Walter D. Edmonds
Walter D. Edmonds was born on Jul 15, 1903 in USA. Walter D. Edmonds's big-screen debut came with The Farmer Takes a Wife directed by Victor Fleming in 1935.
American novelist Walter Dumaux Edmonds graduated from Harvard University in 1926, While at Harvard he was president of the Harvard Advocate magazine. A course in English awakened his interest in writing, and while still at the Advocate he submitted a story to "Scribner's" magazine, which published it. His first novel, "Rome Haul", was about the Erie Canal and sold well, eventually being turned into a Broadway play ("The Farmer Takes a Wife") by Marc Connelly and then being sold to Hollywood, where it ended up as John Ford's Sur la piste des Mohawks (1939) (on which he served as Technical Advisor).
Birthday
Jul 15, 1903Place of Birth
Boonville, New York, USA
Movies & TV Shows
- 1939
writer
7.0 - 1935
writer
6.4