NEW YORK – Larry L. King, a writer and playwright whose magazine article about a campaign to close down a popular bordello became a hit Tony Award-nominated musical “The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas” and a movie starring Burt Reynolds, died Thursday. He was 83.

His wife, Barbara Blaine, said King died after battling emphysema at Chevy Chase House, a retirement home in Washington where he had been living the past six months.

“One of the things that I will always remember about Larry is that he remained funny all the way through this illness,” she said.

He wrote in a good ol’ boy vernacular style similar to other Southern authors such as Roy Blount and Charles Portis. King wrote two musicals, five plays, 14 books, a few screenplays and hundreds of magazine articles, for which he won an O. Henry Award in 2001.

His books include “None But a Blockhead” about the act of writing, and a children’s book called “Because of Lozo Brown,” about the fears children have of meeting others. Collections of his essays were also published, including “The Old Man and Lesser Mortals,” which began as an article about his father.

“King’s strengths are his energy and wit and his integrity not to compromise the fundamentals. He rings an American bell,” Norman Mailer once said.

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His “Confessions of a White Racist” — he called it “a gratuitous admission of guilt on behalf of all white racists past and present, malignant and benign” — was a finalist for a National Book Award. He won an Emmy for his 1982 television documentary for CBS, “The Best Little Statehouse in Texas.” He taught at Princeton and was a fellow at Duke.

“Writing looks much easier than trapeze work, I know, until you sit before a typewriter long enough to realize it won’t speak back unless spoken to,” King wrote in “None But a Blockhead.”

King came to Washington in 1954 to work for a newly elected congressman from El Paso. A journalist from West Texas, he had planned to remain on Capitol Hill for about three years and then go to work for a newspaper.

He wound up staying in politics as an aide in Washington for 10 years. His experience produced a best-seller in 1978, “Wheeling and Dealing: Confessions of a Capitol Hill Operator.”

He said President John F. Kennedy’s assassination caused him to reevaluate his life. King quit politics and headed to New York where he taught, worked on books and freelanced for magazines.

King was not shy about his battles with alcohol and kicked the bottle decades ago. “If you’re not out getting drunk, and waking up with hangovers and having fights with people, there’s a lot of time to write,” he said in an interview in 1987.

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King wrote his most famous piece about the Chicken Ranch brothel in 1974 for Playboy magazine, took the $3,000 and thought no more about it. But Peter Masterson, a Texas actor, saw the article and thought it would make a great play. He and King got together with songwriter Carol Hall, another Texan, to create the smash musical. Tommy Tune was the director and in charge of musical staging.

The movie version starring Dolly Parton and Reynolds was less than a smash with critics, including King, who thought Hollywood had ruined the story and turned it into a sex romp.

King was one of a group of journalists who spent 1969-70 at Harvard University and his 8,000-word account of the year, “Blowing My Mind at Harvard,” appeared in Harper’s magazine. He also wrote for The Texas Observer, Life and Texas Monthly, among others, and penned a biography of former Harper’s editor Willie Morris in 2006.

As a humorist, he had a jaundiced affection for those he wrote about. “I would say Larry was a man who had a lot of fun with life. He had a twinkle in his eye,” his wife said.


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