Robert Carson  | |
|---|---|
| Born | October 6, 1909 Clayton, Washington  | 
| Died | January 19, 1983 (aged 73) Los Angeles, California  | 
Robert Carson (October 6, 1909, Clayton, Washington – January 19, 1983, Los Angeles, California) was an American film and television screenwriter, novelist, and short story writer, who won an Academy Award in 1938 for his screenplay of A Star Is Born. He was married to Mary Jane Irving, a former child actress.[1]
Film screenwriting credits
[edit]- A Star Is Born (1937). Academy Award for best writing, original story, shared with William A. Wellman. Nominated for best writing, screenplay, shared with Alan Campbell and Dorothy Parker.
 - The Last Gangster (1937)
 - Men with Wings (1938)
 - Beau Geste (1939)
 - The Light That Failed (1939)
 - Western Union (1941)
 - The Desperadoes (1943)[2]
 - Once More, My Darling (1949)
 - Just for You (1952)
 - Bundle of Joy (1956)
 
Television screenwriting credits
[edit]- Westinghouse Studio One, 1948 (various episodes)
 
Bibliography
[edit]- The Revels Are Ended (1936). Doubleday.[3]
 - "Aloha Means Goodbye", a serialized short novel about a Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, published in The Saturday Evening Post in June/July 1941, six months before the actual attack occurred. The story was the basis for the film Across the Pacific (1942).
 - Stranger in Our Midst (1947). G.P. Putnam. Reprinted 1953, Popular Library.[4]
 - The Magic Lantern (1952), a fictionalized account of Hollywood. Henry Holt
 - The Quality of Mercy (1954). Henry Holt.[5]
 - Love Affair (1958). Henry Holt. reprinted 1959, Popular Library.
 - My Hero[6] (1961) McGraw Hill. Reprinted 1962, Crest Books
 - An End to Comedy (1963) Bobbs-Merrill[7]
 - The Outsiders (1966), Little, Brown. Reprinted 1970, Coronet[8]
 - Jellybean (1974), a civil war period western. Little, Brown ISBN 0-316-13026-5
 
References
[edit]- ^ New York Times obituary, Jan 22, 1983
 - ^ VideoHound's Golden Movie Retriever 2002, ISBN 0-7876-5755-7
 - ^ The Revels Are Ended at Google Books
 - ^ "Stranger in Our Midst" at Google Books
 - ^ The Quality of Mercy at Google Books
 - ^ Jellybean Little, Brown; 1974, author bio
 - ^ An End to Comedy at Google Books
 - ^ The Outsiders at Google Books