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  1. Lillie Hayward

    American screenwriter

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  1. Seena Owen (sister) Lillie Hayward (born Lillian Olenda Auen, September 12, 1891 – June 29, 1977) was an American screenwriter whose Hollywood career began during the silent era and continued well into the age of television . She wrote for more than 70 films and TV shows including the Disney film The Shaggy Dog and television series The ...

  2. Lillie Hayward (1889-1977) Lillie Hayward. A former musician, Hayward entered the film industry in 1919 as a script editor. She later worked her way up to screenwriter and spent a number of years under contract to Warner Bros., where she specialized in action films. Hayward also wrote a number of "B" movies for Paramount and RKO studios.

    • Writer, Additional Crew, Producer
    • September 12, 1889
    • Lillie Hayward
    • June 29, 1977
  3. Lillie Hayward was born in St. Paul, Minnesota, in 1889, the daughter of Danish immigrants (her birth name was Lillie Auen). When Lillie was two years old her parents moved to Oregon, and later settled in Spokane, Washington. Her sister Signe had dreams of becoming an actress and in 1914 traveled to Hollywood to give it a try.

    • September 12, 1889
    • June 29, 1977
  4. Lillie Hayward was an American screenwriter who worked in Hollywood from the silent era to the age of television. She wrote for more than 70 films and TV shows, including The Shaggy Dog, The Walking Dead, and Aloma of the South Seas.

  5. Feb 11, 2007 · Lillie Hayward followed on June 29, 1977, also in Hollywood. Their deaths passed without mention in the Spokane newspapers. After that 1926 interview, it seems that Spokane had forgotten about the ...

  6. Lillie Hayward was an American screenwriter whose Hollywood career began during the silent era and continued well into the age of television.

  7. Lillie Hayward entered the motion picture industry in 1919 as a script editor, gradually working her way up the ladder to full screenwriter in 1924. Hayward spent most of the 1930s at Warner Bros., specializing in action fare. She also worked on two of the best-ever Hollywood "B"s: Paramount's The Biscuit Eater (1940) and RKO's Follow Me ...

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