Charles Gardner Sullivan (September 18, 1884 – September 5, 1965) was an American screenwriter and film producer. He was a prolific writer with more than 350 films among his credits. In 1924, the magazine Story World selected him on a list of the ten individuals who had contributed the most to the advancement of the motion picture industry from its inception forward. Four of Sullivan's films, The Italian (1915), Civilization (1916), Hell's Hinges (1916), and All Quiet on the Western Front (1930), have been listed in the National Film Registry.
In 1907, Sullivan went into the newspaper business, working on the staff of the St. Paul Daily News at a starting salary of six dollars per week.[2] Shortly afterward, Sullivan was assigned to write a column that he later said "was supposed to be a humorous column."[2] He moved to New York where he joined the staff of the New York Evening Journal. While working in New York, a colleague showed him an advertisement by a motion picture company in the Saturday Evening Post inviting new authors to contribute stories.[1][2] Gardner recalled it was that advertisement that got him started with "photoplay writing".[1]
Sullivan's first script was returned to him, and he did not make another submission for some time.[1] The first story he sold was Her Polished Family, which was purchased by Edison Studios for $25.[1][2]
He later submitted a western story to the New York Motion Picture Corporation run by Thomas H. Ince and received a check for $50. In the following months, Ince's company purchased sixty of Sullivan's stories.[1]
Hollywood screenwriter
In 1914, Ince offered Sullivan a full-time job in Hollywood as a member of his movie studio's "scenario staff".[1] By that time, Sullivan had married and was uncertain about moving to California. However, he accepted and for the next decade became the "dean" of Hollywood's screenwriters.[3]
Sullivan began his career in Hollywood writing stories for Ince's two-reel films. He then progressed to full-length feature films, and his stories contributed much to the fame of stars including Dorothy Dalton, Enid Bennett, Louise Glaum and Constance Bennett.
Showing an ability to handle diverse topics, Sullivan also wrote screenplays involving domestic melodrama. These included The Golden Claw and a series of screenplays for silent film femme fatale, Louise Glaum, such as The Wolf Woman (described as "the greatest vampire woman of all time"), Sahara and the provocatively titled Sex (featuring Glaum performing a sensual "spider dance" dressed in a form-fitting cloak of webs).
With the outbreak of World War I, Sullivan also turned his attention to the war. In Shell 43, he told the story of English spy working behind German lines who saves the life of a German officer and is killed in a German trench by an Allied shell.
Perhaps Sullivan's most famous screenplay was Civilization, a big budget anti-war movie in which Jesus appeared on a World War I battlefield. In the film, a Germanic submarine commander refuses to follow orders to fire torpedoes at a ship carrying innocent passengers, saying he is "obeying orders -- from a Higher Power." The submarine is destroyed, and the commander's soul descends into hell, where he encounters Jesus. Jesus announces that the commander can find redemption by having Jesus occupy his body and return to the living world as a voice for peace. The commander is sentenced to death for refusing to follow orders, and at his execution, the spirit of Jesus emerges from his dead body and gives the king of the warring nation a tour of the battlefields. Jesus asks, "See here thy handiwork? Under thy reign, thy domain hath become a raging hell!" In the film's most famous scene, Jesus departs through the bloodied battlefields. The film was a popular success when it was released in 1916. In fact, the 1916 Democratic National Committee credited the film with helping to re-elect President Woodrow Wilson.[5] However, after the entry of the United States into the war, the film was pulled from distribution.[5]
Sullivan returned to the subject of World War I as the supervising story chief for the 1930 film adaptation of All Quiet on the Western Front.
Sullivan prided himself on tackling a diverse range of subject matters, telling an interviewer the following:
I have made all kinds and manner of pictures, none of them the work of a specialist in a certain grooved form. ... The public is fickle. The man who makes pictures for the public must be able to turn from comedy to melodrama, from psychological realism to sophisticated farce, from the big-scale popular spectacle to the cameo of emotions, sentimental drama.[6]
By 1919, Sullivan was the best known screenwriter in Hollywood. The Los Angeles Times wrote of him:
Several years ago, when the newly-formed Triangle organization contributed a new art and finish to the motion picture, there came into great prominence C. Gardner Sullivan, a writer of fine capabilities; a careful, technical craftsman. No author having a contempt for the intellect of his audience -- and many writers of photodramas continue to hold their audiences in contempt -- could have made the success of screen authorship that C. Gardner Sullivan has.[7]
In January 1920, Sullivan left New York for a world tour. He was given a roving commission by Ince allowing him to "leave the studio with a free mind and just browse around wherever fancy dictates; if the spirit should move him he may write a script now and then, 'just for practice,' or he may just store up a fund of mental notes for future use."[8]
In February 1924, the Los Angeles Times reported that the number of feature films produced from the original stories or adaptations of Mr. Sullivan totaled 311 in eight years. The Times noted: "This record undoubtedly is unrivaled among screen authors. Mr. Sullivan's work is all the more remarkable because of the recognition which it has achieved for unvarying quality and variety."[9] At that time, Sullivan described the rule he applied in the selection of a story for the screen:
Is it human, is it true to life, is it sincere? If you can conscientiously satisfy yourself on these things, you won't have to worry as to whether the public will like the story or not. If you are genuinely moved by it, you may be sure that the public will respond in like manner. ... Give the public a story that touches the heart and is true to life, and, to paraphrase Emerson, 'the world will make a beaten path to the theater box office.'[9]
In his book about the history of American screenwriting, Marc Norman wrote that the Ince studio, where Sullivan was the lead writer, was the first to use the screenplay as the blueprint for the entire production, marking a departure from earlier productions in which the "screenplay" was simply "a one-page précis of the film's narrative."[10] Indeed, Sullivan's scripts detailed locations, the number of actors, costumes, and even the blocking of the shoot.[10] Norman pointed to the following excerpt from the Hell's Hinges script as an example of the directorial detail contained in Sullivan's work:
Scene L: Close-Up on Bar in Western Saloon A group of good western types of the earlier period are drinking at the bar and talking idly -- much good fellowship prevails and every man feels at ease with his neighbor -- one of them glances off the picture and the smile fades from his face to be replaced by the strained look of worry -- the others notice the change and follow his gaze -- their face reflect his own emotions -- be sure to get over a good contrast between the easy good nature that had prevailed and the unnatural, strained silence that follows -- as they look, cut.[10]
Once Sullivan's scripts were completed, Thomas Ince would stamp them "Produce exactly as written," leaving little to the discretion of the directors and cameramen. By setting every detail of the scene in words, Sullivan was able to "control the outcome of the film he saw in his mind's eye."[10]
Producer and screenwriter
In September 1924, Sullivan entered the production end of the business forming a new production company called C. Gardner Sullivan Productions. The company produced Cheap Kisses, a 1924 comedy drama,[11][12] and If Marriage Fails, both based on screenplays written by Sullivan.
In the late 1920s, Sullivan signed on with Cecil B. DeMille as a producer. While working with DeMille, Sullivan made such films as The Yankee Clipper. In 1927, he was referred to as "the man who knows box office":
C. Gardner Sullivan, creator of 365 box-office hits, maker of 'The Yankee Clipper,' ... as well as of 'White Gold,' ... producer for the De Mille studios, whose reputation is that of 'the man who knows box office,' is the man who chose to film a story as truth rather than as 'mush for the morons' ...[6]
With the arrival of censorship in the motion picture industry, Sullivan was an outspoken critic of the practice. In 1931, Sullivan argued publicly that censorship was impeding the presentation of satire in motion pictures. He noted that "some of the finest examples of screen writing are being rejected because their keen satire would be resented by some strata of society."[13]
Sullivan remained active as a screenwriter in the 1930s with works including DeMille's 1938 adventure film The Buccaneer. His final film credit was the story of Jackass Mail, a 1942 western directed by Norman Z. McLeod and starring Wallace Beery.
Personal life and death
Sullivan married actress Ann May on February 14, 1925 in Santa Ana.[14] They had four children together; daughter Sheilah Dree, and sons Charles Gardner, Michael Patrick, and Timothy Reese.[15][16] He was an avid golfer and crossword puzzle enthusiast.
In 1924, the magazine Story World selected a list of the ten individuals who had contributed the most to the advancement of the motion picture industry from the time of its inception. The list included Gardner (the only screenwriter on the list), director D.W. Griffith, actors Charlie Chaplin and Mary Pickford, Carl Laemmle (founder of Universal Studios), Charles Francis Jenkins (inventor of the motion picture projector), producer Thomas H. Ince, and art director Wilfred Buckland.[18][19]
The Buccaneer (1958) (based on Sullivan's 1938 screenplay)
References
^ abcdefg"Human Note Desired for Film Stories". Oakland Tribune. December 31, 1916.
^ abcdCarolyn Lowrey (1920). The first one hundred noted men and women of the screen, p. 176.
^"Newspaper Writer Author of Screen Play". Winnipeg Free Press. January 3, 1920.
^ ab"Latest Shorty Story: Feature Picture at Bijou Theatre For the Remainder of the Week". Newport Daily News. November 20, 1914. ("The feature picture at the Bijou Theatre for the remainder of the week is the Broncho two-reel film, 'Shorty and Sherlock Holmes,' the latest release of the well known Shorty stories by C. Gardner Sullivan and Thomas H. Ince.")
^ abScott Rivers (September 7, 1996). "1916 Film Brings Jesus to Battlefield". The Salt Lake Tribune.
^ abcd"Sullivan Knows His Box Office: Producer of 'White Gold' Says Studio Must Watch Change in Public". Los Angeles Times. March 27, 1927.
^ ab"A Bred-In-The-Bone Scenario Writer: Sullivan Learned Game Right in Picture Studio". Los Angeles Times. July 27, 1919. ("This brilliant author is found at his best, it is said, in his newest drama, 'Sahara' ...")
^"Cinema Close-Ups". Oakland Tribune. December 2, 1919.
^ ab"'The Play's the Thing': Successful Screen Writer Declares Substance of Film Story More Important Than Source". Los Angeles Times. February 17, 1924.
^ abcdMarc Norman (2008). What Happens Next: A History of American Screenwriting, pp. 44-45. Three Rivers Press.
^"Author Tries Films". Oakland Tribune. April 19, 1924.
^"Garrick Screens 'Cheap Kisses': Sullivan Film Story Shows Perils to Youth Along the Cocktail Route". Winnipeg Free Press. May 9, 1925.
^"Censors Impeding Satire, Says C. Gardner Sullivan". Syracuse Herald. November 8, 1931.
^"C.G. Sullivan Rites Slated for Tuesday". Los Angeles Times. September 6, 1965.
^"Ten Greatest Names". The Indianapolis Star. June 22, 1924.
^"News of the Movies". Syracuse Herald. June 15, 1924.
^"advertisement". TheLancaster Daily Eagle. January 29, 1915. ("A romantic adventure of a woman of the '50s by C. Gardner Sullivan and Thos. H. Ince. Featuring Rhea Mitchell, Herchal Mayal, Thos. Kuribara and Wm. S. Hart, the man who played 'Hicks' in Monday's Broncho drama 'The Passing of Two Gun Hicks.'")
^"advertisement". The Cedar Rapids Republican. December 10, 1914. ("Kay Bee in 2 parts—-the thrilling story of a Heroic Indian Girl by Thomas H. Ince and C. Gardner Sullivan")
^"advertisement". The Evening Gazette (Iowa). December 14, 1914. ("Broncho in Two Parts. An [sic] unique plot with a happy finale, by Thomas H. Ince and C. Gardner Sullivan.")
^"Amusements". Naugatuck Daily News. December 22, 1914. ("'Not of the Flock' is the love story of a girl who never had a chance. It was produced by C. Gardner Sullivan and Thomas H. Ince and the cast includes
Charles French, Charles Ray, Enid Markey, Margaret Thompson and Webster W. Campbell.")
^"Amusements". Naugatuck Daily News. December 23, 1914.
^"advertisement". The Evening Gazette. December 28, 1914. ("Broncho in Two Parts. A thrilling Drama of the Electric Chair by C. Gardner Sullivan and Thomas H. Ince.")
^"A Western Romance: History of Feature Picture in New Bill at the Bijou Theatre". Newport Daily News. November 11, 1914. ("The feature picture in the new bill at the Bijou Theatre for today and tomorrow is a two-reel Kay Bee film, 'The Word of His People,' a romance of Western life, by Thomas H. Ince and C. Gardner Sullivan.")
^"advertisement". Middletown Daily Times-Press. February 27, 1915. ("C. Gardner Sullivan and Thomas H. Ince Present 'The Last of the Line' A Thrilling (Broncho) Story of an Old Indian and His Renegade Son.")
^ abc"William S. Hart in "The Darkening Trail"". Galveston Daily News. June 6, 1915. ("C. Gardner Sullivan, the author of the feature and also author of 'The Cup of Life' and 'On the Night Stage,' is probably most admired of truly American dramatists writing original stories for the screen.")
^"advertisement". The Lancaster Daily Eagle. April 5, 1915. ("And a Special Two-Reel Broncho Drama 'Winning Back' Wherein a Faithful Wife Adopts Desperate Methods to hold her hutband's love, by C. Gardner Sullivan and Thos. H. Ince.")
^"Amusements". The Lancaster Daily Eagle. April 9, 1915.("Two reels. A thrilling drama on shipboard by C. Gardner Sullivan and Thomas H. Ince.")
^"advertisement". The Lancaster Daily Eagle. June 14, 1915.("Special Two-Reel Domino Drama 'The Shoal Light' A Charming Story of Love and Adventure by Thos H. Ince and C. Gardner Sullivan.")
^"advertisement". Des Moines Capital. June 25, 1915. ("'Reward' By C. Gardner Sullivan ... A careful picture of a chorus girl's life hack of the stage, from the dressing room to the wings the back-stage world is shown in detail, as are the intriguings of the back-stage Johnny.")
^"advertisement". The Lancaster Daily Eagle. June 30, 1915. ("'Hostage of the North' A Powerful and Thrilling Drama of the Alaska Gold Fields by C. Gardner Sullivan and Thos. H. Ince.")
^"advertisement". The Lancaster Daily Eagle. August 12, 1915.("The Cup of Life By C. Gardner Sullivan Featuring Bessie Barriscale")
^ ab"No Rest for Bessie". The Atlanta Constitution. August 22, 1915.("Like 'The Iron Strain,' 'The Painted Soul' is from the joint pens of C. Gardner Sullivan and Thomas H. Ince.")
^"advertisement". The Lancaster Daily Eagle. August 25, 1915.("'The Man Who Went Out' A Special Two-Reel Domino Drama by C. Gardner Sullivan and Thos. H. Ince")
^"advertisement". Waterloo Times-Tribune. December 18, 1915.('Matrimony' By C. Gardner Sullivan and Thomas H. Ince")
^"advertisement". The Lancaster Daily Eagle. April 26, 1915. ("Special Two Reel Broncho Drama 'In the Switch Tower' A thrilling drama of railroad life, by Thos. H. Ince and C Gardner Sullivan. Featuring Waller Edwards, Frank Borzage, Lewis Morrison, Gertrude Claire and Lewis Durham")
^"advertisement". the Lancaster Daily Eagle. April 16, 1915.("Special Two Reel Kay.Bee Drama 'The Girl Who Might Have Been' Wherein a dance hall girl proves her gratitude to her benefactor. By C. Gardner Sullivan and Thos. H. Ince. Featuring Leona Mutton, Frank Borzage and Edw. Brennan.")
^"'The Man from Oregon,' One of Most Striking Photoplays At Jefferson To-Day". Fort Wayne Journal-Gazette. October 16, 1915.("C. Gardner Sullivan, author of 'The Man from Oregon', long a well known newspaper man whose profession has frequently brought him in close touch with various lobbies and the powers behind them, is exceptionally well versed of the corrupt methods used and in writing this photodrama, his
knowledge has stood him in good stead.")
^"In Local Theaters". Galveston Daily News. August 16, 1915. ("C. Gardner Sullivan has again taken his virile pen in hand and written of life. This time he has shown a deeper insight into the character of men and women who make up a world. ... This prediction is unquestionable, after seeing 'The Toast of Death,' the new C. Gardner Sullivan — Thomas H. Ince Mutual Masterpiece ...")
^"Bessie Barriscale Will Be Seen in 'The Mating,' an Excellent Film That Will Appeal to All Lovers of Real Art and Ability". Galveston Daily News. July 25, 1915. ("C. Gardner Sullivan wrote the scenario.")
^"advertisement". The La Crosse Tribune. January 12, 1916.("'The Winged Idol' By C. Gardner Sullivan")
^"'The Golden Claw': A Strong Five-Reel Kay-Bee by C. Gardner Sullivan". Daily Advocate. February 26, 1916. ("A motion picture story of the highest class, of vital subject, original development and striking characterization, 'The Golden Claw' is one of those rare products calculated to interest many millions of intelligent people and bring into tho fold those other millions of intelligent people who are repelled by poor examples of new art.")
^"advertisement". Warren Evening Times. February 9, 1915. ("By Thomas H. Ince and C. Gardner Sullivan, Produced by
H. Ince, producer of 'The Typhoon' and 'The Bargain.' A simple story of Love and Faith and Loyalty that will appeal to all people.")
^"The Valley of Hate". Titusville Herald. May 31, 1915.("A stirring drama of the Tennessee hills, in which a most beautiful story is told. Written by C. Gardner Sullivan and produced under the personal direction of Thomas H. Ince, featuring the talented actress, Rhea Mitchell, with an exceptionally strong company.")
^"Billie Burke Crystalline in Play of 'Peggy'". Los Angeles Times. December 21, 1915.
^Pansy Panitall (February 20, 1916). "Criticisms". Atlanta Constitution. ("'Honor's Altar' should do as much as any picture I have seen to establish he right of the narrative over all other things else on the screen. ... In the entire picture Gardner Sullivan has shown us a remarkable piece of screen carpentry. He has taken a more or less fresh theme and woven around it a simple narrative that hasn't a single thrill a solitary punch or trick.")
^"Screen". Los Angeles Times. June 25, 1916. ("an unusual photodrama by C. Gardner Sullivan")
^Grace Kingsley (June 18, 1916). "Lighthouse Keeping". Los Angeles Times. ("a heart-interest story from the pen of C. Gardner Sullivan")
^ abcde"Gardner Sullivan Signs With Ince". Los Angeles Times. August 26, 1921.
^"advertisement". Los Angeles Times. June 24, 1917. ("C. Gardner Sullivan's Gripping Story of New York Bohemian Life")
^Antony Anderson (April 15, 1919). "Films: Poppy Girl's Husband; William S. Hart in Powerful Crook Play". Los Angeles Times. ("We are accustomed to think of Bill Hart as a 'bad man,' but now C. Gardner Sullivan, who has made him bad so many times in motion pictures, has made him worse.")
^"Here's Hoping for More Like This One". Los Angeles Times. September 16, 1919. ("It's thanks to directors such as Fred Niblo, writers such as C. Gardner Sullivan ... that we are getting real life on the screen, instead of the tiresome old artificial stuff ...")
^Grace Kingsley (September 2, 1919). "Flashes: Hart Rings Bell; 'Wagon Tracks' Is Greatest Desert Epic". Los Angeles Times. ("the background of this masteripiece of Mr. Sullivan's -- this strikingly original story")
^"advertisement". Los Angeles Times. July 3, 1919. ("'The Haunted Bedroom' was written by C. Gardner Sullivan, author of 'Civilization,' the great Ince spectacle, and considered the foremost contributor to film literature.")
^"'Love Madness' Appeals". Los Angeles Times. September 28, 1920. ("The story by C. Gardner Sullivan tells of a woman who cleverly outwits a band of crooks to save her husband's life, after he has been accused of murder.")
^Edwin Schallert (August 18, 1921). "Reviews: Mother O' Mine; Human Action and Adventure in Ince Feature". Los Angeles Times. ("The film is an original by C. Gardner Sullivan, in which the inspiration apparently is Kipling's celebrated poem of the same title.")
^"Picture Bills of Interest on View: Human Wreckage". Los Angeles Times. August 12, 1923. ("C. Gardner Sullivan wrote the story and builds to dramatic climaxes ...")
^"To Direct Talmadge Pictures: Dean of Scenarists Is Engaged as Director of Talented Sisters". Los Angeles Times. January 27, 1923. ("The appointment comes, not only in recognition of Mr. Sullvan's long conceded place as editorial director, but as the direct outcome of his contributions to the filming of 'Connie's' last picture, 'Dulcy,' the deft and refreshing qualities of which, particularly the titles prepared by Mr. Sullivan, have received widespread comment.")
^"Cost Not Considered by Coogan". Los Angeles Times. June 10, 1923. ('Long Live the King,' adapted by Eve Unsell and C. Gardner Sullivan, from Mary Roberts Rhinehart's novel of that name ...")
^"Screen Star Leads Hectic Marital Life". Los Angeles Times. January 17, 1924. ("'The Goldfish,' adapted by C. Gardner Sullivan from Gladys Unger's stage play ...")
^"C. Gardner Sullivan Busy". Los Angeles Times. February 13, 1924. ("'The Goldfish,' which he adapted from Marjorie Rambeau's popular stage success of that name.")
^"'Wandering Husbands' for Mission Screen". Los Angeles Times. June 6, 1924. ("The story of 'Wandering Husbands' is by C. Gardner Sullivan ...")
^"Norma Lives Her Roles". Los Angeles Times. November 23, 1924. "'The Only Woman' was directed by Olcott from the original story by C. Gardner Smith.")
^"Somber Melodrama: Dynamite Smith". Los Angeles Times. September 10, 1924.("The picture was directed by Ralph Ince, and the scenario was written by C. Gardner Smith ...")
^"'Wild Justice' Only Another Dog Movie". Los Angeles Times. August 31, 1925. ("C. Gardner Sullivan is credited with its creation and well he might, for he has written it innumerable times before.")
^Edwin Schallert (October 2, 1926). "Playdom: 'Gigolo' Unusual; Paul Whiteman Jazz Festival Delights Crowd". Los Angeles Times. ("C. Gardner Sullivan supervised this picture, which has been unusually well directed by William K. Howard.")