Awards & Winners

F. Hugh Herbert

Date of Birth 29-May-1897
Place of Birth Vienna
(Austria)
Nationality Austria
Also know as Frederick Hugh Herbert, Hugh Herbert, Frederick Hugh Herbert, Hugh Herbert
Profession Screenwriter, Playwright, Writer, Novelist, Film Director
Frederick Hugh Herbert was a playwright, screenwriter, novelist, short story writer, and infrequent film director. Born in Vienna, Austria, Herbert was educated at the University of London. He began his film career in 1926 with two projects starring Conrad Nagel, The Waning Sex and There You Are!, the latter adapted from his play of the same title. His screenwriting credits included Vanity Fair, Fashions of 1934, Smarty in 1934, adapted from his own play; Sitting Pretty, Dark Command, Our Very Own, The Little Hut, and Scudda Hoo! Scudda Hay! and The Girls of Pleasure Island, both of which he also directed. One of Herbert's most enduring creations was the character of American teenager Corliss Archer, who was introduced in his 1943 play Kiss and Tell and immortalized on screen by Shirley Temple in the 1945 film adaptation. The character went on to appear in a series of magazine articles, another Temple film, and a radio and television series called Meet Corliss Archer. Herbert's play The Moon Is Blue had a run of 924 performances on Broadway, which was adapted for the screen version produced and directed by Otto Preminger, who had been responsible for the stage production. The film adaptation, released in 1953, was controversial at the time owing to its frank language and sexual themes. When the Breen office refused to give it a Motion Picture Production Code seal of approval, United Artists opted to release the film without one, and the success of the film was instrumental in weakening the long-standing influence of the Code.

Awards by F. Hugh Herbert

Check all the awards nominated and won by F. Hugh Herbert.

1954


Nominations 1954 »

Award Nominated Nominated Work
Writers Guild of America Award for Best Written Comedy The Moon Is Blue

1949


Writers Guild of America Award for Best Written Comedy
Honored for : Sitting Pretty

Nominations 1949 »

Award Nominated Nominated Work
Writers Guild of America Award for Best Written Comedy Sitting Pretty