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Personal Info

Gender

Male

Birthday

1892-11-26 (132 years old)

Place of Birth

Saratoga Springs, New York, USA

Charles Brackett

Biography:

Charles William Brackett (November 26, 1892 – March 9, 1969) was an American novelist, screenwriter, and film producer. He collaborated with Billy Wilder on sixteen films.

Brackett was born in Saratoga Springs, New York, the son of Mary Emma Corliss and New York State Senator, lawyer, and banker Edgar Truman Brackett. The family's roots traced back to the arrival of Richard Brackett in the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1629, near present-day Springfield, Massachusetts. His mother's uncle, George Henry Corliss, built the Centennial Engine that powered the 1876 Centennial Exposition in Philadelphia. A 1915 graduate of Williams College, he earned his law degree from Harvard University. He joined the Allied Expeditionary Force during World War I. He was awarded the French Medal of Honor. He was a frequent contributor to the Saturday Evening Post, Collier's, and Vanity Fair, and a drama critic for The New Yorker. He wrote five novels: The Counsel of the Ungodly (1920), Week-End (1925), That Last Infirmity (1926), and American Colony (1929). and Entirely Surrounded (1934).

Brackett was a president of the Screen Writers Guild (1938–1939) and the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (1949–1955). He either wrote and/or produced over forty films, including To Each His Own, Ninotchka, The Major and the Minor, The Mating Season (1951), Niagara, The King and I, Ten North Frederick, The Remarkable Mr. Pennypacker, and Blue Denim.

Beginning in August 1936, Brackett worked with Billy Wilder, writing the film classics The Lost Weekend and Sunset Boulevard, both of which won Academy Awards for their respective screenplays. Brackett described their collaboration process as follows: "The thing to do was suggest an idea, have it torn apart and despised. In a few days, it would be apt to turn up, slightly changed, as Wilder's idea. Once I got adjusted to that way of working, our lives were simpler."

His partnership with Wilder ended in 1950 and Brackett went to work at 20th Century-Fox as a screenwriter and producer. His script for Titanic (1953) won him another Academy Award.

He received an Honorary Oscar for Lifetime Achievement in 1958.

Charles Brackett died on March 9, 1969. His diaries covering his screenwriting and social life from 1932 to 1949 were edited by Anthony Slide into Slide's book It's the Pictures That Got Small: Charles Brackett on Billy Wilder and Hollywood's Golden Age.

Known For

Acting

2014

And the Oscar Goes To... as Self (archive footage)

1953

The Oscars as Self

1950

The Screen Writer as Self (uncredited)

Production

1962

State Fair as Producer

1960

High Time as Producer

1958

The Gift of Love as Producer

1957

The Wayward Bus as Producer

1956

1954

Garden of Evil as Producer
Woman's World as Producer

1953

Titanic as Producer
Niagara as Producer

1950

Sunset Boulevard as Producer

1948

1946

To Each His Own as Producer

1945

The Lost Weekend as Producer

1944

The Uninvited as Producer

1943

Five Graves to Cairo as Associate Producer

Writing

1956

Teenage Rebel as Writer

1953

Titanic as Screenplay
Niagara as Writer

1950

Sunset Boulevard as Screenplay
Edge of Doom as Writer

1948

A Foreign Affair as Screenplay

1946

To Each His Own as Screenplay

1945

The Lost Weekend as Screenplay

1943

Five Graves to Cairo as Screenplay

1941

Ball of Fire as Screenplay

1940

Arise, My Love as Screenplay

1939

Ninotchka as Screenplay
Midnight as Screenplay
What a Life as Screenplay

1938

1937

Live, Love and Learn as Screenplay

1936

Piccadilly Jim as Writer
Rose of the Rancho as Screenplay
Woman Trap as Story

1935

Without Regret as Writer
College Scandal as Screenplay
Enter Madame as Writer
The Last Outpost as Adaptation

1929

Pointed Heels as Short Story

1926

Directing

Crew

1947

The Bishop's Wife as Additional Writing