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Jean Havez

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Cause of death
  
Heart Attack

Name
  
Jean Havez

Role
  
Writer


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Full Name
  
Jean Constant Havez

Born
  
December 24, 1869 (
1869-12-24
)
Baltimore, Maryland

Occupation
  
Songwriter Skit Writer Silent film screenwriter

Died
  
February 11, 1925, Beverly Hills, California, United States

Spouse
  
Cecil Cunningham (m. 1915–1917)

Movies
  
Sherlock Jr, Seven Chances, The Navigator, Our Hospitality, Safety Last!

Similar People
  
Clyde Bruckman, Joe Keaton, Fred C Newmeyer, Joe Roberts, Edward F Cline

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Jean Constant Havez (December 24, 1869 – February 11, 1925)- Class of 1893 at Johns Hopkins University - was an American writer of novelty songs, vaudeville skits, and silent era comedy films. In his film career, Havez worked most notably with comedians Buster Keaton and Harold Lloyd.

Contents

Career

Havez was a charter member of ASCAP (1914). His novelty songs, popular in their day, include "Darktown Poker Club" and "I'm Cured", written for the great vaudevillian Bert Williams for the 1914 Ziegfeld Follies; "Everybody Works But Father", "When You Ain't Got No Money then You Needn't Come Around", "I'm Looking For an Angel", "Do Not Forget the Good Old Days", "You're On the Right Road, Sister", "He Cert'ny Was Good to Me" and the lyrics for "Sailing Down the Chesapeake Bay". Concurrent with his songwriting, Havez wrote vaudeville routines and stage shows for such performers as Reine Davies, Trixie Friganza, Kolb & Dill, and Cecil Cunningham (who was his first wife).

Havez penned Keystone scenarios for Roscoe Arbuckle, among others, and co-wrote several of Keaton's most popular films, including Our Hospitality (1923), Sherlock Jr. (1924), The Navigator (1924), and Seven Chances (1925). Havez supplied the story, and theme song, for Lloyd's first comedy feature Grandma's Boy (1921), and also contributed (uncredited) to Lloyd's most famous film Safety Last! (1923). Havez died at home of a heart attack and was interred in the Hollywood Forever Cemetery in Hollywood, CA. His widow, a vaudevillian turned screenwriter, married director Edward Sedgwick and remained with him until his death in 1953.

References

Jean Havez Wikipedia