Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Anne Nichols

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Anne Nichols

Children
  
Henry

Movies
  
Abie's Irish Rose


Plays
  
Abie's Irish Rose

Role
  
Playwright

Siblings
  
Evelyn Nicholas

Anne Nichols httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsdd

Died
  
September 15, 1966, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, United States

Similar People
  
Victor Fleming, Elliott Nugent, Sam Wood, Herman J Mankiewicz, Jules Furthman

Senior citizen undergarments mary anne nichols


Anne Nichols (November 26, 1891 – September 15, 1966) was an American playwright best known as the author of Abie's Irish Rose.

Contents

Biography

Anne Nichols was born in Dales Mill, Georgia to Julie and George Nichols. Anne penned a number of Broadway plays, several of which were made into motion pictures. Her most famous production was Abie's Irish Rose, a farce depicting the tumult that arises with the marriage of a young Jewish man and an Irish girl. Abie's Irish Rose was made into a film in 1928 and again in 1946. Nichols sued Universal Studios for making The Cohens and Kellys, a film with a similar plot premise, but the use of stock characters was found to be outside of copyright protection in Nichols v. Universal Pictures Corp.

In 1937 Nichols produced Hey Diddle Diddle, a comedy play written by Bartlett Cormack whose setting was a duplex apartment in Hollywood. The play premiered in Princeton, New Jersey on January 21 with Lucille Ball as Julie Tucker, "one of three roommates coping with neurotic directors, confused executives, and grasping stars who interfere with the girls' ability to get ahead." The play received good reviews, but there were problems, chiefly with its star, Conway Tearle, who was in poor health. Cormack wanted to replace him, but Nichols said the fault lay with the character and insisted that the part needed to be reshaped and rewritten. The two were unable to agree on a solution. The play was scheduled to open on Broadway at the Vanderbilt, but closed after one week in Washington, D.C. when Tearle suddenly became gravely ill.

Nichols died from a heart attack while residing at a nursing home in Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, at the age of 75.

References

Anne Nichols Wikipedia