William Karl Thomas was born 1/25/33 in Bay St.
Louis, Mississippi, a small Gulf Coast town in which Tennessee Williams lived and wrote about in
his works. In 1951 Thomas married his former high school teacher and, after a four year childless
marriage, was divorced.
His checkered background, before ending up on the West Coast, began in 1951-
1952 as a nightclub pianist in New Orlean's French Quarter, included in 1952-1953 being a map
draftsman at the Army Map Service in Washington, D.C., in 1953-1954 serving a year of combat
in Korea while in the U.S. Air Force, and in 1954-1957 finishing his 4 years in the Air Force while
serving in El Paso, Texas; Cheyenne, Wyoming; and Oxford, England.
His screen writing collaboration with Frank Ray Perelli began in New Orleans in
1951 and led them through Juarez, Mexico in 1956, to the West Coast where Perelli had begun to
manage the then unknown Lenny Bruce in 1956. Bruce admired Thomas's multi-talents which led
to collaborating in a variety of capacities including comedy writing, screen writing, album cover
photos, cinematography, theatrical booking, publicity, and more in a collaboration that lasted ten
years until Bruces' death in 1966, as chronicaled in Thomas' memoir, "Lenny Bruce: The Making
of a Prophet."
Thomas spent twenty years mostly in Hollywood as a screen writer,
cinematographer, industrial film producer, photographer, journalist, and public relations
executive. His work in these fields led him on extended six month periods in Tucson, Arizona;
New Orleans, Louisiana, and Jamaica, West Indies.
In addition to ghost writing screenplays and biographies for producers and
celebrities, Thomas' publishing career under his own name began with his move to Tucson,
Arizona, in 1978. His first book is a memoir of his ten year collaboration with the most
controversial comedian of the twentieth century titled "Lenny Bruce: The Making of a Prophet," and
was published in its first edition by Archon, its second edition by Media Maestro, and its Japanese
edition by DHC Corporation of Tokyo. His second book is a memoir of his childhood in a Gulf Coast town
in which Tennessee Williams lived and wrote about, and was where Hurricane Katrine made landfall in 2005,
and is titled "The Genteel Poor," and was published by Seaboard Press.
His third book is a novel based on his wartime experiences in Korea titled "The
Josan And The Jee," and was published by Infinity Publishers. His latest novel, "Cleo,"
also published by Infinity, is based on his media experiences in Los Angeles during the turbulent civil rights
era of the 1950's and 1960's. His upcoming book is a biography of a charismatic woman and her inspiring life
as a polio survivor titled "A Place For Us," and is currently in negotiation
for release in the near future.
William Karl Thomas currently lives in Tucson, Arizona, where he occasionally
teaches writing and film production at a local community college, and continues work on a variety
of book, film, and media projects.