Charles Bennett(1899-1995)
- Writer
- Director
- Actor
Born just before the century turned, Charles Bennett made his writing
debut as a child in 1911, fought in France during World War I while
still a teen and resumed his acting career after the war's end. In 1926
he dropped acting to concentrate on being a playwright, later turning
one of his most famous plays, "Blackmail," into a screenplay for
production under the direction of
Alfred Hitchcock. The
affiliation with "Hitch" continued into the early 1940s, by which time
both Bennett and the director were working in Hollywood. He wrote for
producers ranging from Cecil B. DeMille
to Irwin Allen to the penny-pinching
folks at AIP. "If I couldn't write, I wouldn't want to live," commented
Bennett, who had projects (including a remake of "Blackmail") going
right up to the time of his death.