Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Harvey F. Thew. Harvey Francis Thew was a screenwriter in the United States. [1] [2] He worked mostly with Warner Bros. [2] and wrote dozens of screenplays, often as part of a writing team. Some of his screenplays were adaptations. He also worked for MGM and Paramount.

  2. Harvey F. was a writer, known for Sporting Youth (1924), Love in the Desert (1929) and Song of the West (1930). Harvey F. was married to Vivienne S. Thew. Harvey F. died on 6 November 1946 in Los Angeles, California, USA.

    • January 1, 1
    • Vernon Center, Minnesota, USA
    • January 1, 1
    • Los Angeles, California, USA
  3. Harvey F. Thew was born on 4 July 1883 in Vernon Center, Minnesota, USA. Harvey F. was a writer, known for Sporting Youth (1924), Love in the Desert (1929) and Song of the West (1930). Harvey F. was married to Vivienne S. Thew. Harvey F. died on 6 November 1946 in Los Angeles, California, USA.

    • July 4, 1883
    • November 6, 1946
  4. The screenplay, which was written by Harvey F. Thew, was based on an unpublished novel, Beer and Blood, by John Bright and Kubec Glasmon. [ 9 ] [ 10 ] Bright and Glasmon based their novel on actual people, having witnessed some of Al Capone 's murderous gang rivalries in Chicago .

  5. Let's not forget Harvey Francis Thew who was born in the month of July — — and worked on a famous screenplay with MAE WEST. • • Born in Missouri on 4 July 1883, writer Harvey F. Thew collaborated with Mae West, and screenwriter John Bright, and Lowell Sherman in 1932 on the film version of the bombshell's best-known stage play "Diamond Lil."

  6. Harvey F. Thew is known as an Writer, Screenplay, Adaptation, Scenario Writer, Story, and Dialogue. Some of his work includes The Public Enemy, She Done Him Wrong, The Count of Monte Cristo, Supernatural, Illicit, The Mad Genius, Two Seconds, and The Delicious Little Devil.

  7. writer, author. 63 years biography, photo, best movies and TV shows, news, birthday and age, Date of Death. «Confessions of a Vice Baron» (1943), «Calaboose» (1943), «Four Days Wonder» (1936), «The Trail of the Lonesome Pine» (1936), «Transient Lady» (1935)…

  1. People also search for