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Kenneth Gamet. Writer: Everybody's Hobby. Kenneth Gamet was born on 23 October 1903 in Little Sioux, Iowa, USA. He was a writer and producer, known for Everybody's Hobby (1939), Missing Witnesses (1937) and Last of the Comanches (1953).
- Writer, Producer
- October 23, 1903
- Kenneth Gamet
- October 13, 1971
Kenneth Gamet. Writer: Everybody's Hobby. Kenneth Gamet was born on 23 October 1903 in Little Sioux, Iowa, USA. He was a writer and producer, known for Everybody's Hobby (1939), Missing Witnesses (1937) and Last of the Comanches (1953).
- October 23, 1903
- October 13, 1971
Case Of The Stuttering Bishop, The (1937) -- (Movie Clip) Bishops Don't Often Need Lawyers First shot for Donald Woods as Perry Mason in his only outing as the lead character in the last feature in the Warner Bros. series, briefly Ann Dvorak as assistant Della, then Edward McWade as, it seems, a bishop, his first spoken lines, in The Case Of The Stuttering Bishop, 1937, from an Erle Stanley ...
American screenwriter Kenneth Gamet joined the Warner Bros. "B" unit in 1937. Gamet's contributions to Warners' included three of the four "Nancy Drew" "B" pictures. From Universal's Pittsburgh (1942) onward, Gamet was among the most frequent writers for John Wayne, collaborating on the scripts of The Duke's Flying Tigers (1943) and Flying ...
Gamet wrote scripts for radio, screen, and television; he was a co-founder of the Screen Writers Guild, and scripted more than 50 feature films, concluding with Apache Rifle (1964); he then specialized in telewriting; he died on October 13, 1971 in Los Angeles.Kenneth Gamet was a screenwriter and playwrite who began his career ca. 1936, collaborating during his early years with Don Ryan.
Kenneth C. Gamet, Jr. GREECE - Kenneth C. Gamet, Jr., passed away Aug. 26, 2023 at age 83. He is predeceased by his parents, Kenneth C. Gamet, Sr. and Doris Gamet (Ward). Kenneth is survived by his wi
Co-screenwriter Kenneth Gamet toiled in the studio trenches as well, re-writing older pictures and scripting the entire Nancy Drew series. Both Gamet and co-writer Don Ryan were ex-newspapermen, which helped them frame this story inspired by prosecutor Thomas E. Dewey, who had made headlines fighting organized crime in New York City.