Gayne Dexter

Robert James Dexter (1890 – 20 June 1966), known as Gayne Dexter, was an Australian journalist, publicist and screenwriter. He was head of publicity at Union Theatres and Australasian Films in the 1910s, where his assistant was a young Ken G. Hall.[1] He went on to become editor for Everyone's, the trade paper for the Australian film industry.

Screenwriter

In the 1930s Dexter wrote two films for Ken G. Hall, The Squatter's Daughter (1933) and The Silence of Dean Maitland (1934).[2] He also worked extensively overseas in New York City and London as head of publicity for Warner Bros. and doing publicity for stars such as Judy Garland and Danny Kaye.[3]

Filmography

gollark: (yes, this is in fact the canonical definition of computers)
gollark: All computers can, by definition.
gollark: Since you can do more computation per unit energy at lower temperatures, and as the universe expands and loses usable energy it cools, I think some physicist worked out that you could manage to fit in an infinite amount of computing over infinite time somehow.
gollark: That's poorly defined.
gollark: Well, if you get immortal enough, you might be around then.

References

  1. Ken G. Hall Obituary
  2. Gayne Dexter at Austlit
  3. 'An Australian is Danny Kaye's Personal No-Man.' The Australian Women's Weekly, Wednesday 13 May 1959, p13.


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