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Alec Coppel

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Name
  
Alec Coppel

Spouse
  
Myra Coppel

Books
  
The Last Parable

Role
  
Screenwriter

Education
  
University of Cambridge

Alec Coppel Alec Coppel
Died
  
January 22, 1972, London, United Kingdom

Movies
  
Vertigo, The Gazebo, Mr Denning Drives No, Obsession, The Bliss of Mrs Blossom

Similar People
  
Pierre Boileau, Thomas Narcejac, Robert Burks, George Tomasini, Anthony Kimmins

Alec Coppel - Screenwriter


The photo accompanying this article is of Samuel Taylor, co-writer of "Vertigo", NOT Alec Coppel

Contents

Alec Coppel (17 September 1907 – 22 January 1972) was an Australian-born screenwriter, novelist and playwright. He spent the majority of his career in London and Hollywood, specialising in light thrillers, mysteries and sex comedies. He is best known for the films Vertigo (1958), The Captain's Paradise (1953), Mr Denning Drives North (1951) and Obsession (1949), and the plays I Killed the Count and The Gazebo.

Vertigo - Intro - Prelude And Rooftop


Biography

Coppel was born in Melbourne and attended Wesley College. He moved to England in the 1920s to study medicine at Cambridge University, but dropped out before graduating and went to work in advertising, writing in his spare time. Coppel's first big success was his play I Killed the Count, which saw him receive screenwriting offers.

He returned to Australia during the early days of World War II, where he co-founded and worked as a director for Whitehall Productions, operating out of the Minvera Theatre in Kings Cross. He also wrote for radio and contributed to the script of Smithy (1946), one of the few feature films made in Australia during this time.

Coppel moved back to London towards the end of the war, and continued to alternate between novels, plays and screenplays. He became the first Australian to receive an Academy Award nomination for screenwriting with The Captain's Paradise, which was nominated for Best Story in 1953. Many of his British screenplays featured American characters in sympathetic roles (e.g. Obsession, Mr Denning Drives North, Hell Below Zero).

Coppel moved to Los Angeles in 1954, where he wrote a number of scripts, including an early draft of Vertigo (1958), and a popular play, The Gazebo. He spent the 1960s mostly working in Europe and London. His last two credits were a pair of sex comedies co-written with Denis Norden, The Bliss of Mrs. Blossom and The Statue. Coppel died of liver cancer on 22 January 1972, in London.

Unfilmed screenplays

  • The Chinese Room
  • Plays

  • Short Circuit (1935)
  • The Stars Foretell (1936)
  • I Killed the Count (1937)
  • Let's Pretend (1938) – contributed to book of a revue
  • Believe it Or Not (1940)
  • Mr Smart Guy (1941)
  • My Friend Lester (1947)
  • A Man About a Dog (1949)
  • The Genius and the Goddess (1957)
  • The Joshua Tree (1958) – from a story by Myra and Alec Coppel
  • Oh, Captain! (1958) – based on his story only
  • The Gazebo (1959) – from a story by Myra and Alec Coppel
  • Viva Le Difference (1960)
  • The Captain's Paradise (1961)
  • Not in My Bed, You Don’t (1968) – with Myra Coppel
  • Cadenza (1977)
  • A Bird in the Nest
  • Chip, Chip, Chip
  • TV Plays

  • A Kiss is Just a Kiss (1971)
  • Novels

  • I Killed the Count (London: Blackie, 1939)
  • A Man About a Dog (London: George G Harrap and Company Ltd, 1947) (US: Over the Line)
  • Mr Denning Drives North (London: George G Harrap & Co Ltd, 1950)
  • The Last Parable (London: Arthur Baker, 1953)
  • Moment to Moment (Greenwich: Fawcett Publications, 1966)
  • Tweedledum and Tweedledee (London: Geoffrey Bles, 1967)
  • Radio plays

  • A Rum Affair (1941)
  • Mr Smart Guy (1941)
  • Murder Scrapbook (1950)
  • Unmade Projects

  • Peace in Our Time (1940) - British film
  • References

    Alec Coppel Wikipedia