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  1. Kathryn Scola (November 6, 1891 – January 4, 1982) was an American screenwriter. She worked on more than thirty films during the 1930s and 1940s. Scola worked in Hollywood for a multitude of prominent production companies during the studio era , including Warner Bros. , Paramount Pictures , and 20th Century Fox . [3]

  2. www.imdb.com › name › nm0778636Kathryn Scola - IMDb

    Kathryn Scola was an American screenwriter, with a career spanning the 1930s and 1940s. She was born in Paterson, New Jersey on November 6, 1891. Her father was Giuseppe "Joseph" Scola (1859-1900), an Italian-American silk dyer.

    • Writer, Script And Continuity Department
    • November 6, 1891
    • Kathryn Scola
    • January 4, 1982
  3. The film stars Ruth Chatterton as Alison Drake, the owner-manager of a family business whose casual affairs with men turn serious once she meets Jim Thorne (George Brent). Like Baby Face, a film we screened at towards the end of the Autumn Term, Female is a pre-code film, written by Gene Markey and Kathryn Scola. It too raises many interesting ...

  4. L. The Lady from Cheyenne. The Lady Who Dared. Lilly Turner. A Lost Lady (1934 film) Luxury Liner (1933 film)

  5. Kathryn Scola is known as an Screenplay, Writer, Story, Adaptation, and Continuity. Some of their work includes Baby Face, Female, Alexander's Ragtime Band, The Constant Nymph, Midnight Mary, Fashions of 1934, The House Across the Bay, and The Glass Key.

  6. Kathryn Scola (1891–1982) was an American screenwriter. She worked on more than thirty films during the 1930s and 1940s. Scola worked in Hollywood for a multitude of prominent production companies during the studio era, including Warner Bros., Paramount Pictures and 20th Century Fox.

  7. The film's scenario was adapted from an Anita Loos story by the team of Gene Markey and Kathryn Scola, a duo who provided plenty of pertinent pre-code proto-feminist sagas during the era, such as Baby Face (1933) and Female (1933). Wellman had a marked fondness for the device of flashing back to the youth of his pivotal characters; in this ...