Leonard Spigelgass
Writing
🎂 1908-11-26
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Leonard Spigelgass (November 26, 1908 – February 15, 1985) was an American film producer and screenwriter. Born to a Jewish family in Brooklyn, New York, Spigelgass got his start collaborating on the script for Erich Von Stroheim's Hello, Sister! (1933). Additional screen credits include The Big Street (1942), I Was a Male War Bride (1949), Ten Thousand Bedrooms (1957), Silk Stockings (1957), Pepe (1960), and Gypsy (1962). Spigelgass signed on as a staff writer for Universal Studios in 1938 and was a colonel in the US Army Signal Corps. Spigelgass also was a playwright and penned such dramas as Dear Me the Sky Is Falling, The Wrong Way Light Bulb, and A Remedy for Winter, the comedy A Majority of One, and the book for the musical Look to the Lilies. He also wrote plays for such television series as Playhouse 90 and the novels Million Dollar Baby and Fed to the Teeth. During his career, Spigelgass wrote the scripts for eleven Academy Award-winning films. He himself was nominated in 1950 for the story for Mystery Street and garnered three Writers Guild of America nominations over the course of his career. Spigelgass' sister, Beulah Roth, was a political speechwriter for Franklin Roosevelt and Adlai Stevenson, and was married to photographer Sanford H. Roth, a close friend of James Dean. Spigelgass died in Los Angeles, California.
Cast credits(2)
Writing (35)

Writer
1956

Writer
1962

Story
1960

Screenplay
1942

Screenplay
1949

Screenplay
1954

Screenplay
1957

Writer
1954

Story
1941

Story
1942

Screenplay
1942

Story
1950

Screenplay
1948

Screenplay
1943

Screenplay
1952

Writer
1957

Writer
1938

Adaptation
1934

Screenplay
1961

Theatre Play
1961

Writer
1951

Screenplay
1942

Original Story
1943

Writer
1978

Writer
1974

Writer
1938

Writer
1956

Writer
1953

Story
1939

Scenario Writer
1933

Writer
1947

Screenplay
1940

Screenplay
1934

Screenplay
1951

Screenplay
1941