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Mary McCarthy (screenwriter)
American screenwriter From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Mary McCarthy (not to be confused with another screenwriter—Mary Eunice McCarthy) was an American screenwriter active in the 1930s and 1940s.[1]
Biography
Born and raised in San Francisco, California, to Irish parents (just like the similarly named screenwriter), McCarthy pursued a career as a schoolteacher in San Mateo, California, before giving it all up to run a nonprofit sandwich stand. She then became a political activist, stumping the state for the Democratic Party and going toe-to-toe with the Ku Klux Klan.[1] Eventually she headed to Hollywood to pursue a career as a scenarist in the mid-1930s; her first big credit was on Theodora Goes Wild, a 1936 comedy starring Irene Dunne.[1]
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Selected filmography
- Life Returns (1935)[citation needed]
- Theodora Goes Wild (1936)[1]
- Amateur Detective (1939)[citation needed]
- Sister Kenny (1946)[citation needed]
- Curley (1947)[citation needed]
References
Further reading
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