Dwight Taylor
Writing
🎂 1903-01-01
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Dwight Oliver Taylor (January 1, 1903, New York City, New York – December 31, 1986, Woodland Hills, California) was an American author, playwright, and film/television screenwriter. Dwight Taylor was the son of actress Laurette Taylor and her husband, Charles A. Taylor. Dwight Taylor attended Lawrenceville School in Lawrence Township, New Jersey where he began drawing and painting and wrote a book of poetry. After refusing an opportunity to work as a cub reporter for The New York World, he began his career as a journalist for The New Yorker magazine, serving as one of the first editors for their "Talk of the Town". He began screenwriting for Hollywood films in 1930 and for television in 1953. His first produced play was Don't Tell George (1928). Other plays included such as Lipstick and Gay Divorce. Taylor's first screenplay was Jailbreak. First National Pictures bought the project in 1929 while it was still in manuscript form and had Alfred A. Cohn and Henry McCarty adapt it to become the 1930 film Numbered Men starring Conrad Nagel and Bernice Claire. Gay Divorce was adapted into a Broadway musical by Cole Porter. In 1934, RKO Studios, which renamed it The Gay Divorcee to appease the censors, filmed it with Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers. He was a founding member, and had served one term as president, of the Writers Guild of America, West.
Writing (31)

Writer
1966

Screenplay
1935

Story
1935

Book
1934

Screenplay
1944

Story
1953

Screenplay
1941

Screenplay
1945

Screenplay
1957

Story
1967

Adaptation
1952

Screenplay
1952

Screenplay
1936

Writer
1953

Screenplay
1933

Theatre Play
1935

Screenplay
1957

Writer
1930

Theatre Play
1930

Screenplay
1942

Writer
1931

Screenplay
1940

Screenplay
1939

Screenplay
1939

Screenplay
1934

Novel
1932

Writer
1932

Story
1937

Writer
1955

Screenplay
1941

Screenplay
1933