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George Whitfield Cook III (April 9, 1909 – November 12, 2003) was an American writer of screenplays, stage plays, short stories and novels, best known for his contributions to two Alfred Hitchcock films, Stage Fright and Strangers on a Train.
Whitfield Cook was born on 9 April 1909 in Madison, New Jersey, USA. He was a writer, known for Strangers on a Train (1951), Stage Fright (1950) and High Barbaree (1947). He died on 12 November 2003 in New London, Connecticut, USA.
- Writer
- April 9, 1909
- Whitfield Cook
- November 12, 2003
Dec 15, 2012 · The film: Alma Reville and screenwriter Whitfield Cook begin writing a script together at a secluded beach house. The two become very intimate, with the womanizing...
Whitfield Cook was born on 9 April 1909 in Madison, New Jersey, USA. He was a writer, known for Strangers on a Train (1951), Stage Fright (1950) and High Barbaree (1947). He died on 12 November 2003 in New London, Connecticut, USA.
- April 9, 1909
- November 12, 2003
Writer Whitfield Cook satisfied the filmmaker with his treatment of the story, but it is here that real problems began for Hitchcock, eager to make a successful thriller that would wipe away the memory of financially lacklustre couple of projects at the end of the previous decade.
Nov 20, 2012 · “Alma Hitchcock In the movie’s wildest flight of fancy, Hitchcock grows paranoid that his wife is having an affair with Whitfield Cook (Danny Huston), a TV writer who also worked on ‘Stage...
Whitfield Cook is known as an Screenplay, Writer, and Adaptation. Some of their work includes Strangers on a Train, Stage Fright, The Secret Heart, High Barbaree, Big City, Once You Meet a Stranger, and The Sailor Takes a Wife.