Edward Salisbury Field


Edward "Ned" Salisbury Field was an American author, playwright, artist, poet, and journalist. He was born in Indianapolis, Indiana to Edward Salisbury and Sarah Mills Hubbard Field. He was the husband of Isobel Osbourne and step-father of playwright Austin Strong.
Field was an employee and friend of William Randolf Hearst where he made drawings for Hearst newspapers, signing his drawings "Childe Harold". As a young news man in his 20s, Field became the secretary, protégé, and possibly lover of Fanny Stevenson, after the death of her husband Robert Louis Stevenson. After Fanny's death in 1914, Field married her daughter, Isobel Osbourne, who was 20 years his senior. Field became a successful Southern California real estate developer. In the 1920s, oil was discovered on some of his property which made them wealthy. In 1926 Field purchased Zaca Lake and surrounding land on Figueroa Mountain near Los Olivos, California. His wife, Isobel, built an artists studio there, and the Field home became a popular meeting place for writers and actors.
Field's best known works were the film scripts for Wedding Bells and Twin Beds. The screwball comedy novel Twin Beds was filmed four times; as Twin Beds in 1920 starring Carter and Flora Parker DeHaven; Twin Beds in 1929 starring Jack Mulhall; as The Life of the Party in 1934; and as Twin Beds in 1942 with George Brent and Joan Bennett. It was also adapted to stage, co-written with Margaret Mayo.
Field died September 20, 1936, at Zaca Lake. He was 58 years old.