Paul Gerard Smith
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Paul Gerard Smith (September 14, 1894 – April 4, 1968) was an American screenwriter. He wrote for 90 films between 1926 and 1955.
Smith started writing musical revues at the age of ten. He joined the Marines for World War I and while still in Germany wrote and directed the Sixth Marine Revue in the Rhine Occupation Area. He arrived back in the States in 1919 and started writing vaudeville acts. He became so successful that he was one of the few writers to be credited on the playbill. He scripted the Ziegfeld Follies of 1924, 1925, and 1926 and was also one of the writers of Funny Face.
Smith was brought to Hollywood by Buster Keaton to work on The General and Battling Butler. Early film credits include In Old Arizona, Mother Knows Best, and Dressed to Kill, as well as the first talkies of Harold Lloyd, Welcome Danger and Feet First. He wrote dozens of B movies for Universal Studios, Fox Film Corporation, Paramount Pictures, RKO Radio Pictures, Warner Bros., and Hal Roach Studios.
He also scripted USO shows and personal appearances for many film and radio stars entertaining overseas. After World War II he returned to film and radio scripting and also wrote and directed some early television programs on ABC, including The Gay Nineties Revue. He returned to stage writing with Hullabaloo for the Pasadena Playhouse.
Acting
Crew
Movie
Feet First
Dialogue
1930
Movie
Welcome Danger
Dialogue
1929
Movie
Just Around the Corner
Story
1938
Movie
Heavenly Music
Screenplay
1943
Movie
Jail Bait
Story
1937
Movie
Tanks a Million
Writer
1941
Movie
Sidewalks of New York
Story
1931
Movie
It's a Joke, Son!
Screenplay
1947
Movie
Love Nest on Wheels
Adaptation
1937
Movie
You're in the Army Now
Screenplay
1941
Movie
Earthworm Tractors
Writer
1936
Movie
Ditto
Writer
1937