American screenwriter
Norton S. Parker |
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Born | November 19, 1900
Indianapolis, Indiana, USA |
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Died | July 5, 1969 (aged 68)
New York, New York, USA |
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Education | Billings Polytechnic |
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Occupation(s) | Screenwriter, director |
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Norton S. Parker (also known as Norton S. Good)[1] was an American screenwriter and director known for penning exploitation films and Westerns during the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s.
Biography
Norton was raised in Montana, and he attended Billings Polytechnic; afterward began a career as a journalist, working at The Stillwater County Democrat and The Columbus News.[2] He later moved to Hollywood and began writing screenplays and directing films.
Parker was a friend of cartoonist E.C. Segar, the creator of Popeye. In 1929, Segar and began work on The Sea Hag, a prose novel intended for adult readers. The Sea Hag would have featured both Popeye and the titular villainess, the Sea Hag, as characters. King Features Syndicate refused to grant Segar and Parker permission to put The Sea Hag into print, and the novel was never published.[3]
His marriage to his first wife, Viola, ended in 1940; a year later, he married writer Kallie Foutz in Yuma, Arizona.[4] The pair had a daughter, Patricia, who became a model.[5] Later in his career, he became chief of the writing division at the Army Pictorial Center; he was decorated by the Army in 1966 for his work on the television series The Army in Action.[6][7][8]
Selected filmography
As director:
As writer:
References
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