Bradley King
Bradley King (August 4, 1894 – August 24, 1977) was the pen name of Josephine McLaughlin. She was a successful screenwriter who wrote 56 scripts for films between 1920 and 1947. All but one of her 40 silent films are lost, but most of her 20 or so sound films still exist.
Bradley King | |
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Bradley King in 1923 | |
Born | Josephine McLaughlin August 4, 1894 |
Died | August 24, 1977 |
Years active | 1920–1947 |
Biography
Beginnings
King was educated at the Convent of the Sacred Heart in Albany, New York.[1]
Hollywood career
King recalled that she entered the business after selling a few short stories to pulp magazines and arranged a meeting with Thomas Ince. "I've read some of your stuff and I think your literary style is absolutely lousy," she later recounted Ince saying. "But you've got a good sense of drama, and I'll give you $50 a week." Five years later, she was making $1,500 a week.[2]
Personal life
She was married several times. One was a short marriage to silent film director John Griffith Wray, who died just nine months after their October 1928 wedding.[3] After a later husband, George Hiram Boyd, lost most of her $400,000 fortune ($7.3 million today) to bad investments, she divorced him in 1940.
Later years
She wrote her last screenplay for the 1947 movie That's My Man and disappeared at age 53. She had been having poor health. She was never heard from again, and there is no known record of her death.
Partial filmography
- Lying Lips (1921)
- I Am Guilty (1921)
- Beyond the Crossroads (1922)
- A Man of Action (1923)
- Anna Christie (1923)
- Christine of the Hungry Heart (1924)
- The Chorus Lady (1924)
- Enticement (1925)
- When the Door Opened (1925)
- The Gilded Butterfly (1926)
- The Palace of Pleasure (1926)
- Hell's Four Hundred (1926)
- The Return of Peter Grimm (1926)
- The Lovelorn (1927)
- Under the Black Eagle (1928)
- Diamond Handcuffs (1928)
- Scarlet Seas (1929)
- Drag (1929)
- Weary River (1929)
- The Squall (1929)
- Young Nowheres (1929)
- Drag (1929)
- Dark Streets (1929)
- Son of the Gods (1930)
- Wild Company (1930)
- The Way of All Men (1930)
- The Lash (1930)
- The Mask Falls (1931)
- A Passport to Hell (1932)
- Six Hours to Live (1932)
- Humanity (1933)
- Let's Live Tonight (1935)
- Maid of Salem (1937)
References
- Tarsney, Patrick. "Are Hollywood Scenario Writers Lucky?" (PDF). Hollywood Screenland.
- "7 Feb 1937, Page 21 - Battle Creek Enquirer at Newspapers.com". Newspapers.com. Retrieved 2019-01-02.
- John G. Wray Marries. New York Times, October 8, 1928, p. 15
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bradley King. |
- Bradley King at IMDb
- Bradley King at Women Film Pioneers Project