He worked primarily as a film producer and production executive during the mid-1950s (credits include Until They Sail), but he eventually turned his attention back to scriptwriting.
Biography
He was born in Bridgeport, Connecticut and graduated from Yale in 1936. He studied law for the next three years and practised law in Massachusetts. He was writing plays and a play Apology had a run in 1943 with Elissa Landi.[1]
Screenwriter
Schnee came to Hollywood in 1945. He did some writing on From This Day Forward (1946) at RKO and was credited on Cross My Heart (1946) for Paramount. He sold Angel Face to Paramount for $25,000 [2] and stayed at Paramount to write I Walk Alone (1947) for Hal B. Wallis which was a success and really helped establish him.
Schnee wrote a comedy, When in Rome (1952) which was a flop then did The Bad and the Beautiful (1952) for Houseman and director Vincente Minnelli which was a critical and commercial success. Schnee won an Oscar for this script and Schary promoted him to producer.
Producer at MGM
In January 1952, Dore Schary of MGM announced the formation of a new production unit under the supervision of Charles Schnee. The idea was to make ten to fifteen films a year[6][7] with budgets under $500,000 to absorb studio overhead.[8]
The unit included several sons of executives who had helped establish MGM, Matthew Raft (son of Harry Rapf), Arthur Loew (son of Marcus Loew), and Sidney Franklin Jnr (son of Sidney Franklin). Other producers were Hayes Goetz, Henry Berman (brother of Pandro S. Berman) and Sol Fielding.
In September 1953, his unit was disbanded and he was assigned producer on Bad Day at Black Rock[8] but the production ceased in November.[9] He next made a Biblical movie, The Prodigal (1955) which was a fiasco.[10]
He left MGM and setup as an independent producer at Columbia. He announced Company of Cowards with Hugh O'Brian,[13] an adaptation of The Tiger Among Us by Leigh Brackett[14] and was going to do an original screenplay Atom and Eva.[15] He was also going to make The Image Makers with Clark Gable.[16] None of the films were made apart from Tiger which would be produced by others years later as 13 West Street. Schnee returned to screenwriting.
Return to screenwriting and death
He wrote The Mark Hellinger Story for George Sidney but the film did not proceed due to casting issues.[17] He wrote The Crowded Sky (1960) at Warners and a significant success with BUtterfield 8 (1961) at MGM. In 1961 he was president of the Writers Guild of America, West.
His wife, Mary Schnee, predeceased him by committing suicide in October 1961.
Schnee had just signed a contract with Dino De Laurentiis on the Sacco and Vanzetti case when he died of a heart attack on November 29, 1962. He was 46,[1] survived by a 14-year-old daughter, Tina.[19]
^Pryor, Thomas M. (12 September 1954). "HOLLYWOOD CYCLE: Five Films on Biblical Subjects Keep Industry Wheels Turning -- Addenda". The New York Times. p. X5.