Mary Alice Scully

Mary Alice Scully was an American screenwriter active during the 1920s.

Mary Alice Scully
BornOctober 26, 1902
Lowell, Massachusetts, USA
DiedJuly 1, 1978 (aged 75)
San Diego, California, USA
OccupationScreenwriter
Spouse(s)Pierre Gendron (m. 1928)

Biography

Mary Alice was born in Lowell, Massachusetts, to Phillip Scully and Mary Ahearn. She attended Ten-Acre School and Dana Hall before going off to Wellesley; she left without a degree in order to take care of her sick mother.

The pair headed west to California for her mother's health, where Mary Alice studied shorthand, won typing awards, opened a public stenographer service, served as secretary to Christine Wetherill Stevenson, and eventually gained work at a film studio.[1]

Eventually she got the chance to work on her own screenplays and adaptations; by 1925, she had sold four scripts to First National and six more to other studios.[2] She formed a collaboration with Arthur F. Statter, secretary of the Screen Writers Guild.[3]

In 1928, she married actor and screenwriter Pierre Gendron in Riverside, California.[4] The pair had two children, Peter and Diane. She seems to have retired from filmmaking at this point.

Selected filmography

gollark: So just make it denser and have better transport.
gollark: Indeed.
gollark: If there was more of it, it would presumably cost less.
gollark: Redistributing the existing housing isn't much of a solution if there simply is not enough where people want it.
gollark: I've played city-building games. This is very simple. You just click the zoning button and paint high-density residential.

References

  1. "Sugar and Spice". The Los Angeles Times. 12 Jul 1925. Retrieved 2019-01-09.
  2. "Authoress Arrives by Hard Study". The Los Angeles Times. 7 Jun 1925. Retrieved 2019-01-09.
  3. "Partners at Work on New Scenario". The Los Angeles Times. 17 Jul 1924. Retrieved 2019-01-09.
  4. "Screen Writer Weds Broker". The Los Angeles Times. 30 Sep 1928. Retrieved 2019-01-09.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.