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Shannon Fife is a Scriptwriter American born on 16 february 1888 at Dallas (USA)

Shannon Fife

Shannon Fife
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Birth name Manning Shannon Fife
Nationality USA
Birth 16 february 1888 at Dallas (USA)
Death 7 may 1972 (at 84 years) at Dallas (USA)

Shannon Fife (February 16, 1888 - May 7, 1972), was an American journalist, humorist and film scenario writer. He worked on at least 86 motion pictures over the silent film era before returning to journalism to write for magazines and newspapers.

Biography

Manning Shannon Fife was born on February 16, 1888 in Dallas Texas, the middle of three boys born to Ambrose D. and Mary Shannon Fife. By the turn of the twentieth century, Fife and his two brothers (Locksley and Francis) were living in Dallas with an uncle and their maternal grandmother, Belle Shannon. His father, a well-known Dallas businessman, died in 1911. Fife first worked as a cub reporter for the Dallas Dispatch, where he quickly rose to be city editor.

Fife’s first movie, A Message from the Moon, was written in 1912 for Mack Sennett at Biograph Studios before joining the Lubin Company for several years. By 1916 he was a freelance writer working on such films as Susie Snowflake and The Rainbow Princess, former Ziegfeld Follies star Ann Pennington’s debut pictures. That same year Fife co-wrote The Habit of Happiness, a comedy starring Douglas Fairbanks, Sr. In 1918 Fife's film career was interrupted for a short period while he served as a sergeant over the waning months of the First World War at Camp Travis, a division of Fort Sam Houston in San Antonio.

Fife remained busy throughout the silent era until his health began to fail in the late 1920s. In 1928 he was reported to be home in Dallas recuperating from an unspecified illness, and by 1930 he was listed as a patient at the Loomis Sanatorium in Liberty, New York. His health did improve though, for a little over a year later he was reported slightly injured with Dr. Godfrey Dewey and others while testing an Olympic bob sled course at Lake Placid, New York. Fife's last film, the 1929 Hoot Gibson comedy Smilin' Guns, was an adaption of a popular magazine story he wrote. The latter half of Fife's career would be spent in journalism writing for magazines such as Esquire and syndicated articles in newspapers. He was noted for his one or two line quips on modern life - e.g. All agree that a woman’s blush is becoming, some insist it is becoming obsolete -- Some college graduates who think they have drunk at the Fountain of Knowledge seemed to have only gargled - that were published in American newspapers and magazines for many years.

Manning Shannon Fife died on May 7, 1972 at Dallas, Texas, aged 84.

Usually with

Allan Dwan
Allan Dwan
(1 films)
Alice Terry
Alice Terry
(1 films)
Jackie Condon
Jackie Condon
(1 films)
Henry MacRae
Henry MacRae
(1 films)
Source : Wikidata

Filmography of Shannon Fife (9 films)

Display filmography as list

Scriptwriter

Smilin' Guns, 1h
Directed by Henry MacRae
Origin USA
Genres Western
Actors Hoot Gibson, Blanche Mehaffey, Virginia Pearson, Leo White, Walter Brennan, James Bradbury Jr
Roles Story

Cowboy Jack "Dirty Neck" Purvin travels to San Francisco to learn how to become a refined gentleman in order to impress Helen van Smythe. Upon his return from San Francisco, Purvin is forced to shed his training to save van Smythe from the grasp of a count, and her mother from a jewel thief.
Love Letters, 50minutes
Directed by Roy William Neill
Origin USA
Genres Drama
Actors Dorothy Dalton, William Conklin, Thurston Hall, Hayward Mack
Roles Story

As described in a film magazine, Eileen Rodney (Dalton) is in love with Raymoond Moreland (Connklin), a lecturer who favors the mating of souls without the usual ceremony. When she learns his true convictions she is disgusted and accepts the proposal of her guardian, John Harland (Hall). After she is married, Eileen meets Moreland and requests the return of her love letters, and he invites her to his home. When she gets there he forces his attentions on her. In self defense she strikes him and, believing him dead, rushes from the home. The guilt of her action weighs on her life. Later, a half crazed gardener confesses to the crime and, with the knowledge that she is blameless, Eileen confesses everything to her husband.