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But I thought, 'We'll see what he comes up with.'" Mankiewicz proved very useful, particularly working with Houseman as editor, : 240–242 and wrote five scripts for Campbell Playhouse shows broadcast between November 12, 1939, and March 17, 1940. "I felt it would be useless," Welles said later, "because of Mank's general uselessness many times in the studios. In September 1939 : 244 Welles visited Mankiewicz while he was hospitalized in Los Angeles after a car accident, and offered him a job writing scripts for the Mercury Theatre's show on CBS radio, The Campbell Playhouse.
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Welles admired Mankiewicz, and had met him in New York in 1938 : 234 at the time of the Mercury Theatre's Broadway successes.
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But, you know, when the bitterness wasn't focused straight at you, he was the best company in the world." : 52–53 "A neurotic drinker and a compulsive gambler, he was also one of the most intelligent, informed, witty, humane and charming men I have ever known." : 447 Orson Welles told Peter Bogdanovich that "Nobody was more miserable, more bitter, and funnier than Mank. : 12 "His behavior, public and private, was a scandal," wrote John Houseman. Mankiewicz was a notorious personality in Hollywood.