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  1. Maurine Dallas Watkins (July 27, 1896 [a] – August 10, 1969) was an American playwright and screenwriter. Early in her career, she briefly worked as a journalist covering the courthouse beat for the Chicago Tribune.

  2. Jul 16, 1997 · No one knows exactly how Maurine Watkins got her first and last full-time newspaper job, only that she breezed into the Chicago Tribune newsroom on the second day of February in 1924. One story– and there are several– has it that she wrote the city editor a letter that listed 13 reasons why he should hire her and challenged him to find the ...

  3. Jul 16, 1997 · No one knows exactly how Maurine Watkins got her first and last full-time newspaper job, only that she breezed into the Chicago Tribune newsroom on the second day of February in 1924.

  4. Aug 8, 2019 · Watkins used the plot twists of the women’s trials to write a three-act play, “A Brave Little Woman,” the first she would write while attending the new Yale School of Drama in 1926.

  5. Mar 13, 2015 · On an April day in 1924, a Tribune editor sent Maurine Watkins to cover a coroner’s inquest at a South Side funeral home.

  6. American playwright and screenwriter From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Maurine Dallas Watkins (July 27, 1896 – August 10, 1969) was an American playwright and screenwriter. Early in her career, she briefly worked as a journalist covering the courthouse beat for the Chicago Tribune.

  7. Jul 11, 2017 · In 1924, 28-year-old Maurine Dallas Watkins arrived in Chicago, a city quickly becoming a mecca for crime, liquor, and jazz. Watkins was an aspiring writer and playwright from Harvard University, and news writing was recommended as a way for writers to hone their craft and gain exposure to a broad range of human experiences.