Thorne Smith

编剧

1892年9月27日 — 1934年6月12日 (41年)
The 1926 publication of "Topper" brought writer Thorne Smith immediate acclaim. A sophisticated spoof of middle-class manners and morals, it chronicles the madcap adventures of Cosmo Topper, a mild-mannered bank executive who is rescued from his drab "summer of suburban Sundays" by fun-loving ghosts George and Marion Kerby. A sequel, "Topper Takes a Trip" (1932), records the further ribald escapades of Topper and the Kerbys on the French Riviera. The improbable trio went on to inspire several movies, notably the 1937 film Topper (1937) starring Cary Grant and Constance Bennett, as well as a hit television series Topper (1953)). Following the success of "Topper", Smith enhanced his reputation with a number of clever fantasies. "The Stray Lamb" (1929) features a Topper-like hero whose complacent life is upset when he is transformed into an assortment of animals. In "The Night Life of the Gods" (1931) Smith captivated readers with the nocturnal antics of an oddball inventor who cavorts around Manhattan with reincarnated Greek and Roman deities, and in "Turnabout" (1931) he offered up a screwball comedy about a jaded husband and wife who temporarily switch identities. "Rain in the Doorway" (1933) transports a harassed lawyer from the gloom of the Depression through a portal into a department store tinged with The Marx Brothers lunacy, and "Skin and Bones" (1933) tells of a fashionable photographer who becomes a nearly invisible skeleton at the most inopportune moments. "Did She Fall?", Smith's one mystery, came out in 1930. During this period Smith also wrote "Lazy Bear Lane" (1931), a children's novel, and "The Bishop's Jaegers" (1932), a metaphorical tale about chance-met passengers on a lost ferry boat who find unexpected sanctuary in a nudist colony. "The Glorious Pool" (1934), in which a group of aging hedonists happen upon the fountain of youth, was the last fantasy Smith completed. While vacationing in Florida with his wife and two young daughters, Smith died suddenly of a heart attack on June 21, 1934. His unfinished novel, "The Passionate Witch", was published posthumously in 1941 and adapted for the screen the following year by director René Clair as I Married a Witch (1942), starring Veronica Lake and Fredric March. It was not, as often claimed, the inspiration for the long-running television series Bewitched (1964) with Elizabeth Montgomery.

As recently as 1997 The New York Times rated Smith "one of America's most significant humorous writers" and credited his mischievous ghosts with inspiring such movies as The Ghost and Mrs. Muir (1947), Heaven Can Wait (1978), Beetlejuice (1988), Ghost (1990), Always (1989) and A Life Less Ordinary (1997).

Date of Birth 27 March 1892, Annapolis, Maryland

Date of Death 21 June 1934, Sarasota, Florida  (heart attack)

Plex 上的电影与电视节目

  • 逍遥鬼侣
    逍遥鬼侣1937
  • 礼帽回归
    礼帽回归1941
  • 礼帽之行
    礼帽之行1938
  • Turnabout
    Turnabout1940

知名作品

  • 风流女妖
    风流女妖1942
  • 逍遥鬼侣
    逍遥鬼侣1937
  • 礼帽之行
    礼帽之行1938
  • 礼帽回归
    礼帽回归1941
  • Turnabout
    Turnabout1940

影视作品

1979
Topper · as Novel
1953
Topper · as Novel
1941
Topper Returns · as NovelPlex提供
1938
Topper Takes a Trip · as NovelPlex提供
1937
Topper · as NovelPlex提供
1935

1979
Turnabout · as Novel "turnabout"
1942
I Married a Witch · as Story
1940
Turnabout · as Novel "turnabout"Plex提供
1938
Have You Got Any Castles? · as Character: Cosmo Topper