Harman Patil (Editor)

Thomas Lennon (screenwriter, born 1896)

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Nationality
  
US

Known for
  
work with Frank Buck

Parents
  
Mary Lennon, John Lennon

Occupation
  
screenwriter

Spouse(s)
  
Margaret Lennon

Born
  
10 May 1896
San Francisco, California

Died
  
17 March 1963, Los Angeles, California, United States

Movies
  
Killer McCoy, Murder on a Bridle Path, The Man Who Found Himself, We Go Fast, Racing Lady

Similar
  
Dorothy Yost, Cliff Reid, Lee Tracy, Frank Reicher, Samuel J Briskin

Thomas L. Lennon (10 May 1896 – 17 March 1963) was a screenwriter who wrote Frank Buck’s film, Jacaré, and a screen adaptation of the Maxwell Anderson play Knickerbocker Holiday.

Contents

Early years

Thomas Lennon was the son of John Lennon, a wholesale grocer, born in Ireland in 1847, and Mary Lennon. Thomas was a World War I veteran, according to the 1930 US Census.

Motion pictures

In 1934 Lennon won recognition as author of The Laughing Journey, a bitter and brilliant Irish novel. It was too artistic for Hollywood to regard seriously, so he continued in his job as copy editor in the RKO press office. Lennon was assigned to prepare a Wheeler & Woolsey comedy but just as he was about to begin, was offered a part in Katharine Hepburn's Sylvia Scarlett. Lennon promptly accepted because, as he said, "actors make indecent wages." In 1937, Lennon was a writer of The Man Who Found Himself. After a few more assignments Lennon moved to MGM in 1938.

Hollywood Ten

Lennon wrote two screenplays with men later part of the Hollywood Ten:

  • Secrets of a Nurse (1938) with Lester Cole, about a nurse whose duties lead her to evidence of corruption in professional prize-fighting
  • We Go Fast (1941) with Adrian Scott, a B-movie comedy
  • Work on Jacaré

    Lennon was the writer of Jacaré, for which Clyde E. Elliott, Charles E. Ford and James Dannaldson shot some 260,000 feet of film on the lower reaches of the Amazon River in Spring 1942. The group spent three and a half months at Para, at the mouth of the Amazon, usually within a day's journey of the city, so that they could return to civilization for the night. The company's most primitive adventure occurred on Marajó Island, at the mouth of the Amazon, where they spent four weeks. They ran out of imported food and had to subsist for five days on moldy doughnuts filled with small worms and on chickens which seemed to be 90 per cent vulture.

    Later career

    In 1942 Lennon wrote a play about William Shakespeare and Anne Hathaway, The Truth About Ann. In 1944 Lennon wrote a screen adaptation of the Maxwell Anderson play, Knickerbocker Holiday.

    Family and final years

    Thomas and Margaret Lennon had one daughter. Thomas Lennon died in Los Angeles.

    References

    Thomas Lennon (screenwriter, born 1896) Wikipedia