Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Laurence Tucker Stallings (November 25, 1894 – February 28, 1968) was an American playwright, screenwriter, lyricist, literary critic, journalist, novelist, and photographer. Best known for his collaboration with Maxwell Anderson on the 1924 play What Price Glory, Stallings also produced a groundbreaking autobiographical novel, Plumes, about ...

  2. What Price Glory is a 1952 American Technicolor war film based on a 1924 play by Maxwell Anderson and Laurence Stallings, [3] though it used virtually none of Anderson's dialogue. [4] Originally intended as a musical, it was filmed as a straight comedy-drama, directed by John Ford and released by 20th Century Fox on August 22, 1952, in the U.S.

  3. People also ask

  4. GU alumnus Laurence Stallings used WWI experience to inspire books, plays, and films. Laurence Stallings, who graduated with a Master’s degree from the School of Foreign Service in 1922, turned his experience as a wounded veteran in the First World War into inspiration for a career as a journalist, author, and playwright.

  5. in Macon, Georgia, The United States. November 25, 1894. Died. February 28, 1968. Genre. Literature & Fiction, History, Playwright & Screenwriter. edit data. Laurence Tucker Stallings was an American playwright, screenwriter, lyricist, literary critic, journalist, novelist, and photographer. The World War I veteran was noted for his anti-war ...

    • (19)
    • February 28, 1968
    • November 25, 1894
  6. Laurence Tucker Stallings, U.S. Marine, columnist, playwright, novelist, and chronicler, was born in Macon, Ga., of a southern family known for its long line of Baptist ministers and its Confederate dead. His father, Larkin Tucker, son of the Reverend Jesse Stallings of Stallings, S.C., was, at the time of Laurence's birth, a teller for the ...

  7. Laurence Stallings. Writer: She Wore a Yellow Ribbon. Laurence Stallings was born on 25 November 1894 in Macon, Georgia, USA. He was a writer, known for She Wore a Yellow Ribbon (1949), The Jungle Book (1942) and Song of the West (1930). He was married to Louise St. Leger Vance and Helen Purefoy Poteat. He died on 28 February 1968 in Pacific Palisades, California, USA.

  1. People also search for