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Sidney Howard

 
American Theater Guide: Sidney [Coe] Howard

Howard, Sidney [Coe] (1891–1939), playwright. Born to pioneer stock in Oakland, California, he studied at the University of California and with Professor George Pierce Baker in his 47 Workshop at Harvard. Howard then worked on magazines and newspapers before his first play, the romantic verse drama Swords (1921), reached New York. His first success was They Knew What They Wanted (1924), followed by Lucky Sam McCarver (1925), Ned McCobb's Daughter (1926), and The Silver Cord (1926). Howard endured a series of failures before finding success again with The Late Christopher Bean (1932), Alien Corn (1933), and his 1934 dramatization of Sinclair Lewis's Dodsworth. In 1938 he joined in founding the Playwrights' Company. For the rest of his career Howard's new plays met with divided notices and poor box office response. Ironically, after he died in an accident on his farm, two of his works found better receptions: the adaptation of an old Chinese classic, Lute Song (1946), written with Will Irwin; and the fantasy Madam, Will You Walk (1953), a play that had closed on the road in 1939 but was superbly revived by the Phoenix Theatre. Theatre historian Glenn Hughes observed, “Howard's work was always vigorous and biting, but frequently repellent. At times, too, it lacked form and compactness. He was a headstrong writer, and his enthusiasms were apt to carry him beyond the bounds of dramatic propriety.” But his best work also showed a compassionate, tolerant understanding of human foibles and a zest for life.

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Columbia Encyclopedia: Sidney Coe Howard
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Howard, Sidney Coe, 1891-1939, American dramatist, b. Oakland, Calif., grad. Univ. of California, 1915, and studied under George Pierce Baker at Harvard. His first successful play was They Knew What They Wanted (1924; Pulitzer Prize), a compassionate drama set in the wine-producing region of California. It was followed by such plays as Ned McCobb's Daughter (1926), about a courageous New England resort owner; The Silver Cord (1926), concerning possessive maternalism; and Yellow Jack (1934), a dramatization of man's struggle against yellow fever. Howard's other works include the adaptation The Late Christopher Bean (1932) and the Academy Award winning screenplay for the movie Gone With the Wind (1939).
Works: Works by Sidney Howard
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(1891-1939)

1921Swords. The California-born dramatist's first major play is a blank-verse tragedy set in the Middle Ages. It would be followed by adaptations of foreign dramas, including S. S. Tenacity (1922), Casanova (1923), and Sancho Panza (1923) before his first success, They Knew What They Wanted (1924).
1924They Knew What They Wanted. Howard's first Broadway success is a Pulitzer Prize-winning drama about an aging Italian winegrower in the Napa Valley. He proposes marriage by mail to a younger woman, using the photo of his younger hired hand as an inducement. The play would be turned into a musical, The Most Happy Fella, by Frank Loesser (1910-1969) in 1956.
1925Lucky Sam McCarver. Howard's character study of an ambitious bootlegger's rise as a nightclub owner fails with critics and audiences but would later be seen as one of the significant dramas of the era to explore the materialistic values of the period.
1926Ned McCobb's Daughter and The Silver Cord. Both of Howard's 1926 offerings portray strong women. The first depicts the efforts of a woman to hold together her worthless family; the second concerns a possessive mother determined to wreck her son's engagement.
1933Alien Corn. Katherine Cornell stars as a young pianist trapped in a dreary Midwestern college town in Howard's melodrama featuring a somewhat subdued, psychological honesty and an impressive star turn by Cornell.
1934Yellow Jack. Howard teams with bacteriologist and popularizer of science de Kruif to create this documentary drama on the conquering of yellow fever. It would be made into a film in 1938.
1934Dodsworth. This successful adaptation of Lewis's 1929 novel owes much to the performance of Walter Huston in the title role, reprised in the 1936 film version.
1937The Ghost of Yankee Doodle. Howard's final play is set "eighteen months after the next world war" has begun and deals with the impact of war propaganda on a number of characters.

Quotes By: Sidney Howard
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Quotes:

"One-half of knowing what you want is knowing what you must give up before you get it."

Writer: Sidney Howard
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  • Born: 1891 in Oakland, California
  • Died: 1939
  • Occupation: Writer, Director
  • Active: '20s-'30s
  • Major Genres: Drama, Romance
  • Career Highlights: Gone With the Wind, Dodsworth, Raffles
  • First Major Screen Credit: We're All Gamblers (1927)

Biography

Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright and screenwriter Sidney Howard worked in Hollywood writing alone or with others during the '20s and '30s. His popular play They Knew What They Wanted was filmed three times in 1928, 1930, and 1940 and later was adapted into the Broadway musical The Most Happy Fella'. Several other of Howard's plays have also been adapted for films. Among his most distinguished screenplays are Dodsworth (1936) and Gone with the Wind (1939), for which he was the principal and only billed writer. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
Wikipedia: Sidney Howard
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Sidney Howard
Sidney Coe Howard 1909.jpg
Sidney Howard, 1909
Born Sidney Coe Howard
26 June 1891
Oakland, California, USA
Died 23 August 1939 (aged 48)
Tyringham, Massachusetts, USA
Occupation Playwright, screenwriter
Spouse Clare Eames (1922-1930↑)
Polly Damrosch (1931-1939)
Child(ren) Jennifer Howard
Information
Magnum opus They Knew What They Wanted (1925)
Awards Pulitzer Prize for Drama (1925)

Sidney Coe Howard (26 June 1891 – 23 August 1939) was an American playwright and screenwriter. He received the Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 1925 and a posthumous Academy Award in 1940 for the screenplay for Gone with the Wind.

Contents

Biography

Early life

Howard was born in Oakland, California, the son of Helen Louise Coe and John Lawrence Howard.[1] He graduated from the University of California, Berkeley in 1915 and went on to Harvard University to study the art of playwriting under George Pierce Baker in his "47 workshop." Along with other students of Harvard professor A. Piatt Andrew, Sidney Howard volunteered with Andrew's American Field Service, serving in France and the Balkans during World War I. After the War, Howard, competent at foreign languages, translated a number of literary works from French, Spanish, Hungarian and German.

Career

A particular admirer of the understated realism of French playwright Charles Vildrac, Howard adapted two of his plays into English, under the titles, S. S. Tenacity (1929) and Michael Auclair (1932). One of his greatest successes on Broadway was an adaptation of a French comedy by Rene Fauchois, The Late Christopher Bean. In 1921, Howard had his first Broadway production, with a neo-romantic verse drama, Swords, which failed to win approval from either audiences or critics. It was with his realistic romance, They Knew What They Wanted in 1924 that Howard found recognition. The story of a middle-aged Italian vineyard owner who woos a young woman by mail with a false snapshot of himself, married her, and then forgives her when she becomes pregnant by one of his farm hands, it was praised for its non-judgmental and unmelodramatic view of adultery, and its warm-hearted, tolerant view of all its characters. The play won the 1925 Pulitzer Prize for Drama, was thrice adapted into film (1928, 1930, and 1940) and later became the Broadway musical, The Most Happy Fella. Lucky Sam McCarver, a coolly observed, unsentimental account of the marriage of a New York speakeasy owner on his way up in the world with a self-destructive socialite on her way down, failed to attract audiences but won the admiration of some reviewers. The Silver Cord, a drama about a mother who is pathologically close to her sons and works to undermine their romances, was one of the most successful plays of the 1926-27 Broadway season. Yellow Jack an historical drama about the war against yellow fever was praised for its high purpose and innovative staging when it premiered in 1934.

A prolific writer, and a founding member of the Playwrights' Company, he wrote or created more than seventy plays; he also directed and produced a number of works. In 1922 he married actress Clare Eames (1896-1930) who had played the female lead in Swords. She went on to star in Howard's Lucky Sam McCarver (1925), and Ned McCobb's Daughter (1926) on Broadway, and The Silver Cord in London (1927). Clare Eames was the niece of opera singer Emma Eames on her father's side, and of the inventor Hiram Percy Maxim on her mother's side, and a granddaughter of former Maryland governor, William Thomas Hamilton. Howard and Eames had a daughter, Jennifer Howard. They separated in 1927, and Howard's anger and frustration at the disintegration of his marriage is reflected in his bitter satire of modern matrimony, Half Gods (1929). Following the unexpected death of Eames in 1930, Sidney Howard married Leopoldine (Polly) Damrosch, daughter of the conductor Walter Johannes Damrosch in 1931, with whom he had three children.

Hired by Samuel Goldwyn, Howard worked in Hollywood, writing a number of very successful screenplays. In 1932, Howard was nominated for an Academy Award for his adaptation of the Sinclair Lewis novel Arrowsmith, and again in 1936 for Dodsworth, which he had adapted for the stage in 1934. Posthumously, he won the 1939 Academy Award for Writing Adapted Screenplay for Gone with the Wind (he was the only one honored, despite the fact that his script was revised by several other writers). This was the first time a posthumous nominee for any Oscar won the award.[2]

Accidental Death

A lover of the quiet rural life, Sidney Howard died in Tyringham, Massachusetts while working on his 700-acre hobby farm. Howard was crushed to death in a garage by his two and one half ton tractor. He had turned the ignition switch on and was cranking the engine to start it when it lurched forward, pinning him against the wall of the garage. Apparently an employee had left the transmission in high gear.

He is buried in the Tyringham Cemetery.

Howard left behind a number of unproduced works. Lute Song, an adaptation of an old Chinese play co-written with Will Irwin, premiered on Broadway in 1946. A lighthearted reworking of the Faust legend, Madam, Will You Walk?, closed out of town when produced by the Playwrights Company in 1939, but was more warmly received as the first production of the Phoenix Theatre in 1953.

Legacy

In 1950, Howard's daughter Jennifer Howard (1925-1993) married Samuel Goldwyn, Jr. with whom she had four children including business executive Francis Goldwyn, actor Tony Goldwyn and studio executive, John Goldwyn.

References

  1. ^ PAL: Sidney Coe Howard (1891-1939)
  2. ^ Oscar trivia

Further reading

Arthur Gewirtz. Sidney Howard and Clare Eames: American Theater's Perfect Couple of the 1920s. Jefferson: McFarland Publishers, 2004. ISBN 0-7864-1751-X

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

American Theater Guide. The Oxford Companion to American Theatre. Copyright © 2004 by Oxford University Press, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
Works. The Chronology of American Literature, edited by Daniel S. Burt. Copyright © 2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Quotes By. Copyright © 2008 QuotationsBook.com. All rights reserved.  Read more
Writer. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Sidney Howard" Read more