H.R. No. 966 R E S O L U T I O N WHEREAS, Devotees of fine dramatic writing across Texas and around the nation and the world are mourning the loss of playwright and screenwriter Horton Foote, who died on March 4, 2009, at the age of 92; and WHEREAS, Albert Horton Foote, Jr., was born in Wharton on March 14, 1916, to Albert Horton Foote and the former Hallie Brooks; at the age of 16, Mr. Foote moved to Dallas to study acting; he later studied for two years at the Pasadena Playhouse in California, then moved to New York, where he joined the American Actors Company; and WHEREAS, After Mr. Foote performed an improvisation based on his boyhood, someone suggested that he write about life in the small town where he grew up; that evening, Mr. Foote began a one-act play, Wharton Dance, about the Friday night dances of his youth; a few years later, his first full-length play, Texas Town, was performed in New York to good reviews; for the rest of his life, Mr. Foote continued to write plays set in the fictional Texas town of Harrison, based on Wharton; and WHEREAS, To support himself at the beginning of his career, Mr. Foote worked as a night elevator operator and a clerk in a bookstore, where he met his future wife, Lillian Vallish; they were married in 1945 and remained together until her death in 1992; as a young couple, they moved to Washington, D.C., where he helped run the King-Smith School of the Creative Arts and was the first to open the school's theater to all races; and WHEREAS, Returning to New York in 1950, Mr. Foote continued to write plays while making his living writing for television; his play The Trip to Bountiful was first produced for television, then played on Broadway, and was later made into a film; his television work included adaptations of stories by William Faulkner; and WHEREAS, Mr. Foote began writing for the movies in the 1950s, and he won his first Academy Award for the screenplay he adapted from the novel To Kill a Mockingbird in 1962; he won his second Academy Award for his script for the 1983 film Tender Mercies, which he wrote for his friend, actor Robert Duvall; and WHEREAS, Returning to stage writing in the late 1960s, Mr. Foote began The Orphans' Home, a nine-play cycle based on his family's history and spanning the first quarter of the 20th century; with his wife as producer, two of the plays from the cycle, 1918 and On Valentine's Day, were made into films that were shot in Waxahachie and starred Mr. Foote's daughter, Hallie; and WHEREAS, Mr. Foote created critically acclaimed work until the end of his life; in 1994 and 1995, the Signature Theater in New York devoted an entire season to his plays, and one of them, The Young Man from Atlanta, won the Pulitzer Prize in 1995; his 2002 play, The Carpetbagger's Children, played to sold-out audiences, and his recently rewritten play, Dividing the Estate, won glowing reviews in the fall of 2008; and WHEREAS, Along with his Academy Awards and Pulitzer Prize, Mr. Foote received the National Medal of Arts from President Bill Clinton; his contributions to Texas letters and film were recognized with the Bookend Award from the Texas Book Festival, a Texas Medal of Arts, and induction into the Texas Film Hall of Fame; and WHEREAS, A courtly and good-humored man, Horton Foote wrote with great tenderness and insight about the struggles and small triumphs of ordinary Texans, but so evocatively that audiences around the world saw their own dreams and disappointments reflected on the stage or the screen; the young man who departed Wharton in 1932 spent the rest of his life celebrating the resilience and dignity he learned there, and wherever his success may have taken him, in his heart and in his work, he never left Texas; now, therefore, be it RESOLVED, That the House of Representatives of the 81st Texas Legislature hereby pay tribute to the life of Horton Foote and extend sincere condolences to the members of his family: to his children, Hallie, Daisy, Horton, and Walter Foote; to his two grandchildren; and to his other relatives and friends; and, be it further RESOLVED, That an official copy of this resolution be prepared for his family and that when the Texas House of Representatives adjourns this day, it do so in memory of Horton Foote. Zerwas ______________________________ Speaker of the House I certify that H.R. No. 966 was unanimously adopted by a rising vote of the House on April 27, 2009. ______________________________ Chief Clerk of the House