Dubbed the “Shakespeare of Hollywood,” legendary film writer Ben Hecht brings two of his short stories to the screen in this pair of featurettes — both set in (and distinctly critical of) Hollywood. In Actor’s Blood, a has-been stage actor (Edward G. Robinson) becomes overly involved in his daughter’s (Marsha Hunt) career. In Woman of Sin, a Hollywood agent (Eddie Albert) discovers that a 9-year-old penned the sexy screenplay he’s hawking.
A propboy at Thomas H. Ince Studios in the mid teens, Garmes (1898-1978) became an assistant cameraman in the early ‘20s, working on numerous short comedies and several feature films. He became a director of photography by the mid ’20s, and over the next 40 years lensed films for Rex Ingram, Josef von Sternberg, Howard Hawks, King Vidor, Edmund Goulding, Alfred Hitchcock and Frank Borzage; he also shot much of Gone with the Wind, but was uncredited. Garmes was director of photography and associate director with collaborating writer/directors Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur (Crime Without Passion, The Scoundrel) and with Hecht alone (Angels Over Broadway, Actors and Sin). Garmes also co-directed The Sky’s the Limit with Jack Buchanan. —allmovie guide
Ben Hecht, one of Hollywood & Broadway’s greatest writers, won an Oscar for best original story for Underworld (1927) at the first Academy Awards in 1929 and had a hand in the writing of many classic films. He was nominated five more times for the best writing Oscar, winning (along with writing partner and friend Charles MacArthur, with whom he wrote the classic play The Front Page) for The Scoundrel (1935) (the other nominations were for Viva Villa! (1934) in 1935, Wuthering Heights (1939) (shared with MacArthur), Angels Over Broadway (1940), and Notorious (1946). The latter two for best original screenplay. Hecht wrote fast and he wrote well, and was called upon by many producers as a highly paid script doctor. He was paid $10,000 by producer David O. Selznick for a fast doctoring of the Gone with the Wind (1939) script, for which he received no credit and for which Sidney Howard won an Oscar, beating out Hecht and MacArthur’s “Wuthering Heights” script.
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