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Kathryn Scola

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Occupation
  
Writer

Years active
  
1930–1949 (film)


Name
  
Kathryn Scola

Role
  
Screenwriter

Born
  
November 6, 1891

Died
  
January 4, 1982, San Diego, California, United States

Movies
  
Baby Face, The Glass Key, Luxury Liner, Lilly Turner, Woman Wanted

Similar People
  
Gene Markey, Alfred E Green, Darryl F Zanuck, Raymond Griffith, William A Wellman

Alexander's Ragtime Band (1938) Tyrone Power


Kathryn Scola (1891–1982) was an American screenwriter. She worked on more than thirty films during the 1930s and 1940s. Scola worked in Hollywood for a multitude of prominent production companies during the studio era, including Warner Bros., Paramount Pictures and 20th Century Fox. Scola’s career took place during the transition from unregulated Pre-Code films to the implementation of the Motion Picture Production Code, and was frequently involved in writing screenplays that were deemed too controversial by the Motion Picture Association of America. Three of Scola’s films were included in the Forbidden Hollywood film series, including Baby Face, Female and Midnight Mary.

Contents

Family

Born Catherine Scola in Paterson, New Jersey, on November 6, 1891, she was the elder daughter of Giuseppe (Joseph) Scola (1859-1900), an Italian immigrant silk dyer from Naples, Italy, and his Irish immigrant wife, Mary Scola, nee King, (1871-1943). The Scolas had a younger daughter, Angela (1894-1989), who married Henry Louis Noland (1892-1931), a plumber and musician, and had three sons and one daughter. H.L. Noland, an alcoholic, died of myocarditis, in Ely, Nevada.

Career

Kathryn Scola wrote a number of her scripts in collaboration with other Hollywood screenwriters, the most frequent being Gene Markey. In 1933, Scola and Markey wrote the screenplay for Baby Face, starring Barbara Stanwyck, which underwent various revisions due to Production Code regulations and was rereleased in a Post-Code edition. Scola and Markey also worked together on the 1933 film Female, which dealt with themes of sexual harassment. During the same year, Scola and Markey collaborated on the screenplay for the controversial Pre-Code film Midnight Mary, initially titled 'Nora' and first written by Anita Loos, which engaged with subject matter relating to the Spanish Civil War. In October 1936, three months after the start of the war, Scola and Markey presented their script for Midnight Mary to Darryl F. Zanuck, the production head at Warner Bros. studio.

In 1935, Scola co-wrote the screenplay for the film The Glass Key, an adaptation of the Dashiell Hammett novel, with writer Kubec Glasmon.In 1937, Scola and Darrell Ware collaborated to write the script for the film Second Honeymoon, directed by Walter Lang. In 1943, at the outset of the Second World War, Scola and Julien Josephson wrote the script for Happy Land, a 20th Century Fox production that was meant to prepare audiences for the losses of the war. During 1946, Scola wrote a screenplay for the Max Ophüls 1949 American film noir Caught, which would eventually be rejected by the censorship board due to what was deemed questionable material. Scola’s script was revised by various writers and eventually abandoned, leading to the final screenplay by playwright and screenwriter Arthur Laurents. Scola and Julien Josephson also worked together on the original screenplay for “In Times Like These” in 1956, a teleplay included in the anthology series The 20th Century Fox Hour.

Selected filmography

  • One Night at Susie's (1930)
  • The Lady Who Dared (1931)
  • Wicked (1931)
  • Night After Night (1932)
  • Luxury Liner (1933)
  • Lilly Turner (1933)
  • Midnight Mary (1933)
  • Baby Face (1933)
  • Female (1933)
  • A Modern Hero (1934)
  • A Lost Lady (1934)
  • The Glass Key (1935)
  • Wife, Doctor and Nurse (1937)
  • Second Honeymoon (1937)
  • The Baroness and the Butler (1938)
  • Alexander's Ragtime Band (1938)
  • Always Goodbye (1938)
  • Hotel for Women (1939)
  • The Lady from Cheyenne (1941)
  • The Constant Nymph (1943)
  • Happy Land (1943)
  • Night Unto Night (1949)
  • References

    Kathryn Scola Wikipedia


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