Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

John Bright (screenwriter)

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Name
  
John Bright

Role
  
Screenwriter

Ex-spouse
  
Jeanne Dunne


Died
  
September 14, 1989, Los Angeles, California, United States

Nominations
  
Academy Award for Best Story

Movies
  
The Public Enemy, Three on a Match, Sherlock Holmes and the V, She Done Him Wrong, If I Had a Million

Similar People
  
William A Wellman, Lowell Sherman, Mae West, Lynn Riggs, Norman Taurog

John Milton Bright (1908-1989) was an American journalist, screenwriter and political activist.

Bright was born in Baltimore and worked with Ben Hecht as a newspaper journalist in Chicago. With fellow journalist Kubec Glasmon, Bright co-wrote a series of stories adopted as screenplays. The most notable of these, Beer and Blood, became the 1931 film The Public Enemy starring James Cagney. The two were nominated for a 1931 Academy Award for Best Story.

In 1933 he became one of the ten founders of the Screen Writers Guild. As with other founders and members of the Screen Writers Guild, Bright was targeted in the early 1950s by the House Un-American Activities Committee, and put on the Hollywood blacklist.

Bright's wife Josefina Fierro was a Mexican-American activist in her own right. Bright fled to Mexico and wrote screenplays for at least two Mexican films.

His 2002 memoir was called Worms in the Winecup.

Films

Bright's credits as a screenwriter, often collaborating with others, include:

References

John Bright (screenwriter) Wikipedia