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Charles Lederer
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Charles Davies Lederer (December 31, 1910 – March 5, 1976) was an American screenwriter and film director.[1] He was born into a theatrical family in New York, and after his parents divorced, was raised in California by his aunt, Marion Davies, actress and mistress to newspaper publisher William Randolph Hearst. A child prodigy, he entered the University of California, Berkeley at age 13, but dropped out after a few years to work as a journalist with Hearst's newspapers.
Key Information
Lederer is recognized for his comic and acerbic adaptations and collaborative screenplays of the 1940s and early 1950s. His screenplays frequently delved into the corrosive influences of wealth and power. His comedy writing was considered among the best of the period, and he, along with writer friends Ben Hecht and Herman Mankiewicz, became major contributors to the film genre known as "screwball comedy".
Among his notable screenplays which he wrote or co-wrote, were The Front Page (1931), the critically acclaimed His Girl Friday (1940), Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953), The Spirit of St. Louis (1957), Ocean's 11 (1960), and Mutiny on the Bounty (1962).
Early life
[edit]Charles Davies Lederer was born in New York City to two prominent figures in the American theater, Broadway producer George Lederer and singer Reine Davies. After his parents were separated, Lederer and his older sister Pepi moved to California and were raised by his mother's sister, actress Marion Davies. He grew up in Hollywood, spending much time at San Simeon, the "enchanted castle on the hill", where his aunt reigned as publisher William Randolph Hearst's mistress. He was a child prodigy and was admitted to UC Berkeley at the age of 13, but dropped out a few years later to work as a journalist for Hearst's newspapers.
According to biographer William MacAdams, "Hollywood was home to Lederer, where for most people it was a place they moved to in order to work for the movies. Virtually none of the film community had grown up in Los Angeles, but Lederer had been brought there when he was 11 by Marion Davies, his mother's sister... Lederer thus knew the movie colony inside out as seen from the top and wasn’t impressed ..."[2] : 146
Screenwriting career
[edit]When he was 19, Lederer became friends with Ben Hecht, who introduced him to the New York literati. His friendship with Hecht led to his being hired to write additional dialogue for the film The Front Page. He later moved back to Hollywood to become a full-time screenwriter.
Lederer is recognized for his acerbic wit, with adaptations and collaborative screenplays written mostly during the 1940s and early 1950s. His screenplays frequently delved into the corrosive influences of wealth and power. His comedy writing was also among the best of the period, and he, along with Hecht and Herman Mankiewicz became major contributors to the film genre known as "screwball comedy".
He was friends with screenwriters Joseph and Herman Mankiewicz. Herman would later become co-screenwriter of Citizen Kane. After becoming friends with Lederer, "Herman told Joe to come to the office of their mutual friend Charlie Lederer ... "[3]: 144 Herman, who met Hearst as a result of his friendship with Lederer, later "saw Hearst as ‘a finagling, calculating, Machiavellian figure.’ But also, with Charlie Lederer, ... wrote and had printed parodies of Hearst newspapers ..."[3]: 212–213
As explained by The New Yorker film critic Pauline Kael, "Mankiewicz found himself on story-swapping terms with the power behind it all, Hearst himself. When he had been in Hollywood only a short time, he met Marion Davies and Hearst through his friendship with Charles Lederer, a writer, then in his early twenties, whom Ben Hecht had met and greatly admired in New York when Lederer was still in his teens. Lederer, a child prodigy, who had entered college at thirteen, got to know Mankiewicz ... Lederer was Marion Davies’s nephew – the son of her sister Reine ... Marion was childless, and Lederer was very close to her; he spent a great deal of his time at her various dwelling places, and took his friends to meet both her and Hearst.”[4] : 254–255
After finishing the script for Citizen Kane, Mankiewicz gave a copy to Lederer, which Kael explains was foolish:
He was so proud of his script that he lent a copy to Charles Lederer. In some crazily naive way, Mankiewicz seems to have imagined that Lederer would be pleased by how good it was. But Lederer, apparently, was deeply upset and took the script to his aunt and Hearst. It went from them to Hearst's lawyers. . . . It was probably as a result of Mankiewicz's idiotic indiscretion that the various forces were set in motion that resulted in the cancellation of the premiere at the Radio City Music Hall [and] the commercial failure of Citizen Kane.[4]
Lederer, however, told director Peter Bogdanovich that Kael was totally incorrect in this matter, and "she never bothered to check with him." He did not, in fact, ever give the script to Davies. Lederer explains:
I gave it back to him. He asked me if I thought Marion would be offended and I said I didn't think so. The script I read didn't have any flavor of Marion and Hearst—Robert McCormick was the man it was about.[5]: xxv
According to Hecht biographer, William MacAdams, "When Hecht began looking around for a new collaborator ... he thought of Charlie Lederer, whom he had met on one of his first trips to Los Angeles....In a letter to screenwriter Gene Fowler, Hecht called Lederer "a very tender soul....[who] captivated the New York literati just as the other Charlie (MacArthur) had a few years earlier."[2]: 145
Leading screenplays
[edit]
His friendship with Hecht led to his being hired in 1931, when he was 20, to write additional dialogue for the film version of the 1928 play The Front Page. The film would be nominated for three Academy Awards, including Best Picture. In 1933, he made contributions to Hecht's screenplay for Topaze, along with many others, without being credited.
From 1940 to 1943 Lederer worked at MGM where he wrote a series of light comedies, usually centering on mismatched couples. Comrade X (1940), written in collaboration with Ben Hecht and directed by King Vidor is the story an American in Russia (Clark Gable) who falls in love with a streetcar conductor (Hedy Lamarr). In 1942 he directed his first film, Fingers at the Window, although he did not write the screenplay.
He penned the screenplay for the classic 1951 science-fiction/horror film The Thing from Another World, directed largely by Howard Hawks but credited to Christian Nyby and co-wrote the original 1960's Ocean's 11. Lederer wrote or co-wrote screenplays (notably with Ben Hecht) for Howard Hawks's production of His Girl Friday (a remake of The Front Page), Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, and the Lewis Milestone remake of Mutiny on the Bounty, starring Marlon Brando. His Girl Friday has remained his most popular and critically acclaimed screenplay.[6]: 209 At the suggestion of the film's director, Howard Hawks, Lederer changed the sex of the lead character in the play, Hildy Johnson, from male to female.[6]
With Ben Hecht, he co-wrote the original Kiss of Death which was to feature the actor Richard Widmark's chilling debut as the psychopathic killer with a giggle. In addition, he wrote and directed the 1959 film Never Steal Anything Small, an adaptation of a play by Maxwell Anderson and Rouben Mamoulian, starring James Cagney. The Spirit of St. Louis was Lederer's last significant film work. The films that followed that were primarily vehicles for established stars.
Lederer was valued as a Hollywood screenwriter who produced lively, acerbic adaptations and worked well in collaboration with others. He was also a member of another circle of writers on the East Coast which included Moss Hart, George S. Kaufman, Howard Dietz, Robert Benchley, Dorothy Parker, and editor Harold Ross. These writers were to become the nucleus of the Algonquin Round Table.
Awards
[edit]In 1954, he won three Tony Awards for the Broadway Musical Kismet, as Best Producer (Musical), as Best Author (Musical) with Luther Davis, and as co-author of the book which, with several collaborators, contributed to the Best Musical win.
Personal life
[edit]Marion Davies' nephew
[edit]
Lederer and his sister Pepi were raised by his aunt, actress Marion Davies. He grew up in Hollywood, and spent much of his time at Hearst Castle in San Simeon, his aunt's primary home with newspaper publisher William Randolph Hearst. According to Davies's biographer Fred Guiles, "Everyone close to Marion knew that Charlie was her favorite person after Hearst. . . . He was her knight-errant and no one, not even Hearst, ever reckoned with Marion alone from then on; they knew that they were dealing, too, with nephew Charlie."[7] : 10, 171
Lederer's father, George Lederer, produced her first film, Runaway Romany. Hearst, who at that time had not known Davies, saw the film and offered Davies a one-year acting contract, leading to their future relationship and further roles for Davies.[8]: 258
In July 1928, Davies and Hearst left on a summer vacation to Europe. Among those invited who joined them, at Hearst's expense, were Lederer and his sister Pepi.[8]: 399 During another summer trip to Europe in 1934, Hearst and Davies considered having Lederer write a scenario for a movie project called Movie Queen, a proposed film and vehicle for Davies that had been discussed in Hollywood.[9]: 305 Hearst also asked Lederer to help rewrite the script for another Davies film, Hearts Divided (1936), which he did without credit.[9]: 411
In 1950, Hearst personally asked Lederer to find him an attorney to draw up a trust agreement for his will in order to provide Davies with a lifetime income from the Hearst estate after his death.[8]: 595 Lederer remained close to Davies after Hearst's death in 1951. When Davies died in 1961 at age 64, nearly recovering from cancer treatments and deterioring health from years of heavy drinking, Lederer, along with Davies' husband and her sister, were at her bedside.[8]: 605
During his visits at Hearst's estate, Lederer befriended Charlie Chaplin, also a frequent visitor, and got a small role in his 1931 film, City Lights. The scene was cut from the final film, however, and the seven-minute clip was first publicly shown in the 1983 documentary Unknown Chaplin.
Marriages
[edit]
Lederer married Virginia Nicolson Welles, ex-wife of Orson Welles, May 18, 1940, in Phoenix, Arizona.[10][11] Lederer, at the time, was a "good friend" of Welles, notes Welles biographer Peter Bogdanovich[5]: 557 According to Guiles, "she married Charlie… coming back to the Lederer home on Bedford Drive [in Los Angeles] with her young daughter, Chris, Welles’ first-born child.”[7]: 306 The couple divorced in 1949.[12]
Lederer's second wife was actress Anne Shirley whom he married in 1949.
Friendships
[edit]Orson Welles
[edit]Welles biographer Barbara Leaming states that after Lederer married Welles's first wife in 1940, "earnestly trying to protect the best interests of Virginia and particularly of his daughter Chris, Lederer had angry run-ins with Orson, whom he accused of not living up to the divorce settlement. Now, in the unlikeliest of turnarounds, Orson and the witty, intelligent Lederer became great chums." Welles himself said of the Lederers, "I liked them together," and he soon entered into a friendly relationship that he describes as a "strange design for living at the beach."[13] : 343–344
Welles became famous in the movie world after the release of Citizen Kane in 1941, a story based in part on the life of William Randolph Hearst. The story attempts to solve the mystery of newspaper publisher Charles Foster Kane's last dying word: "Rosebud". Film critic David Thomson calls the word "the greatest secret in cinema."[14] In 1989, author Gore Vidal disclosed that "Rosebud" was in fact a nickname which Hearst playfully used for the clitoris of his mistress, Marion Davies. Vidal said that Davies told this intimate detail to Lederer, who mentioned it to him.[15][16] The claim about the meaning of "Rosebud" was repeated in the 1996 documentary The Battle Over Citizen Kane and again in the 1999 dramatic film RKO 281.
Years later, after Welles's second marriage to actress Rita Hayworth ended in 1948, he moved to a beach house next door to the palatial Marion Davies estate where his first wife Virginia and Lederer, her husband, resided.[13] Welles lived there with Irish actress Geraldine Fitzgerald, and he soon became a "member of the household" of his former wife and Lederer.[17]

Chris Welles, in her biography, describes how her mother and stepfather remained friends with Welles despite the earlier problems:[17]
He seemed to be great pals with my stepfather, Charlie Lederer. No one observing them together would have guessed that my mother and Charlie had sued my father for an increase in my child support. . . . Mother and Charlie had given up, and so it was back to "Orson, darling!" and a daily invitation to join them in the ritual of martinis on the front porch at sunset. He was more likely to arrive unannounced and then madden the cook by staying for lunch or dinner. Always casually dressed in summer slacks and an open shirt, he behaved as though he were a member of our household, coming and going as he pleased with no need to give an account of himself.[17]
According to Welles biographer Frank Brady, Lederer and Welles would sometimes spend hours, or days, discussing various film projects or related properties that they might want to collaborate on. They both loved Tennessee Williams' The Glass Menagerie.[18] There were also awkward periods that Welles remembers:
You see, he'd have Marion Davies for dinner. Virginia would say, "Now you stay away. Don't be seen." And so I'd come up to the window where their dinner table was, with my coat collar up as though it were snowing outside, and just stare in at them eating.[13]: 344
Lederer would often take Chris and Virginia to visit San Simeon, where Davies lived with William Randolph Hearst. She recalls, "Whenever we visited San Simeon, the grandiose castle . . . Charlie could not resist pulling the old man's leg:
"WR is the perfect fall guy," I remember Charlie telling my father one evening while the adults were having martinis on the porch. Then, to illustrate his point, my stepfather launched into his favorite story. Late one night at San Simeon, when everyone else was asleep, Charlie stole out to the gardens and dressed the marble statues of naked women in bras and panties. . . . In the morning, the grand old gentleman stood there bothered and befuddled as each of his guests stumbled half-asleep into the garden and began to howl with laughter.[17]
Chris Welles adds that "aunt Marion, who had lost most of her relatives, was extremely close to Charlie." Lederer agreed, saying that "we're more like partners in crime than aunt and nephew."[17] She remembers one occasion: "Charlie and Marion would exchange a wicked glance and then begin turning somersaults in unison on one of Hearst's priceless Persian rugs."[17] She writes, however, that she was unaware at the time of the complications that her visits to San Simeon caused:
I was too young to appreciate the irony of my position—both the child of the man who had made Citizen Kane and the stepchild of Marion Davies's beloved nephew. Marion, Charlie, and my mother feared that the mere sight of "Orson's kid" might give Pops apoplexy . . .[17]
Virginia Welles gave some of the reasons Lederer became close friends with Welles:
Orson and Charlie just naturally gravitated toward one another. They were both brilliant, highly sophisticated men living in a cultural desert. . . . So my two husbands got to be great friends, and they loved to commiserate about how difficult it was to be married to me. But when it came to their personalities, they couldn't have been more unalike. Charlie was such a dear, sweet, funny man, and he didn't have Orson's crushing ego. He was a hell of a lot easier to live with, I can tell you.[17]
After completing Macbeth in late 1947, Welles planned to live and work in Europe to save on production costs. Before leaving, however, he came down with chicken pox, which he contracted from his daughter. He was forced to stay in New York's Waldorf hotel for three days, during which time Lederer remained with him while they worked on a script for The Shadow, which Welles was to direct.[13]: 355 Later, after Welles had been living in Europe, spending most of his time and energy trying to obtain funds to both live and produce other films, Lederer loaned him $250,000.[19]
Harpo, Ben Hecht, and a Comeuppance
[edit]Lederer was great friends with Harpo Marx and the two constantly cooked up practical jokes at the balls and parties they attended at Hearst Castle, the estate of William Randolph Hearst, such as stealing all the female guests' fur coats and draping them over the statues outside the estate during a heavy snowstorm.
Lederer was a close and lifelong friend of screenwriter Ben Hecht, with whom he co-wrote numerous screenplays. Hecht noted that Lederer was "half Jewish and half Irish," and soon after meeting him, wired Rose, his wife, "I have met a new friend. He has pointed teeth, pointed ears, is nineteen years old, completely bald and stands on his head a great deal. His name is Charles Lederer. I hope to bring him back to civilization with me."[20] : 408–410 Hecht's 1963 autobiography, Gaily, Gaily, was dedicated, "For Charles Lederer, to read in his tub."[21]
Lederer was famed on both coasts as a sardonic wit and "incessant practical joker," which endeared him to Hecht.[2]: 145 Bennett Cerf's book Shake Well Before Using describes an incident during Lederer's career in the Army during World War II, when Lederer took revenge on an Englishwoman who had been making "rabid and noisy" remarks against Jews:
"Tell me, why don't you like the Jews?"
"Oh, I don't know. No reason I guess." Lederer yanked on [her china cabinet] door. Most of the china flew across the room.
"Well, now you've got a reason."[22]
Final years
[edit]According to Mankiewicz' biographer Richard Meryman, Lederer "isolated himself in his last years, contorted from arthritis, addicted to narcotics."[3]: 317 He died in 1976, aged sixty-five.
Filmography
[edit]Writer
[edit]
|
|
Director
[edit]- Never Steal Anything Small (1959)
- On the Loose (1951)
- Fingers at the Window (1942)
Actor
[edit]- City Lights (1931) (In unused scene) Telegraph Delivery Boy, included in 1983 Unknown Chaplin documentary.
References
[edit]- ^ "Charles Lederer Dead at 65; The Stage and Screen Writer" (PDF). The New York Times. March 7, 1976. Retrieved 2009-05-06.
- ^ a b c MacAdams, William. Ben Hecht (New York, Barricade Books, 1990)
- ^ a b c Meryman, Richard. Mank (1978) William Morrow
- ^ a b Kael, Pauline. For Keeps (New York, Penguin Books, 1994)
- ^ a b Welles, Orson and Peter Bogdanovich, edited by Jonathan Rosenbaum, This is Orson Welles. New York: HarperCollins Publishers 1992; Da Capo Press, 1998. ISBN 0-06-016616-9
- ^ a b Levine, Scott. Dictionary of Literary Biography - Screenplays, vol. 26. (1984) Gale Research
- ^ a b Guiles, Fred Lawrence. Marion Davies, a Biography (New York, McGraw-Hill, 1972)
- ^ a b c d Nasaw, David. The Chief: The Life of William Randolph Hearst, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt (2000)
- ^ a b Pizzitola, Louis. Hearst Over Hollywood: Power, Passion, and Propaganda in the Movies, Columbia Univ. Press (2002)
- ^ "Book review, In My Father's Shadow: A Daughter Remembers Orson Welles". Joseph McBride, Bright Lights Film Journal, November 2009. 23 November 2009. Retrieved 2013-11-10.
- ^ "Orson Welles' Ex-Wife Weds". Associated Press (The Spokesman-Review), May 18, 1940. Retrieved 2014-02-07.
- ^ "Mrs. Virginia Lederer Sues Writer-Husband". Associated Press (The Miami News), February 25, 1949. Retrieved 2014-02-07.
- ^ a b c d Leaming, Barbara. Orson Welles – a Biography (New York, Viking Penguin Limelight Edition, 1995)
- ^ Thomson, David. A Biographical Dictionary of Film 3rd Ed. Alfred A Knopf (1998) p. 801
- ^ Vidal, Gore. "Remembering Orson Welles." The New York Review of Books, June 1, 1989. Retrieved January 14, 2008.
- ^ Vidal, Gore. "Rosebud." The New York Review of Books, August 17, 1989. Retrieved January 14, 2008.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Feder, Chris Welles. In My Father's Shadow, Algonquin Books, 2009, pp. 25-44
- ^ Brady, Frank. Citizen Welles, Charles Scribner's Sons (1989) p. 417
- ^ The Battle Over Citizen Kane, documentary film by American Experience, 1996
- ^ Hecht, Ben. A Child of the Century (New York, Simon and Schuster, 1954)
- ^ Hecht, Ben, Gaily, Gaily (1963) Doubleday & Co.
- ^ Cerf, Bennett, Bennett. Shake Well Before Using (Simon and Schuster and Life Magazine, 1948) p. 159-160.
External links
[edit]- Charles Lederer at IMDb
- Charles Lederer family papers, Margaret Herrick Library, Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
Charles Lederer
View on GrokipediaCharles Davies Lederer (December 31, 1910 – March 5, 1976) was an American screenwriter and film director active primarily from the 1930s to the 1960s, recognized for his sharp dialogue and adaptations of stage plays and novels into cinematic comedies, thrillers, and adventures.[1][2] Born into a theatrical family in New York City as the son of producer George W. Lederer and actress Reine Davies, he was orphaned young and raised by his aunt, actress Marion Davies, longtime companion of media magnate William Randolph Hearst, whose influence facilitated Lederer's early entry into journalism and Hollywood.[3][1] After graduating from the University of California, Berkeley in 1929, he transitioned from reporting to screenwriting, often collaborating with Ben Hecht on projects emphasizing fast-paced wit and social observation.[3][2] Lederer's screen credits include the seminal screwball comedy His Girl Friday (1940), a reworking of the play The Front Page that showcased his talent for verbal sparring, as well as the influential sci-fi horror The Thing from Another World (1951), which helped define Cold War-era alien invasion narratives.[4][2] He earned Academy Award nominations for Kiss of Death (1947) and adapted musicals like Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953), blending humor with star-driven spectacle, while later works such as Ocean's 11 (1960) captured the Rat Pack era's heist genre flair.[5][4] His oeuvre reflects a pragmatic craftsmanship shaped by journalistic roots and elite social access, though his proximity to Hearst occasionally drew him into the orbit of Hollywood's power struggles without notable personal scandals.[3][2]
Early Life
Family Background and Upbringing
Charles Lederer was born on December 31, 1910, in New York City to George W. Lederer, a prominent theater producer, and Reine Davies, an actress and singer.[6][1] Reine Davies was the older sister of actress Marion Davies.[6] Following his parents' divorce, Lederer and his sister Pepi were raised primarily by their aunt Marion Davies in California.[7] Marion Davies, the longtime companion of media magnate William Randolph Hearst, exposed the young Lederer to the opulent lifestyle of Hollywood's elite, including frequent stays at Hearst's San Simeon estate.[7] This theatrical family environment, combined with Davies' connections, immersed Lederer in the entertainment industry from childhood, fostering his early interest in writing and journalism.[3]Education and Early Writing
Lederer, recognized as a child prodigy, enrolled at the University of California, Berkeley, at the age of 13 around 1923–1924.[8] He left the university after several years without completing a degree to join William Randolph Hearst's newspaper empire as a journalist. This transition aligned with his familial ties to Hearst through his aunt, actress Marion Davies, who had raised him following his mother's death.[3] His early writing career began in journalism, where he contributed to Hearst publications, including the International News Service, honing skills in concise, dramatic narrative reporting. Exposed to Hollywood's creative milieu via Davies and Hearst's circle—which included figures like Orson Welles and Ben Hecht—Lederer experimented with dramatic scripts and stories as a teenager.[8] These formative efforts, blending journalistic sharpness with theatrical flair, laid the groundwork for his later screenwriting, though no major published plays from this period are documented.[1] By the early 1930s, this foundation propelled him toward professional scriptwork in film.Professional Beginnings
Journalism and Theatrical Influences
Lederer's professional foundations were laid in journalism after departing the University of California, Berkeley around 1929, following enrollment there as a 13-year-old prodigy in 1924.[1] Family ties to William Randolph Hearst—through his aunt, actress Marion Davies, Hearst's longtime companion, and journalist Adela Rogers St. Johns—facilitated his entry into Hearst's newspaper empire, where he contributed to publications emphasizing sensational reporting and rapid news cycles.[9] [10] This immersion in tabloid-style journalism, characterized by aggressive scoops and ethical ambiguities, honed his observational skills and cynicism toward media power dynamics, themes recurrent in his later scripts. Concurrently, theatrical influences emerged via mentorship under Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur, whose 1928 Broadway hit The Front Page depicted newsroom intrigue with rapid-fire dialogue and moral compromise.[3] Lederer, associating with the duo from 1929, absorbed their blend of journalistic realism and stage exaggeration, crediting their style for inspiring his narrative pacing.[1] This apprenticeship culminated in his 1931 screenplay adaptation of The Front Page for Howard Hawks, transforming the play's theatrical energy into cinematic form while retaining its critique of press corruption. Such early exposure bridged journalism's raw events with theater's dramatization, fostering Lederer's signature wit and structural economy in storytelling.[10]Initial Hollywood Entry
Charles Lederer transitioned from journalism to screenwriting in 1931, when he adapted Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur's Pulitzer Prize-winning Broadway play The Front Page for the screen.[11][1] Directed by Lewis Milestone and starring Adolphe Menjou and Pat O'Brien, the film version retained the play's rapid-fire dialogue and cynical portrayal of newsroom ethics, earning critical praise for its pacing and wit.[1] This adaptation, completed when Lederer was approximately 20 years old, marked his professional debut in Hollywood and prompted him to abandon his reporting career with William Randolph Hearst's newspapers.[11] Following The Front Page, Lederer secured a contract with Paramount Pictures in the early 1930s, where he began producing original scripts and further adaptations.[3] His early collaborations often involved Hecht, with whom he had begun associating in 1929, yielding dialogue-heavy narratives suited to the pre-Code era's loosening censorship standards.[1][12] These initial efforts established Lederer as a specialist in journalistic and crime-themed stories, leveraging his Hearst background for authentic depictions of media machinations. By the mid-1930s, his reputation for efficient, acerbic writing had solidified, paving the way for contracts with other major studios like MGM starting in 1938.[3]Screenwriting Career
Key Screenplays and Adaptations
Lederer's screenplay for His Girl Friday (1940), directed by Howard Hawks, adapted the 1928 play The Front Page by Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur into a screwball comedy, reimagining the reporter character as female (played by Rosalind Russell opposite Cary Grant's editor). The script's hallmark overlapping dialogue captured journalistic cynicism and ethical ambiguity, earning praise for its pacing and wit, with the film released by Columbia Pictures on January 18, 1940.[13] In collaboration with Ben Hecht, Lederer co-wrote Kiss of Death (1947), a film noir directed by Henry Hathaway for 20th Century Fox, drawing from a real-life informant story and featuring Victor Mature as a stool pigeon facing moral retribution; the screenplay emphasized gritty urban crime and psychological tension, released on August 27, 1947. Similarly, their adaptation of John W. Campbell's 1938 novella "Who Goes There?" became The Thing from Another World (1951), uncredited Hawks-directed for RKO, portraying an isolated Arctic outpost battling a parasitic alien, with Lederer's script shifting focus to military-scientific conflict and released April 6, 1951. Lederer adapted Anita Loos's 1925 novel Gentlemen Prefer Blondes for the 1953 Howard Hawks musical at 20th Century Fox, starring Marilyn Monroe and Jane Russell as gold-digging showgirls, infusing the script with satirical commentary on 1920s excess while streamlining the narrative for song-and-dance sequences; the film premiered July 15, 1953.[5] His original heist screenplay for Ocean's 11 (1960), directed by Lewis Milestone and featuring Frank Sinatra's Rat Pack, depicted a post-war Vegas casino robbery by eleven ex-paratroopers, blending camaraderie with procedural caper elements, released August 31, 1960.[14] For Mutiny on the Bounty (1962), Lederer co-adapted Charles Nordhoff and James Norman Hall's 1932 novel with a focus on historical naval tyranny and rebellion, directed by Lewis Milestone for MGM with Marlon Brando as Fletcher Christian; the script expanded on Captain Bligh's (Trevor Howard) authoritarianism, premiering November 8, 1962, after production delays.[5] Other adaptations include The Spirit of St. Louis (1957), based on Charles Lindbergh's 1953 memoir, scripted solo for Billy Wilder's Warner Bros. biopic emphasizing solo flight perils, released April 20, 1957.Collaborations and Writing Style
Lederer frequently collaborated with Ben Hecht on screenplays, including Comrade X (1940), Kiss of Death (1947), Ride the Pink Horse (1947), and Her Husband's Affairs (1947).[11] He partnered with I.A.L. Diamond for Monkey Business (1952), directed by Howard Hawks, and with George Oppenheimer on Slightly Dangerous (1943).[15] Additional collaborations included co-authoring the book for the musical Kismet (1953 Broadway production, 1955 film adaptation) with Luther Davis.[11] These partnerships often involved adapting stage plays or novels, leveraging Lederer's journalistic background to sharpen dialogue and pacing for cinematic demands.[15] His work with Hawks produced notable results, such as the 1940 adaptation of Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur's The Front Page into His Girl Friday, where Lederer recast the leads as divorced spouses to heighten screwball comedy elements while preserving rapid-fire, overlapping dialogue.[15][16] Lederer contributed uncredited dialogue to the 1931 The Front Page film alongside Bartlett Cormack, marking an early entry into collaborative adaptation.[15] Lederer's writing style emphasized witty, acerbic adaptations of comic and dramatic source material, transforming non-filmic works into screen-friendly narratives with stylish humor.[15] His scripts excelled in collaboration, where input from directors like Hawks refined uneven solo tendencies into tight, dialogue-driven structures, as seen in the comedic essence retained from originals like Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953).[15] Known for sharp wit and humor, his contributions drew praise in literary circles for practical, engaging prose that suited fast-paced genres.[11]Themes of Power and Corruption
Lederer's adaptation of His Girl Friday (1940), based on Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur's The Front Page, satirizes the interplay between media influence and political malfeasance. The plot revolves around corrupt Chicago officials, including the mayor and sheriff, who orchestrate the execution of innocent convict Earl Williams—a mild-mannered man who accidentally killed a Black police officer—to appease the press and secure lucrative post office contracts from the federal government. This scheme exploits public fears of crime and racial unrest for electoral gain, portraying power as a tool for self-enrichment rather than public service.[17][18][19] In Kiss of Death (1947), co-authored with Ben Hecht and directed by Henry Hathaway, Lederer explores corruption within the criminal syndicate and its entwinement with law enforcement. Protagonist Nick Bianco, a small-time crook, turns state's evidence against psychopathic mobster Tommy Udo after a botched heist, revealing a cycle of betrayal driven by survival instincts and unchecked greed. The narrative depicts a morally bankrupt underworld where loyalty erodes under pressure from authority figures and personal ambition, culminating in Udo's gleeful sadism—exemplified by his infamous wheelchair murder—as emblematic of systemic ethical decay.[20] Lederer's contributions to Mutiny on the Bounty (1962), adapted from Charles Nordhoff and James Norman Hall's novel and co-written with others including Karl Tunberg, highlight tyrannical command as a catalyst for rebellion. Captain William Bligh's regime aboard the HMS Bounty in 1787–1789 enforces draconian punishments, including flogging and food rationing, alienating the crew and leading to Fletcher Christian's mutiny on April 28, 1789. The screenplay underscores how absolute authority, devoid of accountability, fosters resentment and justifies overthrow, drawing on historical logs documenting Bligh's 96 lashes administered and crew desertions.[21] Across these films, Lederer recurrently illustrates power's tendency to corrupt through institutional incentives, whether in urban politics, organized crime, or naval hierarchy, often via sharp dialogue exposing hypocrisy and self-interest.[22]Awards and Honors
Nominations and Wins
Lederer received three Academy Award nominations for screenwriting but no wins. For the 32nd Academy Awards in 1960, he was nominated in the Best Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium category for Never Steal Anything Small.[23] At the 33rd Academy Awards in 1961, he shared a nomination for Best Writing, Story and Screenplay—Written Directly for the Screen for Can-Can with Dorothy Kingsley, and another shared nomination in the same category for Ocean's Eleven with Harry Brown.[23] His sole major film award win came at the 1948 Locarno International Film Festival, where he shared the Prize for Best Screenplay, Adapted with Ben Hecht for Kiss of Death.[24]| Year | Award | Category | Work | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1954 | Tony Award | Author of a Musical | Kismet (book co-written with Luther Davis) | Won[25] |
| 1954 | Tony Award | Producer of a Musical | Kismet | Won[25] |
Industry Recognition
Lederer garnered notable acclaim for his adaptation of the Broadway musical Kismet (1953), co-authored with Luther Davis from Edward Knoblock's 1911 play. The production earned him two Tony Awards in 1954: one for Best Author of a Musical (shared with Davis for the book) and recognition as producer contributing to the Best Musical win.[27] These honors underscored his skill in transforming exotic theatrical source material into a commercially successful vehicle, featuring adapted music from Alexander Borodin and starring Alfred Drake and Doretta Morrow.[27] In film, Lederer's co-screenplay for Kiss of Death (1947), written with Ben Hecht and directed by Henry Hathaway, secured the Prize for Best Adapted Screenplay at the Locarno International Film Festival in 1948.[24] The film's taut narrative of betrayal and redemption, highlighted by Richard Widmark's debut performance, exemplified Lederer's contributions to film noir tension, though the screenplay itself did not receive an Academy Award nomination despite the picture's supporting actor nod for Widmark.[24] The Writers Guild of America recognized Lederer's comedic versatility through multiple nominations across genres. He was nominated for Best Written American Musical for Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953), a Howard Hawks-directed adaptation emphasizing rapid dialogue and satire.[26] Further nominations included Best Written American Comedy or Musical for Never Steal Anything Small (1959), Ocean's Eleven (1960, shared with Harry Brown), and Can-Can (1960, shared with Dorothy Kingsley).[23] None resulted in wins, reflecting the guild's competitive standards amid Lederer's prolific output.[23] Later assessments affirmed his enduring influence, with the Writers Guild ranking His Girl Friday (1940)—his adaptation of Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur's The Front Page—at number 31 on its 2013 list of 101 Greatest Screenplays, praising its overlapping dialogue and journalistic cynicism.[13] Peers valued Lederer's acerbic style and collaborative efficiency, as noted in contemporary obituaries, though formal lifetime honors remained limited.[11]Directing and Other Contributions
Directorial Projects
Charles Lederer's directorial output was limited to three feature films, reflecting his primary career emphasis on screenwriting rather than directing. These projects spanned genres from mystery to drama and musical, but none achieved significant commercial or critical acclaim, with Lederer returning to writing thereafter.[4] His debut as director was Fingers at the Window (1942), a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer mystery thriller. The film centers on a series of axe murders in Chicago committed by seemingly insane individuals, orchestrated by a hypnotist (Basil Rathbone) and unraveled by an unemployed actor (Lew Ayres) and a police psychologist. Co-starring Laraine Day, the 79-minute black-and-white production received mixed contemporary reception, with some critics noting stiff performances amid its low-budget trappings.[28][29][30] In 1951, Lederer directed On the Loose, a RKO drama produced by Ida Lupino's company exploring teenage angst and parental neglect. The story follows Jill Bradley (Joan Evans), a high school girl overshadowed by her self-absorbed parents (Melvyn Douglas and Lynn Bari), leading to her suicide attempt and entanglement with a delinquent crowd including boyfriend Larry (Robert Arthur). Running 78 minutes, the film addressed juvenile delinquency themes prevalent in post-war cinema but garnered modest attention.[31][32] Lederer's final directorial effort, Never Steal Anything Small (1959), was a United Artists musical adaptation of Maxwell Anderson's play, which Lederer co-wrote with Anderson and Rouben Mamoulian. James Cagney stars as Jake MacIllaney, a scheming longshoremen's union president who rigs elections and pursues his lawyer's wife (Shirley Jones) amid labor corruption. The Technicolor production featured Cagney's energetic performance in songs and dances, earning praise for his vitality despite the film's uneven blend of satire and musical numbers; a New York Times review highlighted Cagney's charm but noted the narrative's contrivances.[33][34]Acting Roles and Productions
Charles Lederer pursued acting only peripherally, with his sole documented screen appearance occurring in Charlie Chaplin's City Lights (1931), where he played an uncredited telegraph delivery boy in a deleted scene shot during production.[35] This bit part stemmed from Lederer's youthful connections at William Randolph Hearst's San Simeon estate, where he befriended Chaplin, a fellow guest; the sequence depicted Chaplin's Tramp character interacting with the boy amid comedic mishaps involving an apple, but Chaplin excised it from the final cut despite initial praise for the performance.[36] The footage resurfaced in the 1983 BBC documentary series Unknown Chaplin, revealing Lederer's early brush with on-camera work at age 19.[35] No other acting credits appear in professional filmographies for Lederer, who quickly shifted to screenwriting after this isolated involvement.[4] His participation in City Lights remained uncredited and non-professional, aligning with his nascent career rather than any sustained acting ambition.[35]Personal Life
Marriages and Family
Charles Lederer first married Virginia Nicolson, the actress and former wife of Orson Welles, on May 18, 1940, in Phoenix, Arizona.[37] The marriage ended in divorce in 1949.[38] Through this union, Lederer became stepfather to Nicolson's daughter from her marriage to Welles, Christopher "Chris" Welles Feder, born in 1938.[39] On October 19, 1949, shortly after his divorce, Lederer wed actress Anne Shirley, known for her roles in films such as Stella Dallas (1937).[4] The couple remained married until Lederer's death on March 5, 1976, and they had one son together, Daniel Lederer.[4] Lederer was the son of theater producer George W. Lederer and had a sister, Pepi Lederer, an actress who died by suicide in 1935. His family connections extended to Hollywood circles, including ties to William Randolph Hearst through journalistic relatives, though not direct familial links to Marion Davies as sometimes misattributed.Friendships and Social Networks
Lederer's upbringing within the extended family of actress Marion Davies, his maternal aunt, immersed him in the social circles of Hollywood's elite from an early age following his parents' separation. Davies, the longtime companion of media magnate William Randolph Hearst, hosted lavish gatherings at venues like Hearst Castle, where Lederer, as a favored nephew, was a frequent invited guest alongside prominent figures in entertainment and journalism.[10][40][41] A pivotal friendship formed with director Orson Welles in the late 1930s, rooted in shared Hollywood connections and mutual admiration for each other's talents. Welles described Lederer as a "wonderful fellow" and screenwriter endowed with "a good deal of humor and imagination" in a 1955 television appearance. This bond extended personally when Lederer married Welles's former wife, Virginia Nicholson, on May 18, 1940, in Phoenix, Arizona, after her divorce from Welles.[42][43] Lederer's professional collaborations often reflected enduring personal ties, notably with director Howard Hawks on multiple projects starting in the 1930s and with playwright Ben Hecht on screenplays that blended their stylistic influences. These relationships positioned him within influential creative networks, facilitating access to major studios and talent during Hollywood's Golden Age.[2][10]Controversies
Citizen Kane Authorship Disputes
Charles Lederer, a young screenwriter and close friend of Herman J. Mankiewicz, became peripherally entangled in the Citizen Kane authorship controversies due to Mankiewicz sharing an early draft of the screenplay with him in 1940. Despite Lederer's position as the nephew of Marion Davies—William Randolph Hearst's longtime companion, upon whom aspects of the film were modeled—Mankiewicz entrusted him with the script, which drew heavily from Hearst's life and career.[44][9] This decision proved consequential, as the script reportedly reached Hearst's legal team, resulting in marginal annotations identifying specific dialogue as derived from Hearst's actual statements, such as a note beside a key speech stating, "This happens to be the gist of an authentic interview with WRH—occasion, his last trip from Europe."[9][45] Lederer maintained he never personally showed the document to Hearst, but its return in annotated form exacerbated tensions, contributing to Hearst's broader efforts to suppress the film's release through media blackouts and legal threats in late 1940 and early 1941.[45] Lederer's statements later factored into debates over screenplay credit, which pitted Mankiewicz's foundational draft against Orson Welles's revisions. In a 1972 interview with Peter Bogdanovich for Esquire's "The Kane Mutiny"—a rebuttal to Pauline Kael's Raising Kane essay—Lederer recounted Mankiewicz confiding in him about Welles's extensive alterations to the script, expressing frustration that Welles claimed undue influence over the final product.[44][46] These recollections aligned with Kael's 1971 argument, drawn partly from Lederer and others, that Mankiewicz authored nearly the entire screenplay in isolation during 1940, with Welles contributing minimally beyond directorial input—a view Kael framed to diminish Welles's overall genius.[44] However, contemporaneous records, including Welles's documented revisions from February to May 1941 that streamlined subplots and sharpened thematic focus, support the official co-credit awarded by the Writers Guild of America, which retroactively affirmed shared authorship in 1973 after reviewing drafts.[45] The disputes highlighted tensions in Hollywood's collaborative ethos, with Lederer's dual role—as unwitting conduit for Hearst-related backlash and witness to Mankiewicz's grievances—illustrating how personal networks amplified conflicts. While Lederer offered no claim to co-authorship himself, his accounts fueled partisan narratives; Kael's reliance on them has been critiqued for selective emphasis, overlooking evidence of Welles's structural contributions evident in surviving script versions dated post-Mankiewicz's initial submission on January 7, 1941.[44][45] The Academy Awards recognized both writers equally for the 1941 Oscar win, reflecting a consensus that, despite revisions, Mankiewicz's draft formed the core while Welles elevated its cinematic execution.[45]Associations with Hollywood Power Structures
Charles Lederer maintained significant ties to Hollywood's intertwined media and entertainment elites through his familial connection to Marion Davies, the longtime companion of publishing magnate William Randolph Hearst. As the son of Davies' sister Reine and thus her nephew, Lederer benefited from proximity to Hearst's vast influence, which extended from newspaper chains to film production via Cosmopolitan Pictures, a vehicle for promoting Davies' career.[40][8] This relationship afforded Lederer early access to power centers, including journalistic opportunities with Hearst's publications, where he honed his writing skills as a young prodigy.[8] Lederer's associations facilitated his transition into Hollywood screenwriting, embedding him within social and professional networks dominated by influential figures. He formed mentorships and collaborations with prominent writers like Ben Hecht, who had similarly navigated Hearst's orbit, and directors such as Howard Hawks, enabling credits on high-profile projects that reflected critiques of wealth and power dynamics—ironically echoing elements of the Hearst persona.[40] His visits to Hearst's San Simeon estate, often alongside peers like Orson Welles, underscored his insider status amid the era's mogul-driven industry structures.[8] These connections, however, also highlighted tensions inherent in Hollywood's power alignments, as Hearst's media leverage could suppress unfavorable portrayals, a dynamic Lederer's loyalty to Davies navigated during controversies over films like Citizen Kane. Despite such pressures, Lederer's position allowed him to operate at the nexus of creative talent and financial backers, contributing to his reputation as a versatile craftsman in an oligopolistic studio system.[47]Later Years and Legacy
Final Works and Retirement
In the late 1950s, Lederer directed and wrote Never Steal Anything Small (1959), a musical comedy starring James Cagney, and penned It Started with a Kiss (1959), a service comedy featuring Glenn Ford and Debbie Reynolds.[15] These projects marked a shift toward lighter, star-driven fare, reflecting a pattern of sporadic output in his later career.[1] Lederer's final screenplays included Can-Can (1960), a musical adaptation starring Frank Sinatra and Shirley MacLaine; Ocean's 11 (1960), a heist film co-written with Harry Brown and featuring Sinatra's Rat Pack ensemble; Follow That Dream (1962), an Elvis Presley vehicle; Mutiny on the Bounty (1962), an epic adaptation with Marlon Brando and Trevor Howard for which Lederer received sole screenplay credit; and A Global Affair (1964), a comedy with Bob Hope.[11][15] These works, often vehicles for established stars, were criticized in some accounts for uneven quality compared to his earlier, more acclaimed scripts, aligning with observations of his career's later diminished impact.[15] After A Global Affair, Lederer ceased active contributions to major film projects, effectively retiring from screenwriting amid a history of intermittent employment.[1] He resided in Bel Air, California, during these years.[11]Death and Posthumous Influence
Charles Lederer died on March 5, 1976, at the University of California Hospital in Los Angeles, where he resided in Bel Air; he was 65 years old.[11][4] Lederer's screenwriting legacy persisted after his death through the continued cultural impact of his films, several of which earned recognition for preservation. His Girl Friday (1940), adapted by Lederer from the play The Front Page by Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur, was inducted into the United States National Film Registry in 1993 for its "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" qualities, highlighting the enduring appeal of his rapid-fire dialogue and comic adaptations.[48][49] Similarly, his screenplay for The Thing from Another World (1951) contributed to a work noted in the Registry's personnel credits for its foundational role in science fiction horror.[49] These selections underscore the lasting influence of Lederer's collaborative style with directors like Howard Hawks on genre-defining narratives, though he received no major individual posthumous awards such as a Hollywood Walk of Fame star.Filmography
As Writer
Charles Lederer contributed screenplays to over two dozen films, often adapting plays or novels into taut, dialogue-driven narratives characteristic of his style influenced by mentors Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur.[4][15] His credits span screwball comedy, film noir, and adventure genres, with notable adaptations emphasizing rapid-fire wit and moral ambiguity.| Year | Title | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 1940 | His Girl Friday | Screenplay adaptation of the play The Front Page by Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur; directed by Howard Hawks. |
| 1947 | Kiss of Death | Co-written with Ben Hecht from a story by Eleazar Lipsky; film noir starring Victor Mature and Richard Widmark.[50] |
| 1947 | Ride the Pink Horse | Adaptation of Dorothy B. Hughes' novel; directed by Robert Montgomery. |
| 1951 | The Thing from Another World | Co-written with Howard Hawks (uncredited) and Edmund H. North, from John W. Campbell's novella Who Goes There?; science fiction horror.[51] |
| 1953 | Gentlemen Prefer Blondes | Co-written with Joseph A. Fields, adaptation of the Broadway musical; starring Marilyn Monroe and Jane Russell.[52] |
| 1957 | The Spirit of St. Louis | Co-written with Billy Wilder, adaptation of Charles Lindbergh's memoir; directed by Wilder, starring James Stewart. |
| 1960 | Ocean's 11 | Co-written with Harry Brown and George Clayton Johnson; heist film starring the Rat Pack, directed by Lewis Milestone.[53] |
| 1960 | Can-Can | Co-written with Dorothy Kingsley, adaptation of the musical; directed by Walter Lang, starring Frank Sinatra and Shirley MacLaine. |
| 1962 | Mutiny on the Bounty | Co-written with several others, adaptation of the novel; directed by Lewis Milestone, starring Marlon Brando. |
