- Alfred A. Cohn
Alfred A. Cohn (
March 26 1880 —February 3 1951 ) was anauthor ,journalist andnewspaper editor,Police Commissioner , andscreenwriter of the 1920s and 1930s. He is best remembered for his work on "The Jazz Singer", which was nominated for (but did not win) anAcademy Award for Writing Adapted Screenplay in the1st Academy Awards of 1929.Cohn was born in
Freeport, Illinois but subsequently moved toCleveland, Ohio where he began work as anewspaper editor andjournalist . He then moved toGalveston, Texas where he ran a newspaper.Following his career in journalism, he moved to
Arizona and participated as a secretary in theArizona constitutional convention which led to its statehood in 1912.In the 1920s, he moved to
Los Angeles, California and began working as a writer, first doingtitle card s forsilent films and, later, scripts and adaptations. His work on adapting The Jazz Singer, one of the first motion pictures with sound, from a play and short story bySamson Raphaelson , led to his first and only nomination for an Academy Award. During this period, he was a prolific writer and wrote more than 100 scripts, roughly 40 of which were produced into films.In the 1930s, he retired from screenwriting and was appointed the
Police Commissioner of Los Angeles , and he continued writing as a short story writer. He died of a heart condition in 1951.External links
*imdb name|id=0169879|name=Alfred A. Cohn
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