
Preston Sturges
Directing
🎂 1898-08-29
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Preston Sturges (29 August 1898 – 6 August 1959), originally Edmund Preston Biden, was a celebrated playwright, screenwriter and film director born in Chicago, Illinois. In 1941 he won the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay for the film The Great McGinty. Sturges took the screwball comedy format of the 1930s to another level, writing dialogue that, heard today, is often surprisingly naturalistic, mature, and ahead of its time, despite the farcical situations. In recent years, film scholars such as Alessandro Pirolini have also argued that Sturges' cinema anticipated more experimental narratives by contemporary directors such as Joel and Ethan Coen, Robert Zemeckis, and Woody Allen, along with prolific The Simpsons writer John Swartzwelder: "Many of [Sturges'] movies and screenplays reveal a restless and impatient attempt to escape codified rules and narrative schemata, and to push the mechanisms and conventions of their genre to the extent of unveiling them to the spectator. [See for example] the disruption of standardized timelines in films such as The Power and the Glory and The Great McGinty [or the way] an apparently classical comedy such as Unfaithfully Yours (1948) shifts into the realm of multiple and hypothetical narratives. Prior to Sturges, other figures in Hollywood (such as Charlie Chaplin, D.W. Griffith, and Frank Capra) had directed films from their own scripts. However, Sturges is often regarded as the first Hollywood figure to be initially mainly successfully established as a screenwriter and then to subsequently move into directing his own scripts, at a time when those roles were mostly entrenched and separate. Famously, Sturges sold the story for The Great McGinty to Paramount Pictures for $1, in return for being allowed to direct the film; the sum was quietly raised to $10 by the studio for legal reasons. Description above from the Wikipedia article Preston Sturges, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Cast credits(5)
Writing (37)

Writer
1933

Screenplay
1940

Screenplay
1941

Writer
1941

Screenplay
1942

Writer
1944

Writer
1949

Writer
1934

Screenplay
1937

Writer
1944

Original Film Writer
1984

Screenplay
1939

Screenplay
1947

Writer
1940

Theatre Play
1940

Screenplay
1948

Screenplay
1938

Screenplay
1935

Story
1958

Screenplay
1934

Writer
1940

Writer
1935

Writer
1938

Screenplay
1938

Screenplay
1944

Screenplay
1933

Writer
1936

Adaptation
1934

Theatre Play
1933

Theatre Play
1931

Writer
1955

Writer
1933

Screenplay
1956

Writer
1937

Writer
1947

Writer
1942

Dialogue
1930