Vernon Sylvaine

Vernon Sylvaine (1896–1957) was a British playwright and screenwriter. He is known for writing several popular stage farces. He began working in film in 1937 when his stage hit Aren't Men Beasts! was turned into a film of the same title starring Robertson Hare and Alfred Drayton. Hare and Drayton starred in two further adaptations of his plays A Spot of Bother (1938) and Women Aren't Angels (1943). He adapted his own play for the 1943 comedy-thriller Warn That Man [1] starring Gordon Harker, Basil Radford and Judy Kelly. His 1948 play One Wild Oat was turned into a 1951 film of the same title.

Vernon Sylvaine
Born(1896-08-09)9 August 1896
Died22 November 1957(1957-11-22) (aged 61)
Sussex, United Kingdom
Other namesWilliam Vernon Scotchburn
OccupationWriter

He was the father of the actress June Sylvaine.

Selected filmography

Selected plays

gollark: It's shorter.
gollark: Maybe use easier to understand names like YAvZzH9XHOe4Ald40QxzRhjt2SVucaCe.
gollark: So! Instead of numbers, each SCM should be named something like afa35eb6b2b6c135726e5aca53f98b6df650dc4fc89d4d785e1a597785ccb944334a0435b7ddd841e7fcbd785882031902ca677a94474d69fa7af785507b69ae.
gollark: , right?
gollark: Wait, part of the SCM Foundation's mission is to make things as extremely annoying as possible at all times/

References

  1. Murphy p.309

Bibliography

  • Murphy, Robert. British Cinema and the Second World War. A&C Black, 2005.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.