Adrian Scott


Robert Adrian Scott was an American screenwriter and film producer. He was one of the Hollywood Ten and later blacklisted by the Hollywood movie studio bosses.

Life and career

Early life

Scott was born in Arlington, New Jersey, the son of successful Irish Catholic parents — his father worked in middle management for the New York Telephone Company. Arlington was one of the centres of the American textile industry, a key site in the history of industrial capitalism and a hotbed of radical labour agitation. Arlington is 12 miles south of Paterson, where the 1913 strike of 25,000 silk workers brought together socialists, Wobblies and Greenwich Village intellectuals. In 1926, when Scott was 15, 20,000 textile workers in nearby Passaic, New Jersey, closed down the mills.
Scott's older brother Allan was a playwright whose comedy Goodbye Again ran on Broadway for most of 1933.
Adrian's college yearbook in Amherst College described him: "Hat cocked back at a rakish angle, cigar in the corner of his mouth, his fingers playing nimbly over the typewriter keys, the inimitable R.A.L. Scott."
Scott graduated from Amherst in 1934. He was a film critic and associate editor of Stage magazine from 1936 through 1938. He moved to Hollywood, California in 1939.

Screenwriter

Scott broke into Hollywood as a screenwriter. He worked on the script for Keeping Company at MGM, We Go Fast at 20th Century Fox and The Parson of Panamint at Paramount. Scott wrote Mr. Lucky at RKO, which was a huge hit.

Producer

RKO signed Scott to work as a producer. His first credit in that capacity was My Pal Wolf. He went on to produce Murder, My Sweet, an adaption of Farewell My Lovely by Raymond Chandler by John Paxton that was directed by Edward Dmytryk. It was a critical and commercial success. The cast included Dick Powell, who revitalised his career in the role of Philip Marlowe, and Ann Shirley who Scott married.
Scott, Dmytryk, Powell and Paxton reunited on Cornered. Scott then produced Deadline at Dawn the only feature film directed by Harold Clurman. He, Dmytryk and Paxton reunited on So Well Remembered shot in England. More successful was Crossfire, another collaboration between the three men. Crossfire was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture and was a popular success.
Scott produced The Boy with Green Hair directed by Joseph Losey and a box office flop. He is also credited on the script for Miss Susie Slagle's at Paramount.

Blacklisting

Scott joined the Communist Party USA in 1944. In October 1947, Scott was called to testify during the House Committee on Un-American Activities hearings on Hollywood but – as did nine others – refused to testify. RKO fired him on October 29, 1947 for refusing to answer questions.
For the first year of the blacklist he returned to journalism, contributing to the London journal Cine-Technician. He was then sentenced to prison along with the other members of the Hollywood Ten. Edward Dmytryk, another of these Hollywood Ten, later, in 1951 testified before the HUAC that Scott pressured him to put communist propaganda in his films.
In 1955, Scott published an essay entitled "Blacklist: The Liberal's Straightjacket and It's Effect on Content" in Hollywood Review.
From 1954–1961 Scott made a living writing for television. Among the shows he worked on were The Adventures of Robin Hood and The Adventures of Sir Lancelot. He provided the story for Conspiracy of Hearts under a pseudonym.
He moved to England in 1961.
In 1963, MGM England hired Scott as a production executive, effectively ending his blacklisting.

Later career

Scott attempted to make a return to feature film production in 1967 by producing a new adaption of Monsieur Lecoq; the film was never finished. Film stills featuring the movie's actress Julie Newmar were featured in the September 1969 edition of Playboy.
Shortly before his death, Scott made a television adaption of The Great Man's Whiskers and was credited with his legal name.

Personal life

Scott was married to the actress, Anne Shirley, who subsequently married another screenwriter, Charles Lederer, nephew of Marion Davies. He later married Joan Scott, fellow screenwriter and producer. Joan sometimes served as Adrian's front when he was unable to publish under his own name, and later the surname LaCour was used by both when writing in Hollywood.
Adrian was the brother of screenwriter Allan Scott, who is the father of actress Pippa Scott.
Adrian Scott died from lung cancer in 1972 in Sherman Oaks, California.

Papers

Joan and Adrian Scott's papers can be found at the American Heritage Center in Laramie Wyoming http://www.uwyo.edu/ahc/