Maxine Alton Explained

Maxine Alton
Birth Name:Belle Trompeter
Birth Date:May 3, 1886
Birth Place:Willis, Kansas, US
Death Date:June 16, 1954 (aged 68)
Death Place:Los Angeles, California, US
Education:Washington University in St. Louis
Arts Student League
Occupation:Screenwriter, playwright, novelist, agent
Spouse:William Alfred Allen

Maxine Alton (born Belle Trompeter) was an American screenwriter, playwright, talent agent, and actress from Willis, Kansas.[1] She was also credited as Maxie Alton early in her career.[2]

Biography

Maxine was born in Willis, Kansas, to photographer John Trompter and his wife, Rose Lee Williams. She was educated at the Sacred Heart Convent in Saint Joseph, Missouri, and attended Washington University in St. Louis.[3] She developed an interest in the arts at an early age, and performed in opera productions in Missouri in her teens.

She later attended the Arts Student League in New York City, where she studied drawing.[4] While looking for ideas for a theater's poster competition as a student, she visited an NYC theater and met a producer who suggested she give acting a try. From there, she appeared in plays and vaudeville sketches all over the country during the 1910s.

She was working as a play broker by the early 1920s, securing the American rights to works by Parisian composer Andre de Croisset, among other projects.[5] She was also in charge of a stable of actors she represented as an agent.[6]

She had settled in Los Angeles by 1924 after chaperoning her client—the young, innocent Clara Bow[7] —on her journey from New York to Hollywood. Alton had secured Bow a contract with B.P. Schulberg.[8] [9] [10] [11] [12] Two years later, Alton had begun to try her luck at screenwriting; her first credit was on The Cowboy and the Countess, which she co-wrote with Adele Buffington.[13] She wrote a string of screenplays through the end of the decade, ending with 1930's Call of the Circus.[14]

In the early 1930s, she returned to writing plays and novels.[15] She also wrote created and wrote the radio series Hollywood Cinderella later on in the decade, a fictionalization on the goings-on in the movie colony.[16]

Selected works

As screenwriter:

As playwright:

As novelist:

References

  1. Web site: The Hit of the Show. 3 Jan 1907. The Horton Headlight-Commercial. en. 2019-03-18.
  2. Web site: Almost a Horton Actress. 27 Dec 1906. Horton Commercial. en. 2019-03-18.
  3. Book: Hunt, Rockwell Dennis. California and Californians. 1932. Lewis Publishing Company. en.
  4. Web site: Loves Stage Work. 12 Nov 1916. The Washington Herald. en. 2019-03-18.
  5. Web site: Music Rights. 1 Jun 1923. Daily News. en. 2019-03-18.
  6. Web site: Story Selected. 13 Aug 1923. The Dayton Herald. en. 2019-03-18.
  7. Web site: Is That You, Clara?. 5 Nov 1933. Chicago Tribune. en. 2019-03-18.
  8. Web site: Who's Who and What's What. 21 Sep 1924. The Los Angeles Times. en. 2019-03-18.
  9. Web site: Clara's First Ride. 29 Dec 1929. The Pittsburgh Press. en. 2019-03-18.
  10. Web site: Sad Separation. 23 May 1931. The San Francisco Examiner. en. 2019-03-18.
  11. Book: Notable American Women: The Modern Period : a Biographical Dictionary. registration. 95. maxine alton film.. Sicherman. Barbara. Green. Carol Hurd. 1980. Harvard University Press. 9780674627338. en.
  12. Book: Notable American Women: The Modern Period : a Biographical Dictionary. registration. 95. maxine alton agent.. Sicherman. Barbara. Green. Carol Hurd. 1980. Harvard University Press. 9780674627338. en.
  13. Web site: New Jones Film. 19 Mar 1926. The Orlando Sentinel. en. 2019-03-18.
  14. Web site: At Family Theatre. 21 Oct 1930. The Wilkes-Barre Record. en. 2019-03-18.
  15. Web site: Screen Gossip. 28 Apr 1930. The Times. en. 2019-03-18.
  16. Web site: CFAC Notes. 26 Mar 1938. Calgary Herald. en. 2019-03-18.