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Edith Sommer
Edith Sommer
from Wikipedia

Edith Rose Sommer (August 21, 1917 - February 1, 1991) was an American screenwriter, playwright, and TV writer active from the 1940s through the 1970s. She worked with director Jean Negulesco on several films, and later worked extensively on soap operas, forming a writing team with her husband, Robert Soderberg.[1][2] She and Soderberg—who may have met while working on the script for Nicholas Ray's Born to Be Bad[3]—were nominated for several Daytime Emmys.[4]

Key Information

Selected filmography

[edit]

TV

Theater

  • A Roomful of Roses (Broadway; 1955)

Film

References

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from Grokipedia
Edith Sommer was an American screenwriter known for her contributions to Hollywood films in the 1950s and 1960s, particularly through collaborations with director Jean Negulesco, as well as her later career as a prominent writer and head writer on long-running daytime soap operas. Born in Chicago, Illinois on August 21, 1917, Sommer began her writing career in the 1940s and gained early credits with screenplays for films such as Born to Be Bad (1950) and Perfect Strangers (1950). She went on to work on several notable projects in the 1950s and 1960s, including the adaptation of Rona Jaffe's novel The Best of Everything (1959), Blue Denim (1959), Jessica (1962), The Pleasure Seekers (1964), and This Property Is Condemned (1966), the last co-written with Francis Ford Coppola and Fred Coe. In the late 1960s, Sommer transitioned primarily to television, where she served as head writer for the soap operas Guiding Light from 1969 to 1973 and As the World Turns from 1973 to 1978, frequently collaborating with her husband, fellow writer Robert Soderberg. Her extensive work on these series involved writing hundreds of episodes. She died on February 1, 1991, in Santa Barbara, California.

Early life

Early years and background

Edith Sommer was born Edith Rose Sommer on August 21, 1917, in Chicago, Illinois, USA. She is also credited under the name Edith R. Sommer in various professional contexts. Details about her early years remain extremely limited, with no verifiable information available on her family background, upbringing, education, or early interests in primary film industry sources. This scarcity of documented personal history prior to her professional career is typical for many mid-20th-century screenwriters whose biographies focus primarily on credits rather than formative years.

Career

Entry into screenwriting

Edith Sommer was an American screenwriter, playwright, and television writer. Born in Chicago, Illinois, on August 21, 1917, she entered the field of screenwriting in the mid-1940s. Her earliest documented contribution came in 1946, when she provided additional scenes for the film From This Day Forward (credited as Edith R. Sommer). Sommer transitioned to fully credited feature screenwriting in 1950 with co-writing credits on Born to Be Bad and Perfect Strangers. This marked the beginning of her primary period of film activity, which AllMovie lists as spanning 1946 to 1966. Her work during this era most frequently aligned with the genres of drama, romance, comedy, crime, romantic comedy, and comedy drama. She continued writing professionally into the 1970s, with extensive contributions to television formats. No records indicate screenwriting activity prior to 1946.

Film screenplays

Edith Sommer earned credits as a screenwriter on several Hollywood feature films, primarily in the 1950s and 1960s, often contributing to adaptations of literary works or stage plays. Her film contributions reflect the era's studio system, where screenwriters frequently collaborated on scripts for dramatic and romantic pictures, including multiple projects with director Jean Negulesco. Sommer received screenplay credit for Born to Be Bad (1950), directed by Nicholas Ray and starring Joan Fontaine, Robert Ryan, and Mel Ferrer. The film adapted Anne Parrish's novel All Kneeling, with Charles Schnee providing the adaptation and Robert Soderberg contributing additional dialogue along with George Oppenheimer. She shared screenplay credit with Mann Rubin on The Best of Everything (1959), a drama directed by Jean Negulesco and based on Rona Jaffe's bestselling novel about young women navigating careers and romance in New York City. Sommer also received screenplay credits on Blue Denim (1959), Jessica (1962) (co-directed by Negulesco), and The Pleasure Seekers (1964) (directed by Negulesco). Her final film credit came with This Property Is Condemned (1966), co-written with Francis Ford Coppola and Fred Coe, directed by Sydney Pollack, and adapted from Tennessee Williams' one-act play. The project marked a collaboration with emerging talents in an adaptation focused on Southern Gothic themes.

Television writing

Edith Sommer contributed to television as a writer across episodic prime-time series and long-running daytime soap operas, often collaborating with her husband Robert Soderberg in the latter part of her career. One of her notable early television credits was writing three episodes of the detective series Burke's Law between 1963 and 1964. In the late 1960s and 1970s, Sommer and Soderberg worked as a writing team on several soap operas, beginning with Search for Tomorrow in 1968–1969 before taking on head writer roles. They served as head writers for Guiding Light from January 1969 to 1973. The pair then moved to As the World Turns, serving as head writers from 1973 to 1978 and overseeing the show's transition to a 60-minute format while maintaining strong ratings for much of their run. Their work on As the World Turns earned a Daytime Emmy Award nomination for Outstanding Writing for a Daytime Drama Series in 1977, shared with Ralph Ellis, Eugenie Hunt, Theodore Apstein, and Gillian Spencer.

Personal life and death

Personal life

Edith Sommer was married to fellow writer Robert Soderberg, with whom she frequently collaborated on daytime soap operas. Little additional information about her personal life, including children or other family relationships, is available in publicly available sources. This scarcity is typical for many screenwriters of her era, whose private lives are less documented than their professional work.

Death

Edith Sommer died on February 1, 1994, in Santa Barbara, California, USA, at the age of 76. Some sources report her death as February 1, 1991, but the 1994 date is used by major film reference databases including IMDb and AllMovie. No cause of death or additional circumstances are documented in reliable records.
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