Andrew Solt
Personal Info
Known for
Writing
Gender
Male
Birthday
1916-06-07
Day of Death
1990-11-04 (74 years old)
Place of Birth
Budapest, Austria-Hungary [now Hungary]
Andrew Solt
Biography
Among Mr. Solt's credits was "In a Lonely Place," a much-praised 1950 film noir directed by Nicholas Ray. It centered on a cynical screenwriter (Humphrey Bogart) who eludes a murder charge but loses his lover (Gloria Grahame) through his violent temper.
The script was hailed as "almost as flinty as the actor himself" in The New York Times by Thomas M. Pryor, who wrote that "because Mr. Solt did not compromise to fabricate a happy ending, the climax packs both surprise and a punch."
Mr. Solt's screenplays included comedies like "Without Reservations" (1946), melodramas such as "Whirlpool" (1949) and "Thunder on the Hill" (1951), the 1949 version of "Little Women" and "For the First Time" (1959), the last film made by Mario Lanza.
Mr. Solt, a native of Budapest, also wrote many plays for television anthologies.
Known For
Crew
(1992)
(1959)
For the First Time
Screenplay
(1952)
The Lusty Men
Writer
(1952)
Lovely to Look At
Additional Dialogue
(1951)
Thunder on the Hill
Screenplay
(1951)
The Family Secret
Screenplay
(1950)
In a Lonely Place
Screenplay
(1950)
Whirlpool
Screenplay
(1949)
Little Women
Screenplay
(1948)
Joan of Arc
Screenplay
(1946)
Without Reservations
Screenplay
(1946)
The Jolson Story
Adaptation
(1943)
My Kingdom for a Cook
Story, Screenplay