L. V. Jefferson (born Louis Victor Jefferson) was an American screenwriter and short story author. He claimed to be capable of automatic writing and was an influence on Jane Wolfe. He credited looking into a crystal ball with empowering him.[1] He was born in Carthage, Missouri.[citation needed] He worked in the Western scenario department for Universal.[2] He also wrote for Triangle and worked with Irvin Willat of Willat Studios.[3]
L.V. Jefferson | |
---|---|
Born | Louis Victor Jefferson May 14, 1873 |
Died | November 30, 1959 86) | (aged
Nationality | American |
Occupation | Screenwriter |
Spouse | Gertrude Lambley |
Filmography
- The Grail (1915)[4]
- The Making of Maddalena (1916) from a play by Samuel Service and Mary Service
- The House of Lies (1916), co-writer
- Her Father's Son (1916), co-writer
- Redeeming Love (1916), story[5]
- The House with the Golden Windows (1916)
- Out of the Wreck (1917), story[5]
- The Sawdust Ring (1917)
- A Square Deal (1917)
- Ten of Diamonds (1917), from a story by Albert Cowles
- Put Up Your Hands (1919)
- Charge It to Me (1919)
- The Kentucky Colonel (1920)
- Riders of the Dawn (1920), co-writer of adaptation from a Zane Grey novel
- The Desert Scorpion (1920), story
- Crossing Trails (1921)
- The Face of the World (1921)[4]
- Partners of the Tide (1921)[4]
- Daring Danger (1922)[4]
- Tracks (1922)
- The Redeeming Sin (1925), based on Jefferson's short story
- The Cloud Rider (1925)[4]
- The Primtose Path (1925)[4]
- Flying High (1926)[4]
- The Set-Up (1926)
- The Escape (1926)[4]
- Three Pals (1926)
- The Flag: A Story Inspired by the Tradition of Betsy Ross (1927)
- Temptations of a Shop Girl (1927)
- One Chance in a Million (1927)
- The Haunted Homestead (1927)[4]
- Catch as Catch Can (1927)[4]
- Born to Battle (1927)[4]
- Laddie Be Good (1928), co-writer
- A Gentleman Preferred (1928), co-writer
- China Slaver (1929), co-writer from a story by Calvin Holivey and Rupert Hughes
- Pueblo Terror (1931)
- Trails of the Golden West (1931)
- His Debt (1919), story
- Lightning Range (1933)
- The Fighting Cowboy (1933)[4]
- The Pecos Dandy (1934)
- Twisted Rails (1934), story author and screenplay co-writer
- The Test (1935), continuity and dialogue
- $20 a Week (1935)
- Riddle Ranch (1935)
- The Lion's Den (1936)
References
External links
Wikiwand in your browser!
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.