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Samuel Hoffenstein

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Name
  
Samuel Hoffenstein

Role
  
Screenwriter

Plays
  
Gay Divorce


Samuel Hoffenstein SelfStyled Siren The Love Song of Samuel Hoffenstein Coda

Died
  
October 6, 1947, Los Angeles, California, United States

Movies
  
Laura, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Cluny Brown

Books
  
The Broadway Anthology, Pencil in the Air, Year In - You're Out, Poems in Praise of Practicall

Similar People
  
Vera Caspary, Kenneth Webb, Joseph LaShelle, Rouben Mamoulian, Ring Lardner - Jr

Samuel "Sam" Hoffenstein (October 8, 1890 - October 6, 1947) was a screenwriter and a musical composer. Born in Russia, he emigrated to the United States and began a career in New York City as a newspaper writer and in the entertainment business. In 1931 he moved to Los Angeles, where he lived for the rest of his life and where he wrote the scripts for over thirty movies. These movies included Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1931), The Miracle Man (1932), Phantom of the Opera (1943), The Wizard of Oz (1939), Tales of Manhattan (1942), Flesh and Fantasy (1943), Laura (1944), and Ernst Lubitsch's Cluny Brown (1946).

Samuel Hoffenstein TOP 8 QUOTES BY SAMUEL HOFFENSTEIN AZ Quotes

In addition, Hoffenstein, along with Cole Porter and Kenneth Webb, helped compose the musical score for Gay Divorce (1933), the stage musical that became the film The Gay Divorcee (1934).

He died in Los Angeles, California. A book of his verse, Pencil in the Air, was published three days after his death to critical acclaim. Another book of his work was published in 1928, titled Poems in Praise of Practically Nothing. The book contained some of his work that had been formerly published in the New York World, the New York Tribune, Vanity Fair, the D. A. C. News, and Snappy Stories.

References

Samuel Hoffenstein Wikipedia


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