Recherchez un film ou une personnalité :
FacebookConnexionInscription
Clara Beranger est une Scénariste Américaine née le 14 janvier 1886 à Baltimore (Etats-Unis)

Clara Beranger

Clara Beranger
Si vous aimez cette personne, faites-le savoir !
Nom de naissance Clara Strouse
Nationalité Etats-Unis
Naissance 14 janvier 1886 à Baltimore (Etats-Unis)
Mort 10 septembre 1956 (à 70 ans) à Hollywood (Etats-Unis)

Clara Beranger est une scénariste américaine née le 14 janvier 1886 à Baltimore dans le Maryland aux États-Unis, décédée le 10 septembre 1956 à Hollywood (États-Unis).

Biographie

Born Clara Strouse in Baltimore, Maryland to Benjamin and Fannie (Kahn) Strouse. Benjamin and his brothers had emigrated from Germany and opened a dry-goods store in Indiana.

After graduating from Goucher College with a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1907, Clara went into journalism, writing for various popular magazines and devoting time to study the stage. She married Albert Berwanger with whom she had a daughter, Frances Berwanger in 1909. When she began to write, Frances would change her name to Beranger.



Freelance
Using the pseudonym of Charles S. Beranger, her first screen employment was as a freelancer, writing for the Edison, Vitagraph and Kalem companies, to whom she furnished many originals as well as continuities. Her success attracted some attention and she was appointed as a staff writer for the Fox Corporation. She wrote several scripts for the popular child star Baby Marie Osborne as well as a much-praised adaptation of A Tale of Two Cities. Beranger also wrote The Interloper for Kitty Gordon, The Bluffer for June Elvidge and The Mirror for Marjorie Rambeau, though many of these films are considered lost. With Forrest Halsey, Beranger wrote the stage play, His Chinese Wife, which received good reviews and became one of the successes of the 1919–1920 season.


The Famous Players-Lasky
In 1921, Clara took Frances, then twelve, and migrated to Hollywood to write for motion pictures, where she signed a long contract with Cecil B. DeMille's Famous Players-Lasky; the outfit with whom she is most associated. She wrote or contributed to more than 24 DeMille productions, and produced both Come Out of the Kitchen and Girls for Marguerite Clark; Sadie Love and Wanted: A Husband for Billie Burke; Judy of Rogue's Harbor for Mary Miles Minter; The Fear Market for Alice Brady; The Cost for Violet Heming; Half an Hour for Dorothy Dalton; Civilian Clothes for Thomas Meighan, Notoriety for Bebe Daniels and the long-lasting classic Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde for John Barrymore.


From an interview with Louella Parson in 1922: I will be out in California when Mr. DeMille begins operations. Under my old contract I furnished eight continuities a year; now that I work only for William DeMille I only write four. That gives me an opportunity to see my work through from the story to the screen. It makes it possible for me to go over my script scene by scene with the producer, so he can make the picture with almost no changes. In the old days I had to keep my nose to the grindstone continually so as to finish the eight pictures in time for the different directors for whom I was writing."
William DeMille
In 1921 Beranger met her future husband William DeMille and work on the adaptation of Miss Lulu Bett, the Pulitzer Prize-winning play about a young woman who discovers that she’s married to a man who is already married. Not as famous today as Cecil, and though most of his silents have been lost, William is still considered one of the silents' most respected directors. Miss Lulu Bett shows a delicate touch in the telling of an impoverished spinster's misfortunes in a small town.

William had other affairs including Lorna Moon who had borne him a son out of wedlock, and with another screenwriter, Olga Printzlau; but he genuinely fell in love with Clara who had tolerated it all. In June 1926, William to the surprise of his wife, announced that he wanted a divorce. Anna refused him and took their daughters, Agnes and Margaret, to Europe for a long trip. When the family returned, William announced that he had given up Beranger and would try again with his wife, but this arrangement only lasted about a year. Anna never recovered from the divorce, and took the children to live in New York permanently. William DeMille (50) and Clara Beranger (42) would be married in Albuquerque, New Mexico on August 14, 1928 in the drawing room aboard "The Chief", a transcontinental special train.

After marrying into the DeMille dynasty, Beranger would continue to write, including Craig's Wife (1928) for Irene Rich and This Mad World (1930) for Kay Johnson. William would lose everything in the Depression and unhappily rely on Beranger to support him, until Beranger asked Cecil DeMille to employ him to write scenarios.


USC School of Cinematic Arts
Baranger would retire from writing pictures in 1934, though she remained a frequent contributor to magazines such as Liberty and Good Housekeeping, and writer of inspirational books. Beranger's largest impact would be as one of the original faculty of USC School of Cinematic Arts which had begun in 1929 as a collaboration between the University of Southern California and Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Also among the original faculty were actors Douglas Fairbanks and Mary Pickford, directors D.W. Griffith and Ernst Lubitsch, and producers Irving Thalberg and Darryl Zanuck. Cecil would endow the Drama Department, to which William would be appointed as Director, at last allowing him to exploit his education and skills as a teacher and director.

Beranger was a large proponent of the idea that Hollywood had a responsibility to teach the next generation of artists, and would write a much-used text Writing for the Screen in 1950 and continue to lecture on screenwriting for the rest of her life. She suffered a heart attack and died in 1956.

Le plus souvent avec

Adolph Zukor
Adolph Zukor
(16 films)
Jesse L. Lasky
Jesse L. Lasky
(13 films)
Ethel Wales
Ethel Wales
(6 films)
Agnes Ayres
Agnes Ayres
(6 films)
Source : Wikidata

Filmographie de Clara Beranger (43 films)

Afficher la filmographie sous forme de liste

Scénariste

His Double Life, 1h8
Réalisé par William C. de Mille
Origine Etats-Unis
Genres Drame, Comédie, Comédie dramatique
Acteurs Roland Young, Lillian Gish, Montagu Love, Lumsden Hare, Lucy Beaumont, Charles Richman
Rôle Responsable de l'adaptation
Note63% 3.1908253.1908253.1908253.1908253.190825
Priam Farrel est un artiste célèbre mais un solitaire social. Lorsque son valet meurt d'une maladie soudaine, une confusion conduit à identifier le corps comme celui de Farrel. L'artiste timide assume alors l'identité de son ancien serviteur, mais se trouve en conséquence confronté à des dilemmes constants.
The Idle Rich, 1h20
Réalisé par William C. de Mille
Origine Etats-Unis
Genres Comédie, Comédie romantique
Thèmes Adaptation d'une pièce de théâtre
Acteurs Conrad Nagel, Bessie Love, Leila Hyams, James Neill, Edythe Chapman
Rôle Ecrivain
Note58% 2.910152.910152.910152.910152.91015
Wealthy businessman William "Will" Van Luyn (Conrad Nagel) proposes to his secretary, Joan Thayer (Leila Hyams). She accepts, but worries how her family will react. When he meets them for the first time, little sister Helen (Bessie Love) is delighted by the advantages he will bring, but cousin Henry starts lecturing him on the virtues of the downtrodden middle class. The rich can afford medical treatment, and the poor can rely on the government to pay the bills, but the middle class has to shoulder the financial burden on its own. Nevertheless, Will marries Joan.