
John L. Balderston
Writing
🎂 1889-10-22
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. John L. Balderston (October 22, 1889 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania - March 8, 1954 Los Angeles, California) was an American playwright and screenwriter best known for his horror and fantasy scripts. Balderston began his career as a journalist. He worked as European war correspondent during World War I. He was the editor of Outlook magazine and a correspondent for the New York World. In 1927, he was retained by Horace Liveright to revise Hamilton Deane's stage adaptation of Dracula for its American production. His 1929 play Berkeley Square later formed the basis of the musical On a Clear Day You Can See Forever. His Dracula subsequently formed the basis of the 1931 film version, leading Balderston into a screenwriting career, initially for Universal Pictures horror films: in addition to Dracula, he contributed to Frankenstein, Bride of Frankenstein, The Mummy, and Dracula's Daughter. He spent much of his career adapting novels for the screen, including The Prisoner of Zenda in 1937 and 1944's Gaslight, which earned him his second Academy Award nomination (the first was for 1935's The Lives of a Bengal Lancer). He was also one of the team of writers who collaborated on the 1939 film adaptation of Gone with the Wind. His 1932 play Red Planet was filmed as Red Planet Mars in 1952. Description above from the Wikipedia article John L. Balderston, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Writing (36)

Original Film Writer
1999

Characters
2001

Adaptation
1992

Original Film Writer
2008

Theatre Play
1931

Screenplay
1944

Adaptation
1935

Screenplay
1932

Theatre Play
1979

Screenplay
1937

Story
1936

Screenplay
1935

Adaptation
1936

Writer
1952

Original Film Writer
1959

Writer
1935

Screenplay
1952

Characters
1944

Writer
1936

Original Film Writer
1940

Original Film Writer
1942

Characters
1955

Screenplay
1935

Original Film Writer
1944

Screenplay
1942

Theatre Play
1951

Screenplay
1936

Screenplay
1936

Theatre Play
1933

Screenplay
1933

Screenplay
1935

Screenplay
1941

Screenplay
1942

Screenplay
1940

Story
1940

Writer
1941