Martin Flavin
Martin Flavin
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Martin Flavin

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Martin Flavin

Martin Archer Flavin (November 2, 1883 – December 27, 1967) was an American playwright and novelist. His novel Journey in the Dark received both the Harper Prize for 1943 and a Pulitzer Prize for 1944. His play The Criminal Code was produced on Broadway in 1929, and it was the basis for the movie The Criminal Code. He had eleven plays on Broadway between 1923 and 1937.

Flavin was born on November 2, 1883, in San Francisco, California, to Martin J. Flavin and Louise Ann Archer. He grew up in Chicago and was a Sigma Chi at the University of Chicago, which he attended from 1903 to 1905.

He was a U.S. Army Cavalryman during World War I, and he enjoyed riding horses for most of his life. Flavin was married three times: to Daphne Virginia Springer on November 14, 1914, in Joliet, Illinois, Sarah Keese Arnold in 1919, and Cornelia Clampett in 1949. He had three children.

"Weaves charming plays and plays charmingly with his family of clever children in his palatial home on the edge of the sea."

Flavin left college to work as a reporter on a Chicago newspaper. He then took over the family's business called the American Wallpaper Company. He wrote plays while working there.

He moved to Carmel-by-the-Sea, California, in the 1920s. He and playwrights Perry Newberry, and Ira Remsen produced original dramas at the Carmel Arts and Crafts Club theater at that time.

Flavin then won a Harper Prize for his play The Criminal Code. By 1929, he had three plays running on Broadway. He wrote the novel Journey in the Dark, which received both the Harper Prize in 1943 and a Pulitzer Prize in 1944. He was the oldest writer to win the $10,000 Harper prize. Other novels included Mr. Littlejohn (1940), Corporal Cat (1941), The Enchanted (1947), Cameron Hill (1957), Black and White (1950), and Red Poppies and White Marble (1962).

Flavin's play Broken Dishes (1929) was the basis of several screen adaptations. It was adapted into the 1931 film Too Young to Marry, the 1936 film Love Begins at 20, and the 1940 film Calling All Husbands. It was also adapted for television as a 1951 episode of Pulitzer Prize Playhouse.

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