Mildred Cram
Mildred Cram (October 17, 1889, Washington, D.C. – April 4, 1985, Santa Barbara, California) was a popular American writer.[1]
Her short story "Stranger Things" was included in the O. Henry Award story collection for 1921. A number of her stories and novels were made into films. She was nominated, along with Leo McCarey, for the Academy Award for Best Writing, Original Story for Love Affair (1939).[2] Gerald Clarke wrote in his biography Get Happy: The Life of Judy Garland that Cram was Tyrone Power's favorite author.[3] Power introduced Garland to Cram's novella Forever, which Garland could eventually "quote word for word".[3]
Bibliography
- All The King's Horses, book length novel, Cosmopolitan Magazine, September 1936
- Forever, novella (60 pages), Alfred A. Knopf, April 22, 1938; 13th printing, November 1954
Filmography
- Subway Sadie (1926) (story "Sadie of the Desert")
- Behind the Make-Up (1930) (story "The Feeder")
- This Modern Age (1931) (story "Girls Together")
- Amateur Daddy (1932) (novel Scotch Valley)
- Sinners in the Sun (1932) (story "The Beachcomber")
- Faithless (1932) (novel Tinfoil)
- Maquillage (1932), also known as Make Up (novella The Feeder)
- Stars Over Broadway (1935) (story "Thin Air")
- Navy Born (1936) (story)
- Wings Over Honolulu (1937) (story)
- Love Affair (1939) (story)
- Beyond Tomorrow (1940), also known as Beyond Christmas (story)
- An Affair to Remember (1957) (story)
- Love Affair (1994) (story)
References
- ↑ "Authors No Longer "Slave" In Garrets!: Successful Writers Of Today Have Different Slant On Life Than Immortals Of Yesteryear!". Daily Capital Journal. May 29, 1937 – via Newspapers.com. Note image of Cram on the left.
- ↑ "Academy Awards Database: 1939 (12th)". awardsdatabase.oscars.org. Retrieved April 15, 2015.
- 1 2 Clarke, Gerald (2000). Get Happy: the Life of Judy Garland. New York: Random House. ISBN 0-385-33515-6.
External links
- Works by Mildred Cram at Project Gutenberg
- Works by or about Mildred Cram at Internet Archive
- Works by Mildred Cram at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
- Mildred Cram at the Internet Movie Database
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