Donald Ogden Stewart

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Donald Ogden Stewart
Born November 30, 1894(1894-11-30)
Columbus, Ohio
Died August 2, 1980 (aged 85)
London, England
Spouse(s) Beatrice Ames (1924-1938)
Ella Winter (1939-1980)

Donald Ogden Stewart (November 30, 1894August 2, 1980) was an American author and screenwriter.[1]

Contents

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[edit] Life

His hometown was Columbus, Ohio. He graduated from Yale University in 1916 and was in the Naval Reserves in World War I.

After the war he started to write and found success with A Parody Outline of History, a satire of The Outline of History (1920) by H. G. Wells. This led him to becoming a member of the Algonquin Round Table. Around that time a friend of his got him interested in theater and he became a noted playwright on Broadway in the 1920s. He was friends with Dorothy Parker, Robert Benchley, George S. Kaufman, and Ernest Hemingway (he was the model for Bill Gorton in Hemingway's The Sun Also Rises). In 1924, he wrote Mr. and Mrs. Haddock Abroad for the publishing house George H. Doran. It was a snarky send up of the ugly American tourist.

He became interested in adapting some of his plays to film, but on first entering Hollywood he had to adapt the plays of others as his own were initially shelved. Once there he mostly wrote, but he also had a small part in the film Not so Dumb. By the 1930s he had become known primarily as a sceenwriter and won an Academy Award for The Philadelphia Story (1940).

As World War II approached, he became a member of the Hollywood Anti-Nazi League, which, during the Second Red Scare, was suspected of being a Communist front. Stewart was blacklisted in 1950 and the following year emigrated to England, where he lived for the rest of his life.

His 1975 memoir is entitled By a Stroke of Luck. He died in London in 1980 and was survived by his widow Ella Winter, who died the same year. They had been married for over 40 years, but he also had a previous marriage which produced two sons. [2][1]

[edit] Partial filmography

[edit] As a writer

  • Love and Death' (1975) (uncredited)
  • Summertime (1955) (uncredited)
  • The Prisoner of Zenda (1952 film) (1952) (additional dialogue) (originally uncredited)
  • Edward, My Son (1949)
  • Cass Timberlane (1947) (adaptation)
  • Life with Father (1947)
  • Without Love (1945)
  • Forever and a Day (1943)
  • Keeper of the Flame (1942) (screenplay)
  • Tales of Manhattan (1942)
  • Smilin' Through (1941) (screenplay)
  • A Woman's Face (1941)
  • That Uncertain Feeling (1941) (screenplay), aka Ernst Lubitsch's That Uncertain Feeling (USA: complete title)
  • Kitty Foyle: The Natural History of a Woman (1940) (additional dialogue), aka Kitty Foyle (USA: short title)
  • The Philadelphia Story (1940) (screenplay)
  • The Night of Nights (1939) (also story)
  • Love Affair (1939)
  • Marie Antoinette (1938) (screenplay)
  • Holiday (1938) (screenplay)
  • The Prisoner of Zenda (1937 film) (1937) (additional dialogue)
  • Dinner at Eight (1933) (additional dialogue)
  • Another Language (1933)
  • The White Sister (1933)
  • Smilin' Through (1932) (dialogue)
  • Rebound (1931) (based on his play of the same name)
  • Tarnished Lady (1931) (also story New York Lady)
  • Finn and Hattie (1931) (novel Mr and Mrs Haddock Abroad)
  • Laughter (1930)
  • Humorous Flights (1929)
  • Father William (1929)
  • Traffic Regulations (1929)
  • Brown of Harvard (1926) (adaptation)

[edit] As an actor

  • Not So Dumb (1930) .... Skylar Van Dyke/Horace Patterson
  • Night Club (1929/I)
  • Humorous Flights (1929) .... Donald Ogden Stewart

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b "Donald O. Stewart, Screenwriter, Dies. Writer of Screenplay for the Movie 'Philadelphia Story' Was Also Well Known for Parodies 'I Want to Have Bite' Shared Oscar With Trumbo Alumnus of Exeter and Yale", New York Times, August 3, 1980. Retrieved on 2008-04-18. "Donald Ogden Stewart, a parodist, playwright and politically committed screenwriter who enjoyed a large reputation from 1920 to 1950, died yesterday afternoon at his home in London after an illness that followed a heart attack. He was 85 years old." 
  2. ^ "Ella Winter Stewart, Journalist and Widow Of Donald O. Stewart; Was War Correspondent Back After 17 Years.", New York Times, August 5, 1980, Tuesday. Retrieved on 2008-04-18. "Ella Winter Stewart, a journalist and the widow of Donald Ogden Stewart, who died Saturday, died of a stroke early today at her home in Hamstead, London. She was 82 years old."