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Philip Dunne (writer)

Philip Ives Dunne (February 11, 1908 – June 2, 1992) was an American screenwriter, film director and producer, who worked prolifically from 1932 until 1965. He spent the majority of his career at 20th Century Fox. He crafted well regarded romantic and historical dramas, usually adapted from another medium. Dunne was a leading Screen Writers Guild organizer and was politically active during the "Hollywood Blacklist" episode of the 1940s–1950s. He is best known for the films How Green Was My Valley (1941), The Ghost and Mrs. Muir (1947), The Robe (1953) and The Agony and the Ecstasy (1965).[1]

Philip Dunne
Philip Dunne (1961)
Born
Philip Ives Dunne

February 11, 1908 (1908-02-11)
New York City, U.S.
DiedJune 2, 1992 (1992-06-03) (aged 84)
Occupation(s)Screenwriter, film director and producer

Dunne received two Academy Award nominations for screenwriting: How Green Was My Valley (1941) and David and Bathsheba (1951). He also received a Golden Globe nomination for his 1965 screen adaptation of Irving Stone's novel The Agony and the Ecstasy, as well as several peer awards from the Writers Guild of America (WGA), including the Laurel Award for Screenwriting Achievement.

Many notable directors worked with Dunne's screenplays, including Carol Reed, John Ford, Jacques Tourneur, Elia Kazan, Otto Preminger, Joseph L. Mankiewicz, and Michael Curtiz, among others.

Biography Edit

Early life Edit

 
Philip Dunne's star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

Dunne was born in New York City, the son of Chicago syndicated columnist and humorist Finley Peter Dunne and Margaret Ives Abbott, the first American woman to win an Olympic medal and the daughter of the Chicago Tribune's book reviewer and novelist, Mary Ives Abbott.

Although a Roman Catholic, he attended Middlesex School (1920–1925) and Harvard University (1925–1929). Immediately after graduation, he boarded a train for Hollywood for his health and to seek work.[2]

First screenplays Edit

Dunne was not initially interested in working in the film industry but that was the first place he got a job. Via a recommendation from a friend of his brother he obtained work at Fox as a reader at $35 a week.[2] Also among readers at the time was Leonard Spigelgass. Dunne later recalled:

We got nothing but the worst stuff; all the good books and plays went through the New York readers’ department. We got the pathetic originals written by out-of-work screenwriters. I kept seeing ways that I thought I could improve them. I'd write a synopsis, and I'd make it better. I couldn't help it. It would be an obvious thing that the guy had missed. And when you learn to synopsize a story, you learn to construct it. At the same time, I was moonlighting writing short stories, so all these things came together."[3]

In 1931, Dunne was fired from Fox after less than a year at the studio in a cost-cutting move. He was briefly under contract at MGM, writing a comedy for them, but was unhappy with his work and resigned after handing in his first draft. This script was subsequently filmed as Student Tour (1934), which Dunne never saw.[4][5]

Dunne also worked uncredited on Me and My Gal (1932).[citation needed]

Career progress Edit

The first important screenplay of Dunne's career was The Count of Monte Cristo (1934), produced by Edward Small. Dunne was brought on to the project after the novel had been distilled to a treatment by director Rowland V. Lee and Dan Totheroh, and Dunne helped finesse the script into scenes and did the dialogue. Dunne later credited Lee as an important mentor for him.[6]

Small kept Dunne on to work on the script for The Melody Lingers On (1935).[5] He was also credited for Helldorado (1935), the latter at Fox for Jesse Lasky, another early mentor.

He did some minor uncredited work on Under Pressure (1935) and Magnificent Obsession (1935).

Dunne received a lot of acclaim for his adaptation of The Last of the Mohicans (1936) for Small which he wrote with John L. Balderstone. Dunne claimed the script was hurt by later rewrites from another writer, but the script, rather than the original novel, formed the basis of the 1992 film version.[5]

For Universal he wrote Breezing Home (1937) which he later said was the first of what he considered only four original screenplays he would write in his career.[3]

20th Century Fox Edit

After working for various studios, he moved to 20th Century Fox in 1937, where he would remain for 25 years (excepting 4 years civilian war service during World War II), scripting 36 films in total and directing 10. He also produced several of his later films.

His first assignment at Fox was Lancer Spy (1937), with George Sanders. He then did three films in collaboration with Julien Josephson which established him as one of the leading writers at the studio: Suez (1938), Stanley and Livingstone (1939), and The Rains Came (1939).

Alone Dunne wrote Swanee River (1939), and Johnny Apollo (1940) (rewriting Rowland Brown's draft).

He wrote How Green Was My Valley (1941) originally developed with William Wyler then taken over by John Ford.[7] He also wrote Son of Fury: The Story of Benjamin Blake (1942).

World War II Edit

From 1942 to 1945, Dunne was the Chief of Production for the Motion Picture Bureau, U.S. Office of War Information, Overseas Branch. He wrote films such as Salute to France (1943).[2]

Notably, he produced the non-fiction short The Town (1944), directed by Josef von Sternberg, which has received some critical acclaim.[8]

Postwar career Edit

Dunne returned to Fox after the war and quickly re-established himself as one of the studio's leading writers with credits including The Late George Apley (1947), and The Ghost and Mrs. Muir (1947).

He wrote Forever Amber (1947) in collaboration with Ring Lardner Jr and wrote Escape (1948) and The Luck of the Irish (1948). He revised Dudley Nichols' script for Pinky (1949).[4]

In 1949 he and Otto Preminger were working on a film The Far East Story which was never made.[9]

Dunne moved into spectacles with David and Bathsheba (1951), based on the story in the Bible but which Dunne considered his second "original". It was a huge hit. Zanuck put Dunne on Queen of Sheba but it was never made.[10]

He also wrote Anne of the Indies (1951) and Lydia Bailey (1952).[citation needed]

Producer Edit

Dunne turned producer with Way of a Gaucho (1952) which he also wrote.[11][12] As a writer only he worked on The Robe (1953), the first movie in CinemaScope and a huge success. Dunne had enjoyed writing David and Bathsheba but said working on The Robe was "a chore" which he only did "as a favor to Zanuck".[13]

He was announced for a film The Story of Jezebel which was not made. Dunne wrote the sequel to The Robe, Demetrius and the Gladiators (1954), his third original, which was also a hit.

However another spectacle Dunne wrote (from a draft by Casey Robinson), The Egyptian (1954), was a box-office disappointment. Dunne says he acted as an unofficial producer on this film.[13]

Director Edit

Dunne was assigned to produce Prince of Players (1955) from a script by Moss Hart. When he could not find a director he was happy with, Darryl F. Zanuck suggested Dunne to do the job himself.[14]

Dunne later said "I started directing too late and, no question, at the wrong time. Twentieth Century Fox, the studio system, were falling apart. The boat had sailed."[15]

Dunne wrote, produced and directed The View from Pompey's Head (1955). He wrote and directed Hilda Crane (1956). That was produced by Herbert Swope who also produced Three Brave Men (1957) which Dunne wrote and directed.[16]

He directed and did some writing on In Love and War (1958), a war time drama, featuring many of the studio's young contract players. Edward Anhalt wrote it and Jerry Wald produced.[17]

Dunne wrote and directed two films for producer Charles Brackett: Ten North Frederick (1958) with Gary Cooper, and Blue Denim (1959).

Later films Edit

In 1961, he directed Wild in the Country, starring Elvis Presley, from a screenplay by Clifford Odets and produced by Wald.[citation needed]

In 1962, he directed Lisa, based on the novel The Inspector by Jan de Hartog and featuring Stephen Boyd and Dolores Hart, which was nominated for a Golden Globe for Best Picture – Drama. Dunne did not write it.[18][6]

Dunne worked on The Agony and the Ecstasy (1965) as a writer only.[19] Although based on a novel by Irving Stone, Dunne later said he considered this an original. "I called it Quirt and Flagg in the Sistine Chapel", he said later.[20]

He wrote and directed Blindfold (1966), at Universal. It was his last feature. He was reportedly working on an adaptation of The Consort a novel by Anthony Hextall Smith, but it was never made.[21]

The 1992 film The Last of the Mohicans, directed by Michael Mann and starring Daniel Day-Lewis, was based on Dunne's 1936 screenplay of the Fenimore Cooper novel.[citation needed]

Other writing Edit

In addition to screenwriting, Dunne wrote syndicated newspaper articles and was a contributor to The New Yorker and The Atlantic Monthly magazines.[citation needed]

He wrote speeches for various Democratic politicians such as Adlai Stevenson.[4]

He also wrote a stage play, Mr. Dooley's America (1976), based on his father's humor, and another, Politics (1980).[citation needed]

His books include Mr Dooley Remembers (1963) and Take Two: A Life in Movies and Politics (1980). His short stories appeared in the New Yorker and his essays were regular features of Time, the Los Angeles Times, and the Harvard Review.[22]

Awards Edit

He was a winner of the Laurel Award (1962) and the Valentine Davies Award (1974).

The week before he died he was awarded a lifetime achievement award by the Writers Guild.[4]

Dunne has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, in front of 6725 Hollywood Boulevard, just west of Las Palmas Ave.

Politics Edit

Dunne was a co-founder of the Screen Writers Guild and served as vice-president of its successor, the Writers Guild of America, from 1938 to 1940. He later served on the Board of Governors of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS) from 1946 to 1948.[citation needed]

Before World War II, he was a member of the Committee to Defend America by Aiding the Allies, a group founded in May 1940 that advocated military materiel aid to Britain as the best way to keep the United States out of the war.[citation needed]

Philip Dunne and the Hollywood Blacklist Edit

Dunne was a key participant in the Hollywood Blacklist episode of the 1940s and 1950s. In 1947 he co-founded the Committee for the First Amendment with John Huston and William Wyler in response to hearings held by the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC). Dunne, Huston, and Wyler, along with fellow members Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Bacall, Danny Kaye, and Gene Kelly, appeared before HUAC in Washington, D.C. in October 1947, protesting HUAC's activities and methods. Dunne was never subpoenaed or blacklisted himself, nor was he accused of any Communist Party affiliations.[23]

As a writer and director, Dunne frequently worked with others who either were, had been, or would become blacklisted, including Ring Lardner Jr., Clifford Odets, Albert Maltz, and Marsha Hunt. Additionally, Dunne was a character witness for Dalton Trumbo at the latter's trial for contempt of Congress.[citation needed]

The original credits for The Robe (1953) gave Dunne the sole screenplay credit, when in fact Hollywood Ten member Albert Maltz had made significant contributions. In 1997, the WGA restored full writing credits to blacklisted writers whose names were left out of films they worked on. The following is from the WGA's "Blacklisted Writers Receive Credit" press release of April 2, 1997:

In the case of The Robe there was an extraordinary amount of information gathered to indicate that Maltz was entitled to shared screenplay credit. In addition, Philip Dunne did not believe he deserved sole screenplay credit but it was not until many years later that he learned that a blacklisted writer had worked on the project. Amanda Dunne, Philip's widow, confirms that Philip would have been happy to share screenplay credit with Maltz.

Dunne's political stance was decidedly liberal and reformist, but he was also determinedly anti-Communist. His involvement in the Committee for the First Amendment can arguably be read as just that—support for Constitutional free speech against a government entity (HUAC) that, to Dunne, seemed determined to usurp those rights. At various times dating to before the Second World War, he clashed with fellow members of the Screen Writers Guild who he felt were "pro-Stalin" Communists. Dunne's anti-Communist leanings would seem to be verified by his uninterrupted employment as a screenwriter on major Hollywood productions throughout the blacklist period, despite his quite vocal denunciation of HUAC.[citation needed]

Personal life Edit

Dunne married the former Amanda Duff (1914–2006) on July 13, 1939.[24] They had three children.[citation needed]

In 1980, he published his memoirs, Take Two: A Life in Movies and Politics.[citation needed]

Dunne died of cancer on June 2, 1992, in Malibu, California, aged 84.[citation needed]

Quotes Edit

  • "Never in all my years in this chancy and unstable profession did I ever realize that I was sleepwalking along a precipice. I ignored the fact that the rate of professional mortality among screen writers is extremely high...It wasn't courage or arrogance or insensitivity; I suspect it was the irascible Horatio Alger in my blood. If I had it to do all over again I would perish of sheer fright."
  • "All over town the industrious communist tail wagged the lazy liberal dog."
  • "Had I known it was the Golden Age of Hollywood, I would have enjoyed it more."

Selected filmography Edit

References Edit

  • Contemporary Authors: Philip Dunne, Thomson Gale, 2004
  • Philip Dunne, Take Two: A Life in Movies and Politics, McGraw-Hill, 1980 (ISBN 0-87910-157-1)
  • McGilligan, Patrick (1986). Backstory: Interviews with Screenwriters of Hollywood's Golden Age. University of California Press.

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Dunne, Philip (December 21, 1980). "MOVIES: PHILIP DUNNE: A CHAPTER FROM A CINEMATIC LIFE". Los Angeles Times. p. s58.
  2. ^ a b c "Philip Dunne;Obituary". The Times. London. June 8, 1992.
  3. ^ a b McGilligan p 156
  4. ^ a b c d Folkart, Burt A. (June 4, 1992). "Philip Dunne, Writer-Director Who Opposed Blacklists, Dies". Los Angeles Times (Home ed.). p. 1.
  5. ^ a b c Server p 96
  6. ^ a b MURRAY SCHUMACH (April 3, 1962). "DIRECTORS CHIDED FOR FILM WRITING: Philip Dunne Urges That Scenarists Be on Sets Best-Known Scripts Used One Line". New York Times. p. 43.
  7. ^ Champlin, Charles (April 2, 1991). "How Collaborative Was Their Project Movies: Philip Dunne, screenwriter for 'How Green Was My Valley", recalls conflicts and compromises with director John Ford and producer Darryl Zanuck". Los Angeles Times (Home ed.). p. 5.
  8. ^ "Screenwriter Philip Dunne, 84; founded guild, fought blacklist". Boston Globe. June 9, 1992. p. 95.
  9. ^ THOMAS F. BRADY (February 28, 1949). "'SWORD IN DESERT' TO STAR ANDREWS: Paul Christian's Illness Causes Change in the Cast of U-I Film About Palestine". New York Times. p. 16.
  10. ^ THOMAS M. PRYOR (September 17, 1951). "ZANUCK WILL FILM 'QUEEN OF SHEBA': Success of Fox's 'David and Bathsheba' Has Researchers at Studio Reading Bible". New York Times. p. 17.
  11. ^ HOWARD THOMPSON (August 26, 1951). "BY WAY OF REPORT: The South American Way At Fox—Disney Docket CRYSTAL GAZER: AGENDA: OF GANDHI". New York Times. p. X5.
  12. ^ "Drama: Dore Schary Picture List Rated Notable". Los Angeles Times. January 26, 1951. p. A8.
  13. ^ a b McGilligan p 164
  14. ^ HOWARD THOMPSON (June 8, 1966). "OF PICTURES AND PEOPLE: Blueprint for 'Prince of Players' – A Chinese 'G. W. T. W.' – Other Items". New York Times. p. d11.
  15. ^ Lee Server (1987). Screenwriter: Words Become Pictures. p. 109.
  16. ^ "Joi Lansing Now Invited to England". Los Angeles Times. April 9, 1956. p. B9.
  17. ^ Rule, Sheila (June 4, 1992). "Philip Dunne, 84, Screenwriter And an Opponent of Blacklisting". New York Times. p. B.12.
  18. ^ Scheuer, Philip K. (March 5, 1962). "Piped Theater TV Called Death Knell: Philip Dunne Survives 25 Years of Shake-ups at Fox". Los Angeles Times. p. C15.
  19. ^ MURRAY SCHUMACH Special to The (February 14, 1963). "FOX STUDIO BACK IN PRODUCTION: Film Work Resumes After Long Inactivity Film Set for Spring Other Scripts Prepared". New York Times. p. 5.
  20. ^ McGilligan p156
  21. ^ Kimmis Hendrick. The (June 10, 1966). "Dunne: writer who directs: Urgent advice". Christian Science Monitor. p. 4.
  22. ^ Freeman, David (May 3, 1992). "A Wide Angle on Hollywood TAKE TWO: A Life in Movies and Politics, By Philip Dunne (Limelight Editions: $17.95, paper; 405 pp.)". Los Angeles Times (Home ed.). p. 2.
  23. ^ "Noted screenwriter Philip Dunne, 84". Chicago Tribune. June 5, 1992. p. A8.
  24. ^ "Philip Dunne Weds Miss Duff". New York Times. July 16, 1939. p. 32.

External links Edit

  • Philip Dunne at IMDb

philip, dunne, writer, philip, ives, dunne, february, 1908, june, 1992, american, screenwriter, film, director, producer, worked, prolifically, from, 1932, until, 1965, spent, majority, career, 20th, century, crafted, well, regarded, romantic, historical, dram. Philip Ives Dunne February 11 1908 June 2 1992 was an American screenwriter film director and producer who worked prolifically from 1932 until 1965 He spent the majority of his career at 20th Century Fox He crafted well regarded romantic and historical dramas usually adapted from another medium Dunne was a leading Screen Writers Guild organizer and was politically active during the Hollywood Blacklist episode of the 1940s 1950s He is best known for the films How Green Was My Valley 1941 The Ghost and Mrs Muir 1947 The Robe 1953 and The Agony and the Ecstasy 1965 1 Philip DunnePhilip Dunne 1961 BornPhilip Ives DunneFebruary 11 1908 1908 02 11 New York City U S DiedJune 2 1992 1992 06 03 aged 84 Malibu California U S Occupation s Screenwriter film director and producerDunne received two Academy Award nominations for screenwriting How Green Was My Valley 1941 and David and Bathsheba 1951 He also received a Golden Globe nomination for his 1965 screen adaptation of Irving Stone s novel The Agony and the Ecstasy as well as several peer awards from the Writers Guild of America WGA including the Laurel Award for Screenwriting Achievement Many notable directors worked with Dunne s screenplays including Carol Reed John Ford Jacques Tourneur Elia Kazan Otto Preminger Joseph L Mankiewicz and Michael Curtiz among others Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 First screenplays 1 3 Career progress 1 4 20th Century Fox 1 5 World War II 1 6 Postwar career 1 7 Producer 1 8 Director 1 9 Later films 1 10 Other writing 1 11 Awards 2 Politics 2 1 Philip Dunne and the Hollywood Blacklist 3 Personal life 4 Quotes 5 Selected filmography 6 References 7 Notes 8 External linksBiography EditEarly life Edit nbsp Philip Dunne s star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame Dunne was born in New York City the son of Chicago syndicated columnist and humorist Finley Peter Dunne and Margaret Ives Abbott the first American woman to win an Olympic medal and the daughter of the Chicago Tribune s book reviewer and novelist Mary Ives Abbott Although a Roman Catholic he attended Middlesex School 1920 1925 and Harvard University 1925 1929 Immediately after graduation he boarded a train for Hollywood for his health and to seek work 2 First screenplays Edit Dunne was not initially interested in working in the film industry but that was the first place he got a job Via a recommendation from a friend of his brother he obtained work at Fox as a reader at 35 a week 2 Also among readers at the time was Leonard Spigelgass Dunne later recalled We got nothing but the worst stuff all the good books and plays went through the New York readers department We got the pathetic originals written by out of work screenwriters I kept seeing ways that I thought I could improve them I d write a synopsis and I d make it better I couldn t help it It would be an obvious thing that the guy had missed And when you learn to synopsize a story you learn to construct it At the same time I was moonlighting writing short stories so all these things came together 3 In 1931 Dunne was fired from Fox after less than a year at the studio in a cost cutting move He was briefly under contract at MGM writing a comedy for them but was unhappy with his work and resigned after handing in his first draft This script was subsequently filmed as Student Tour 1934 which Dunne never saw 4 5 Dunne also worked uncredited on Me and My Gal 1932 citation needed Career progress Edit The first important screenplay of Dunne s career was The Count of Monte Cristo 1934 produced by Edward Small Dunne was brought on to the project after the novel had been distilled to a treatment by director Rowland V Lee and Dan Totheroh and Dunne helped finesse the script into scenes and did the dialogue Dunne later credited Lee as an important mentor for him 6 Small kept Dunne on to work on the script for The Melody Lingers On 1935 5 He was also credited for Helldorado 1935 the latter at Fox for Jesse Lasky another early mentor He did some minor uncredited work on Under Pressure 1935 and Magnificent Obsession 1935 Dunne received a lot of acclaim for his adaptation of The Last of the Mohicans 1936 for Small which he wrote with John L Balderstone Dunne claimed the script was hurt by later rewrites from another writer but the script rather than the original novel formed the basis of the 1992 film version 5 For Universal he wrote Breezing Home 1937 which he later said was the first of what he considered only four original screenplays he would write in his career 3 20th Century Fox Edit After working for various studios he moved to 20th Century Fox in 1937 where he would remain for 25 years excepting 4 years civilian war service during World War II scripting 36 films in total and directing 10 He also produced several of his later films His first assignment at Fox was Lancer Spy 1937 with George Sanders He then did three films in collaboration with Julien Josephson which established him as one of the leading writers at the studio Suez 1938 Stanley and Livingstone 1939 and The Rains Came 1939 Alone Dunne wrote Swanee River 1939 and Johnny Apollo 1940 rewriting Rowland Brown s draft He wrote How Green Was My Valley 1941 originally developed with William Wyler then taken over by John Ford 7 He also wrote Son of Fury The Story of Benjamin Blake 1942 World War II Edit From 1942 to 1945 Dunne was the Chief of Production for the Motion Picture Bureau U S Office of War Information Overseas Branch He wrote films such as Salute to France 1943 2 Notably he produced the non fiction short The Town 1944 directed by Josef von Sternberg which has received some critical acclaim 8 Postwar career Edit Dunne returned to Fox after the war and quickly re established himself as one of the studio s leading writers with credits including The Late George Apley 1947 and The Ghost and Mrs Muir 1947 He wrote Forever Amber 1947 in collaboration with Ring Lardner Jr and wrote Escape 1948 and The Luck of the Irish 1948 He revised Dudley Nichols script for Pinky 1949 4 In 1949 he and Otto Preminger were working on a film The Far East Story which was never made 9 Dunne moved into spectacles with David and Bathsheba 1951 based on the story in the Bible but which Dunne considered his second original It was a huge hit Zanuck put Dunne on Queen of Sheba but it was never made 10 He also wrote Anne of the Indies 1951 and Lydia Bailey 1952 citation needed Producer Edit Dunne turned producer with Way of a Gaucho 1952 which he also wrote 11 12 As a writer only he worked on The Robe 1953 the first movie in CinemaScope and a huge success Dunne had enjoyed writing David and Bathsheba but said working on The Robe was a chore which he only did as a favor to Zanuck 13 He was announced for a film The Story of Jezebel which was not made Dunne wrote the sequel to The Robe Demetrius and the Gladiators 1954 his third original which was also a hit However another spectacle Dunne wrote from a draft by Casey Robinson The Egyptian 1954 was a box office disappointment Dunne says he acted as an unofficial producer on this film 13 Director Edit Dunne was assigned to produce Prince of Players 1955 from a script by Moss Hart When he could not find a director he was happy with Darryl F Zanuck suggested Dunne to do the job himself 14 Dunne later said I started directing too late and no question at the wrong time Twentieth Century Fox the studio system were falling apart The boat had sailed 15 Dunne wrote produced and directed The View from Pompey s Head 1955 He wrote and directed Hilda Crane 1956 That was produced by Herbert Swope who also produced Three Brave Men 1957 which Dunne wrote and directed 16 He directed and did some writing on In Love and War 1958 a war time drama featuring many of the studio s young contract players Edward Anhalt wrote it and Jerry Wald produced 17 Dunne wrote and directed two films for producer Charles Brackett Ten North Frederick 1958 with Gary Cooper and Blue Denim 1959 Later films Edit In 1961 he directed Wild in the Country starring Elvis Presley from a screenplay by Clifford Odets and produced by Wald citation needed In 1962 he directed Lisa based on the novel The Inspector by Jan de Hartog and featuring Stephen Boyd and Dolores Hart which was nominated for a Golden Globe for Best Picture Drama Dunne did not write it 18 6 Dunne worked on The Agony and the Ecstasy 1965 as a writer only 19 Although based on a novel by Irving Stone Dunne later said he considered this an original I called it Quirt and Flagg in the Sistine Chapel he said later 20 He wrote and directed Blindfold 1966 at Universal It was his last feature He was reportedly working on an adaptation of The Consort a novel by Anthony Hextall Smith but it was never made 21 The 1992 film The Last of the Mohicans directed by Michael Mann and starring Daniel Day Lewis was based on Dunne s 1936 screenplay of the Fenimore Cooper novel citation needed Other writing Edit In addition to screenwriting Dunne wrote syndicated newspaper articles and was a contributor to The New Yorker and The Atlantic Monthly magazines citation needed He wrote speeches for various Democratic politicians such as Adlai Stevenson 4 He also wrote a stage play Mr Dooley s America 1976 based on his father s humor and another Politics 1980 citation needed His books include Mr Dooley Remembers 1963 and Take Two A Life in Movies and Politics 1980 His short stories appeared in the New Yorker and his essays were regular features of Time the Los Angeles Times and the Harvard Review 22 Awards Edit He was a winner of the Laurel Award 1962 and the Valentine Davies Award 1974 The week before he died he was awarded a lifetime achievement award by the Writers Guild 4 Dunne has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in front of 6725 Hollywood Boulevard just west of Las Palmas Ave Politics EditDunne was a co founder of the Screen Writers Guild and served as vice president of its successor the Writers Guild of America from 1938 to 1940 He later served on the Board of Governors of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences AMPAS from 1946 to 1948 citation needed Before World War II he was a member of the Committee to Defend America by Aiding the Allies a group founded in May 1940 that advocated military materiel aid to Britain as the best way to keep the United States out of the war citation needed Philip Dunne and the Hollywood Blacklist Edit Dunne was a key participant in the Hollywood Blacklist episode of the 1940s and 1950s In 1947 he co founded the Committee for the First Amendment with John Huston and William Wyler in response to hearings held by the House Un American Activities Committee HUAC Dunne Huston and Wyler along with fellow members Humphrey Bogart Lauren Bacall Danny Kaye and Gene Kelly appeared before HUAC in Washington D C in October 1947 protesting HUAC s activities and methods Dunne was never subpoenaed or blacklisted himself nor was he accused of any Communist Party affiliations 23 As a writer and director Dunne frequently worked with others who either were had been or would become blacklisted including Ring Lardner Jr Clifford Odets Albert Maltz and Marsha Hunt Additionally Dunne was a character witness for Dalton Trumbo at the latter s trial for contempt of Congress citation needed The original credits for The Robe 1953 gave Dunne the sole screenplay credit when in fact Hollywood Ten member Albert Maltz had made significant contributions In 1997 the WGA restored full writing credits to blacklisted writers whose names were left out of films they worked on The following is from the WGA s Blacklisted Writers Receive Credit press release of April 2 1997 In the case of The Robe there was an extraordinary amount of information gathered to indicate that Maltz was entitled to shared screenplay credit In addition Philip Dunne did not believe he deserved sole screenplay credit but it was not until many years later that he learned that a blacklisted writer had worked on the project Amanda Dunne Philip s widow confirms that Philip would have been happy to share screenplay credit with Maltz Dunne s political stance was decidedly liberal and reformist but he was also determinedly anti Communist His involvement in the Committee for the First Amendment can arguably be read as just that support for Constitutional free speech against a government entity HUAC that to Dunne seemed determined to usurp those rights At various times dating to before the Second World War he clashed with fellow members of the Screen Writers Guild who he felt were pro Stalin Communists Dunne s anti Communist leanings would seem to be verified by his uninterrupted employment as a screenwriter on major Hollywood productions throughout the blacklist period despite his quite vocal denunciation of HUAC citation needed Personal life EditDunne married the former Amanda Duff 1914 2006 on July 13 1939 24 They had three children citation needed In 1980 he published his memoirs Take Two A Life in Movies and Politics citation needed Dunne died of cancer on June 2 1992 in Malibu California aged 84 citation needed Quotes Edit Never in all my years in this chancy and unstable profession did I ever realize that I was sleepwalking along a precipice I ignored the fact that the rate of professional mortality among screen writers is extremely high It wasn t courage or arrogance or insensitivity I suspect it was the irascible Horatio Alger in my blood If I had it to do all over again I would perish of sheer fright All over town the industrious communist tail wagged the lazy liberal dog Had I known it was the Golden Age of Hollywood I would have enjoyed it more Selected filmography EditThe Count of Monte Cristo 1934 screenplay with Rowland V Lee and Dan Totheroh Student Tour 1934 screenplay Helldorado 1935 screenplay The Melody Lingers On 1936 screenplay The Last of the Mohicans 1936 screenplay Breezing Home 1937 screenplay Lancer Spy 1937 screenplay Suez 1938 screenplay Stanley and Livingstone 1939 screenplay with Julien Josephson The Rains Came 1939 screenplay Swanee River 1939 screenplay Johnny Apollo 1940 screenplay with Rowland Brown How Green Was My Valley 1941 screenplay Son of Fury 1942 screenplay The Late George Apley 1947 screenplay The Ghost and Mrs Muir 1947 screenplay Forever Amber 1947 screenplay with Ring Lardner Jr Escape 1948 screenplay The Luck of the Irish 1948 screenplay Pinky 1949 screenplay with Dudley Nichols Anne of the Indies 1951 screenplay David and Bathsheba 1951 screenplay Lydia Bailey 1952 screenplay Way of a Gaucho 1952 screenplay producer The Robe 1953 screenplay with Albert Maltz Demetrius and the Gladiators 1954 screenplay The Egyptian 1954 screenplay with Casey Robinson Prince of Players 1955 director producer The View from Pompey s Head 1955 screenplay director producer Hilda Crane 1956 screenplay director Three Brave Men 1956 screenplay and director Ten North Frederick 1958 screenplay and director In Love and War 1958 director Blue Denim 1959 screenplay director Wild in the Country 1961 director Lisa 1962 director The Agony and the Ecstasy 1965 screenplay with Carol Reed Blindfold 1966 screenplay and director References EditContemporary Authors Philip Dunne Thomson Gale 2004 Philip Dunne Take Two A Life in Movies and Politics McGraw Hill 1980 ISBN 0 87910 157 1 McGilligan Patrick 1986 Backstory Interviews with Screenwriters of Hollywood s Golden Age University of California Press Notes Edit Dunne Philip December 21 1980 MOVIES PHILIP DUNNE A CHAPTER FROM A CINEMATIC LIFE Los Angeles Times p s58 a b c Philip Dunne Obituary The Times London June 8 1992 a b McGilligan p 156 a b c d Folkart Burt A June 4 1992 Philip Dunne Writer Director Who Opposed Blacklists Dies Los Angeles Times Home ed p 1 a b c Server p 96 a b MURRAY SCHUMACH April 3 1962 DIRECTORS CHIDED FOR FILM WRITING Philip Dunne Urges That Scenarists Be on Sets Best Known Scripts Used One Line New York Times p 43 Champlin Charles April 2 1991 How Collaborative Was Their Project Movies Philip Dunne screenwriter for How Green Was My Valley recalls conflicts and compromises with director John Ford and producer Darryl Zanuck Los Angeles Times Home ed p 5 Screenwriter Philip Dunne 84 founded guild fought blacklist Boston Globe June 9 1992 p 95 THOMAS F BRADY February 28 1949 SWORD IN DESERT TO STAR ANDREWS Paul Christian s Illness Causes Change in the Cast of U I Film About Palestine New York Times p 16 THOMAS M PRYOR September 17 1951 ZANUCK WILL FILM QUEEN OF SHEBA Success of Fox s David and Bathsheba Has Researchers at Studio Reading Bible New York Times p 17 HOWARD THOMPSON August 26 1951 BY WAY OF REPORT The South American Way At Fox Disney Docket CRYSTAL GAZER AGENDA OF GANDHI New York Times p X5 Drama Dore Schary Picture List Rated Notable Los Angeles Times January 26 1951 p A8 a b McGilligan p 164 HOWARD THOMPSON June 8 1966 OF PICTURES AND PEOPLE Blueprint for Prince of Players A Chinese G W T W Other Items New York Times p d11 Lee Server 1987 Screenwriter Words Become Pictures p 109 Joi Lansing Now Invited to England Los Angeles Times April 9 1956 p B9 Rule Sheila June 4 1992 Philip Dunne 84 Screenwriter And an Opponent of Blacklisting New York Times p B 12 Scheuer Philip K March 5 1962 Piped Theater TV Called Death Knell Philip Dunne Survives 25 Years of Shake ups at Fox Los Angeles Times p C15 MURRAY SCHUMACH Special to The February 14 1963 FOX STUDIO BACK IN PRODUCTION Film Work Resumes After Long Inactivity Film Set for Spring Other Scripts Prepared New York Times p 5 McGilligan p156 Kimmis Hendrick The June 10 1966 Dunne writer who directs Urgent advice Christian Science Monitor p 4 Freeman David May 3 1992 A Wide Angle on Hollywood TAKE TWO A Life in Movies and Politics By Philip Dunne Limelight Editions 17 95 paper 405 pp Los Angeles Times Home ed p 2 Noted screenwriter Philip Dunne 84 Chicago Tribune June 5 1992 p A8 Philip Dunne Weds Miss Duff New York Times July 16 1939 p 32 External links EditPhilip Dunne at IMDb Writers Guild of America s 1997 press release on restoration of blacklist credits Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Philip Dunne writer amp oldid 1172719376, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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