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William Marchant (playwright)

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Nationality
  
American

Name
  
William Marchant


Role
  
Playwright

Plays
  
The Desk Set

Occupation
  
Playwright and screenwriter

Died
  
November 5, 1995, Paramus, New Jersey, United States

Movies
  
Desk Set, My Lover, My Son

Books
  
The privilege of his company, Firebird, The Gentleman Vanishes, To be Continued: Play in Three Acts, Firebird: A Novel

Education
  
Yale University, Temple University

Similar People
  
Phoebe Ephron, Walter Lang, John Newland

William Marchant (May 1, 1923 in Allentown, Pennsylvania – November 5, 1995 in Paramus, New Jersey) was a playwright and screenwriter. He is best known for writing the play that served as the basis for the 1957 Walter Lang movie, The Desk Set.

Contents

Marchant had been a resident of the Actor's Fund home in Englewood, New Jersey at the time of his death. He had earlier lived in the Stanton section of Readington Township, New Jersey, in a home owned by Broadway actress Dorothy Stickney.

Education

Marchant was educated at Temple University in Philadelphia and the Yale School of Drama in New Haven, Connecticut.

Playwriting

Marchant's play, To Be Continued (which included a 23-year-old Grace Kelly in the cast), opened on April 23, 1952 at the Booth Theatre on Broadway and ran for 13 performances.

Marchant's most notable work, The Desk Set, opened on Broadway on October 24, 1955 at the Broadhurst Theatre and ran for 296 performances, with Shirley Booth in the lead role. The play served as the source material for an eponymous 1957 movie starring Spencer Tracy and Katharine Hepburn.

In 1975, Marchant wrote The Privilege of his Company, a remembrance of Noël Coward, which was published by The Bobbs-Merrill Company.

He translated the French play Les Dames Du Jeudi for Lynn Redgrave and John Clark, who premiered it as Thursday's Girls in Los Angeles in 1982.

Screenwriting

As a screenwriter, Marchant wrote several episodes for the Armchair Theatre and Armchair Mystery Theatre, dramatized Louise, a W. Somerset Maugham story, for a 1969 BBC Two television production, and worked on two films: Triple Cross (1966) and My Lover, My Son.

References

William Marchant (playwright) Wikipedia