Wikipedia

Mildred Horn

Mildred Horn
Born
Anna Horn

January 4, 1901
Erie, Pennsylvania, USA
DiedJune 7, 1998
Indian Wells, California, USA
OccupationScreenwriter, film critic
Spouse(s)Kroger Babb

Mildred Horn was an American film critic and screenwriter, best known for her work on the Kroger Babb exploitation film Mom and Dad.

Biography

Horn was born in Erie, Pennsylvania, and studied at Academy High School.[1] She later moved to Indianapolis, Indiana, where she became a film critic for a local paper.

When Horn was sent to review Kroger Babb's production of Child Bride, she was horrified that such a "cheap, crude, mislabeled morality play would be shown in a major Indiana family theater." In Horn's opinion, the film was material for a shoddy sideshow tent at some backwoods county fair.[2]

Babb later met with Horn, and instead of Horn writing a scathing review, they entered into a personal and professional relationship that would last 40 years until his death in 1980. They enjoyed a common-law marriage after 1944, only making it official when Babb's first wife, Toby, consented to a divorce in the late '60s.[2]

Together with Jack Jossey, they formed Hygienic Productions (later renamed Hallmark Productions),[3] and she wrote the screenplay for their best-known production, Mom and Dad. The film was presented in a unique way, and included lectures and the sale of hygiene books that Horn wrote.[4]

Horn also wrote the screenplays for Why Men Leave Home, a film about female beauty, and Prince of Peace, a passion play.

Selected works

Films

  • Mom and Dad, screenplay (1945)
  • The Prince of Peace, aka The Lawton Story, screenplay (1949)
  • Why Men Leave Home, aka Secrets of Beauty, screenplay (1951)

Books

  • Man and Boy (1944)
  • Woman and Girl (1944)

References

  1. ^ Erie, PA, Times: "Erieite Wins Fame as Hollywood Screen Writer." 16 December 1951.
  2. ^ a b Friedman, David F. (1990) A Youth in Babylon: Confessions of a Trash-Film King NY:Prometheus Books. ISBN 0-87975-608-X.
  3. ^ Marshall, Wendy L. (2005). William Beaudine: from silents to television. Metuchen, N.J: Scarecrow Press. ISBN 0-8108-5218-7.
  4. ^ Briggs, Joe Bob.(2003) Profoundly Disturbing: Shocking Movies That Changed History!, Universe Publishing, ISBN 0-7893-0844-4


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