of
Jesus Christ, he decided that he would write the story of Jesus and "try and make it as interesting as a serial story in a popular magazine." He would call it The Greatest Story Ever Told.[17]
In 1943, Oursler was received into the
Catholic Church. The following year, his son converted to the Catholic faith, and his wife returned to her childhood faith a year later. His daughter converted in 1948. The Greatest Story Ever Told was published in 1949.[18] It was followed by The Greatest Book Ever Written in 1951, and The Greatest Faith Ever Known, completed by his daughter, April Oursler Armstrong, and posthumously published in 1953. The film, The Greatest Story Ever Told, based on Oursler's book, was released in 1965.[19]
Oursler also wrote, as Abbot, the Reader's Digest article that was made into the movie Boomerang! (1947). Another book was Father Flanagan of Boy's Town, 1949, the story of Fr
Edward J. Flanagan's work with young men. The book was co-authored by Fulton's son
Will, also a noted writer.[citation needed]
Oursler died in New York City in 1952, while halfway through writing his autobiography. Oursler left his estate to his second wife on the understanding that she would leave the estate to his four children. When she died, she only left it to the two children she had with Oursler and the other two successfully sued for their share.[1]
About the Murder of Geraldine Foster (1930) a.k.a. The Murder of Geraldine Foster
About the Murder of the Clergyman's Mistress (1931) a.k.a. The Crime of the Century, The Murder of the Clergyman's Mistress, The Mysterious Murder of the Blonde Play-Girl
^Lorene Hanley Duquen, A Century of Catholic Converts. Huntington, Indiana: Our Sunday Visitor, 2003, p. 129.
^Oursler, Charles Fulton. The Magician Detective: and Other Weird Mysteries, Off-Trail Publications, 2010;
ISBN978-1-935031-12-3. Book includes Oursler biography in addition to an anthology of stories.