Gene Markey
0.2Writing

Gene Markey

Dec 11, 1895 - Jackson, Michigan, USA

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Eugene Willford "Gene" Markey (December 11, 1895 – May 1, 1980) was an American author, producer, screenwriter, and highly decorated naval officer.

Early life

Markey was born in Michigan in the year 1895. His father, Eugene Lawrence Markey, was a colonel in the United States Army. His uncle, Daniel P. Markey, had been Speaker of the Michigan House of Representatives. He graduated from Dartmouth College in 1918.

Chicago

He was a skilled sketch artist, which gained him entry, after World War I, into the Art Institute of Chicago starting in 1919 and finishing in 1920. There, he claimed to have "studied painting and learned nothing". After that, he worked as a journalist in Chicago for several newspapers and magazines, including Photoplay magazine. It was during the 1920s that Gene Markey first became a writer, specializing in novels about the Jazz Age. Among his titles were Anabel; Stepping High; Women, Women, Everywhere; and His Majesty's Pyjamas. His book "Literary Lights" (March 1923, Alfred A. Knopf, New York) was a collection of fifty of America's most important literary authors of the day. He personally sketched each caricature.

Hollywood

He went to Hollywood in 1929 and became a screenwriter for Twentieth Century Fox. His screen credits included King of Burlesque (1936) starring Alice Faye, Girls' Dormitory (1936) featuring Herbert Marshall, and On the Avenue (1937), starring Dick Powell, Madeleine Carroll, and Alice Faye. He was also the producer of the 1937 Shirley Temple film, Wee Willie Winkie, among others.

Although he was not overly handsome, he was a very skilled conversationalist and he quickly became a popular fixture in Hollywood society. Among his good friends in Hollywood were producer John Hay Whitney, composer Irving Berlin, and actors Douglas Fairbanks Jr., Ward Bond and John Wayne. He would often go fishing with Bond and Wayne off Catalina Island. A 1946 article in the Washington Times Herald said, "Other Men Say: What's Gene Markey Got That We Haven't Got?" The article ran a photo of Rudolph Valentino with the caption, "NOT SO HOT – By Comparison. Though all American womanhood swooned over him in his day, Rudolph Valentino was no Markey." Soon after he arrived in Hollywood in 1929, it was also reported that, "Markey became the most sought after unattached man in the cinema firmament, so sprinkled with far handsomer, richer male stars." Markey was married three times to prominent film actresses. His first wife was Joan Bennett, from 1932 to 1937 (which produced a daughter, Melinda, in 1934). He was married to Hedy Lamarr from 1939 to 1940 and to Myrna Loy from 1946 to 1950. At first, Loy claimed mental cruelty, but later retracted it, saying, "He could make a scrubwoman think she was a queen and he could make a queen think she was the queen of queens."

More information can be found at Wikipedia.

Credits

Cast

Media
Movie1940Cavalcade of the Academy AwardsSelf

Crew

Media
Movie1933Baby FaceScreenplayWriting
Movie1947Moss RoseProducerProduction
Movie1933Midnight MaryScreenplayWriting
Movie1923BlinkyStoryWriting
Movie1933Lilly TurnerScreenplayWriting
Movie1937On the AvenueScreenplayWriting
Movie1932As You Desire MeAdaptationWriting
Movie1934The Merry FrinksScreenplayWriting
Movie1930The Florodora GirlWriterWriting
Movie1934A Modern HeroScreenplayWriting
Movie1936Girls' DormitoryScreenplayWriting
Movie1934A Lost LadyScreenplayWriting
Movie1936Private NumberWriterWriting
Movie1933FemaleWriterWriting
Movie1931InspirationWriterWriting
Movie1931The Great LoverWriterWriting
Movie1932As You Desire MeWriterWriting
Movie1936White HunterStoryWriting
Movie1938Sally, Irene and MaryProducerProduction
Movie1938KentuckyProducerProduction
Movie1939The Hound of the BaskervillesAssociate ProducerProduction
Movie1939Second FiddleProducerProduction
Movie1939The Adventures of Sherlock HolmesAssociate ProducerProduction
Movie1940Lillian RussellAssociate ProducerProduction
Movie1934The Merry FrinksStoryWriting
Movie1929SyncopationAuthorWriting
Movie1949That Dangerous AgeScreenplayWriting
Movie1929The Battle of ParisWriterWriting
Movie1933Luxury LinerScreenplayWriting
Movie1951The Wonder KidScreenplayWriting
Movie1929Lucky In LoveWriterWriting
Movie1934Fashions of 1934AdaptationWriting
Movie1936The Big NoiseStoryWriting
Movie1937On the AvenueAssociate ProducerProduction
Movie1939The Little PrincessAssociate ProducerProduction
Movie1929Mother's BoyStoryWriting
Movie1929Mother's BoyScreenplayWriting
Movie1938SuezAssociate ProducerProduction
Movie1930The Florodora GirlDialogueWriting
Movie1930Prince of DiamondsStoryWriting
Movie1936Love in ExileNovelWriting
Movie1956GloryStoryWriting
Movie1938JosetteAssociate ProducerProduction
Movie1953Meet Me at the FairNovelWriting
Movie1936King of BurlesqueScreenplayWriting
Movie1936Champagne CharlieWriterWriting
Movie1935Let's Live TonightScreenplayWriting
Movie1931West of BroadwayScreenplayWriting
Movie1931West of BroadwayAdaptationWriting