- Adela Rogers St. Johns
Adela Rogers St. Johns "née" Adela Nora Rogers (
May 20 ,1894 Los Angeles, California -August 10 ,1988 Arroyo Grande, California ) was an Americanjournalist ,novelist , andscreenwriter . She wrote a number of screenplays for silent movies and, late in life, appeared with other early twentieth-century figures as one of the "witnesses" inWarren Beatty 's "Reds", but she is most remembered for her groundbreaking exploits as a "girl reporter" during the 1920s and 1930s.Career
The daughter of a prominent Los Angeles criminal lawyer,
Earl Rogers , who was friends with publishing magnateWilliam Randolph Hearst , she got her first job at age 19 working as a reporter for Hearst's "San Francisco Examiner ". She reported on crime, politics, society, and sports news before retiring in the early 1920s. St. Johns then became noted for interviewing movie stars for "Photoplay " magazine. She also wrote short stories for "Cosmopolitan", "The Saturday Evening Post ", and other magazines and finished nine of her 13 screenplays before returning to reporting for Hearst newspapers.Writing in a distinctive, emotional style, St. Johns reported on, among other subjects, the controversial
Jack Dempsey –Gene Tunney “long-count” fight in 1927, the treatment of the poor during theGreat Depression , and the 1935 trial ofRichard Bruno Hauptmann for kidnapping and murdering the son ofCharles Lindbergh . In the mid-1930s she moved to Washington, D.C., to report on national politics. Her coverage of the assassination of SenatorHuey Long in 1935, the abdication of King Edward VIII in 1936, the Democratic National Convention of 1940, and other major stories made her one of the best-known reporters of the day. St. Johns retired again from newspaper work in 1948 in order to write books, and to teach at a series of universities. In 1962 she published "Final Verdict", a biography of her fatherEarl Rogers .In 1976, at the age of 82, she returned to reporting for the "Examiner" to cover the bank robbery and conspiracy trial of
Patty Hearst , granddaughter of her former employer.St. Johns was awarded the
United States Medal of Freedom in 1970.In 1980, she appeared to great effect in the television documentary series "Hollywood (documentary)|Hollywood: A Celebration of the American Silent Film." [cite video
people =Brownlow, Kevin; Gill, David
title = [http://www.amazon.com/Hollywood-1-James-Mason/dp/6301931556 Hollywood: A Celebration of the American Silent Film.]
medium =video
publisher =Thames Video Production
location =
date =1980] Her animated and forthright commentaries on such stars of the period includingRudolph Valentino ,Greta Garbo andGloria Swanson were a highlight of this much lauded production.Well into her 80s, St. Johns was a frequent guest on Jack Parr's "Tonight Show" and one night Parr noted that St. Johns had known many of the legends of Hollywood's so-called Golden years and was once rumored to have had Clark Gable's baby. St. Johns replied, "Well who wouldn't have wanted to have Clark Gables baby" and left us all wondering. Parr then noted that St. Johns had enjoyed a rather incredible life and asked if there was anything she wanted to do that she had not yet done? St. Johns paused with her ancient eyes flashing and replied, "I just want to live long enough to see how it all turns out."
Works
Films, as an actress
*"Reds" (1981)
Books
*"
A Free Soul " (New York, Cosmopolitan Book Corporation, 1927) -- The film was made in 1931.
*"" (1959)
*"Final Verdict " (Doubleday, 1962) "New York Times " best selling biography.
*"Tell No Man " (1966) Bestseller, fictional memoir about a clergy's religious awakening.
*"The Honeycomb " (1969) Her autobiography*"
Some are Born Great " (1974)
*"Love, Laughter, and Tears " (1978)
*"" (1982)creen/Teleplays
*"
Alfred Hitchcock Presents " TV series, episode " [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0508212/ Never Again] " (1955)
*"General Electric Theater ", The Crime of Daphne Rutledge (1954) TV Episode
*"The Girl Who Had Everything " (1953) (based on her novel "A Free Soul")
*"Smart Woman " (1948)
*"That Brennan Girl " (1946)
*"Government Girl " (1943)
*"The Great Man's Lady " (1942)
*"Back in Circulation " (1937)
*"A Star Is Born" (1937) (uncredited)
*"A Woman's Man " (1934)
*"Miss Fane's Baby Is Stolen " (1934)
*"What Price Hollywood? " (1932)
*"A Free Soul " (1931)
*"The Single Standard " (1929)
*"Scandal " (1929)
*"Lilac Time " (1928)
*"The Heart of a Follies Girl " (1928)
*"The Arizona Wildcat " (1927)
*"The Patent Leather Kid " (1927)
*"Singed " (1927)
*"Children of Divorce " (1927)
*"The Broncho Twister " (1927)
*"The Wise Guy " (1926)
*"The Skyrocket " (1926)
*"The Red Kimona " (1925)
*"Lady of the Night " (1925)
*"Inez from Hollywood " ("The Worst Woman in Hollywood") (1924)
*"Broken Laws " (1924)
*"The Secret Code " (1918)
*"Marked Cards " (1918)
*"Old Love for New " (1918)References
External links
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