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Humphrey Pearson

Writer, Additional Credits
Born November 30, 1893Died February 24, 1937 (43 years)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Humphrey Pearson (November 30, 1893 – February 24, 1937) was an American screenwriter and playwright of the 1930s. During his brief career, he penned a Broadway play and 22 screenplays. His promising career was cut short when he was found shot to death, under mysterious circumstances in his home, in early 1937. Pearson was born on November 30, 1893 in Columbus, Ohio. He would break into the film industry in 1929, writing the dialogue and titles to Mervyn LeRoy's Hot Stuff, which was one of the few films Hollywood produced which was a silent film with sound sequences. Pearson's play, Shoestring, would serve as the basis for Robert Lord's screenplay On With the Show!, which in 1929 became the first color sound film.

In the next two years Pearson would pen another seven screenplays, including Bride of the Regiment, starring Vivienne Segal and Allan Prior, and featuring Walter Pidgeon and Myrna Loy; Michael Curtiz' Bright Lights (1930); Going Wild, starring Joe E. Brown, and Walter Pidgeon; and another Mervyn Leroy film, Top Speed, again starring Joe E. Brown. 1930 would also see Pearson's play, They Never Grow Up, be produced. It would be the only play written by Pearson produced on Broadway, having a short run at the Theatre Masque, lasting for 24 performances. Its cast included Florence Auer, and Otto Kruger.

Between 1931 and 1936 Pearson would be responsible for another fourteen screenplays. These would include Consolation Marriage, with Irene Dunne and Pat O'Brien; George Archainbaud's The Lost Squadron, starring Richard Dix, Mary Astor, Robert Armstrong, Joel McCrea, and Erich von Stroheim; Westward Passage, starring Ann Harding, Laurence Olivier, and ZaSu Pitts; Face in the Sky, starring Spencer Tracy; 1935's Ruggles of Red Gap, which stars Charles Laughton, Mary Boland, Charlie Ruggles, ZaSu Pitts, Roland Young, and Leila Hyams, which The Film Daily rated one of the ten best films of 1935; and Red Salute, starring Barbara Stanwyck.

Pearson's last screenplay was 1936's Palm Springs. In February 1937, after a night of drinking, Pearson was killed by a gunshot wound to the chest at his home in Palm Springs, California. His death occurred under mysterious circumstances. Initially, it was not clear whether the death was a suicide or at the hand of his wife, Rive King Pearson, but eventually the Palm Springs chief of police ruled it accidental.

Known For

  • Ruggles of Red Gap
  • Aggie Appleby, Maker of Men
  • On with the Show!
  • Sunny
  • Going Wild
  • Playing Around
  • Broadway Babies
  • Bride of the Regiment

Humphrey Pearson Filmography

1936
1933
1933
Face in the Sky · as Screenplay
1932
1931
Consolation Marriage · as Screenplay
1931
1930
Sunny · as Screenplay
1930
Bright Lights · as Screenplay
1930
Top Speed · as Screenplay
1930

1935
Red Salute · as Story
1935
Ruggles of Red Gap · as Adaptation
1932
Men of America · as Story
1932
Westward Passage · as Dialogue
1930
Going Wild · as Adaptation
1930
Playing Around · as Titles
1929
On with the Show! · as Theatre Play
1929
Broadway Babies · as Dialogue

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