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  • Biography
IMDbPro

Colin Clements(1894-1948)

  • Writer
  • Script and Continuity Department
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
Colin Clements
Colin Campbell Clements was born on 25 February, 1894, the son of William George and Ada von Swanback Clements. His father, who had emigrated from England around 1885, worked at the Omaha stockyards as a cattle driver.

In 1917 Clements graduated with an Artium Baccalaureatus (A.B.) Degree from the University of Washington. The following year he attended classes at the Carnegie Institute of Technology in Pittsburgh. Before enlisting in the US Army in 1918, Clements worked as a play reader, actor and stage manager for Stuart Walker's Portmanteau Theater.

After the war Clements spent two years working in the British occupied zone in Turkey with Near East Relief assisting Armenian refugees. A few years later the British government awarded him the General Service Medal of the British Army for his services there.

Not long after returning to America Clements became master of English at Lawrenceville School in Lawrence Township, New Jersey. It was also around this time that he attended Professor George Pierce Baker's famous 47 Workshop at Harvard.

Clements published his first book, "The Touchstone and Other Plays", in 1919, followed by "Seven Plays of Old Japan" in 1920. An example of some of the other books he wrote during this period of his career are: "Jo-a Drama" (1922), "A Book of Prayers for Boys" (1922), "Plays for a Folding Theater" (1923), "Plays for Pagans" (1924) and in collaboration with Mary Heaton Vorse, "Wreckage" (1924).

Clements met Florence Ryerson in 1927 while he was directing a play at a small theater in Santa Barbara, California. When the couple married the following year they almost immediately began working as a team. By 1945 they had churned out, eight novels, over 100 short stories (six that were serialized in magazines), three books of monologues and in excesses of 50 plays and screenplays. Their most popular works were probably "June Mad" (1939), "Glamour Preferred" (1941) "Harriet" (1943), "Notorious Gentleman" (1945) and "Strange Bedfellows" (1948).

Children were often the subject matter of Clements and Ryerson's stories. Much of what they learned from observing Ryerson's son, Hal and their gardener's four children became fodder for their work.

Clements and Ryerson's plays were very popular among amateur theater groups from around the country. Even during the depths of The Great Depression royalties from amateur theater groups earned them $4,000 annually.

In 1932 the Clements were robbed by a burglar with rather sophisticated tastes. Besides expensive Oriental rugs and towels, the highbrow thief pilfered a set of books by Maurice Maeterlinck, sixteen volumes of the history of Greece, four volumes of works by Giovanni Boccaccio and a copy of "The Imitation Of Christ" by Thomas A. Kempis.

The original manuscript of "Harriet", their story about Harriet Beecher Stowe, was donated by the couple to the Archives of American Letters in Princeton University along with a letters of appreciation for the play from former First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt, author Sinclair Lewis and actress Mary Pickford.

Colin Campbell Clements died on 29 January, 1948, after a three week stay at Jewish Hospital in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. His wife and partner of nearly 21 years was at his bedside.
BornFebruary 25, 1894
DiedJanuary 29, 1948(53)
BornFebruary 25, 1894
DiedJanuary 29, 1948(53)
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank

Known for

Connie Lamont, Matt Moore, Dorothy Revier, and Alan Roscoe in Call of the West (1930)
Call of the West
  • Writer
  • 1930
Alice White in Sweethearts on Parade (1930)
Sweethearts on Parade
7.4
  • Writer
  • 1930
Jackie Cooper and Jane Withers in Her First Beau (1941)
Her First Beau
6.0
  • Writer
  • 1941
Wickedness Preferred (1928)
Wickedness Preferred
  • Writer
  • 1928

Credits

Edit
IMDbPro

Writer



  • Star Tonight (1955)
    Star Tonight
    7.9
    TV Series
    • play
    • original
    • 1955
  • Kraft Television Theatre (1947)
    Kraft Television Theatre
    7.9
    TV Series
    • story
    • 1947–1951
  • The Chevrolet Tele-Theatre (1948)
    The Chevrolet Tele-Theatre
    7.8
    TV Series
    • written by
    • 1949
  • Tonight on Broadway (1948)
    Tonight on Broadway
    TV Series
    • play
    • 1948
  • Write Me a Love Scene
    TV Movie
    • play
    • 1946
  • Angels Don't Marry
    TV Special
    • Writer
    • 1946
  • Virginia Grey, Danny Morton, Milburn Stone, and Kent Taylor in Smooth as Silk (1946)
    Smooth as Silk
    6.3
    • story "Notorious Gentleman"
    • 1946
  • Perfect Ending
    TV Movie
    • play
    • 1944
  • Jackie Cooper and Jane Withers in Her First Beau (1941)
    Her First Beau
    6.0
    • story
    • 1941
  • Charles Bickford and Helen Vinson in A Notorious Gentleman (1935)
    A Notorious Gentleman
    7.1
    • contributor to screenplay
    • original story (uncredited)
    • 1935
  • Pardon My Pups (1934)
    Pardon My Pups
    5.8
    Short
    • story "Mild Oats"
    • 1934
  • Git Along Little Wifie
    5.7
    Short
    • dialogue
    • 1933
  • The Love Bargain
    Short
    • Writer
    • 1931
  • Alice White in Sweethearts on Parade (1930)
    Sweethearts on Parade
    7.4
    • scenario
    • 1930
  • Connie Lamont, Matt Moore, Dorothy Revier, and Alan Roscoe in Call of the West (1930)
    Call of the West
    • screenplay
    • story
    • 1930

Script and Continuity Department



  • Git Along Little Wifie
    5.7
    Short
    • continuity
    • 1933

Personal details

Edit
  • Born
    • February 25, 1894
    • Omaha, Nebraska, USA
  • Died
    • January 29, 1948
    • Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA(heart attack)
  • Spouse
    • Florence Ryerson1927 - January 29, 1948 (his death)
  • Other works
    Stage: Wrote (w/Florence Ryerson) "Glamour Preferred" on Broadway. Scenic Design by John Root. Directed by Antoinette Perry. Booth Theatre: 15 Nov 1940-23 Nov 1940 (11 performances). Cast: Thomas Babcock (as "Silver-Fish Exterminator"), Flora Campbell (as "Lynn Eldridge "), Haskell Coffin (as "Henry"), Irene Corlett (as "Angela Vaughn"), Robert Craven (as "Sir Hubert Towyn"), Elsie Mae Gordon (as "Loula"), James Gregory (as "Officer Hanan"), Loring Smith (as "Max Musick"), Louis Sorin (as "Bernard C. Goldwater"), Maidel Turner (as "Mrs. Florinda Mott Pengilly"), Henry Vincent (as "Webster"). Produced by Brock Pemberton.
  • Publicity listings
    • 2 Articles

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