Patrick Kearney (October 9, 1893, Columbus, Ohio – March 28, 1933, New York City)[1] was an American playwright.
Kearney started in the theatre as an actor.[2] His first Broadway play as a playwright was the comedy A Man's Man which was moderately successful, opening on October 12, 1925, and running into January of the next year, with 120 performances.
[3] It was made into a 1929 silent film of the same name, now lost.
Kearney's play of An American Tragedy was adapted (not by Kearney) into the 1951 film A Place in the Sun[7][8] starring Elizabeth Taylor and Montgomery Clift, according to a screen credit acknowledging the play as a source. Elizabeth Coons and Deirdre Kearney Rose, Patrick Kearney's widow and daughter, filed a 1959 lawsuit against Paramount Pictures requesting an injunction restraining the distribution of the film. Paramount countered that, the onscreen credit notwithstanding, the film was based solely on Dreiser's novel.[7][9] (the disposition of the lawsuit is not available).[7] The film won the 1951 Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay.
Kearney's next Broadway play was also an adaption, Elmer Gantry. It opened at the Playhouse Theatre in 1928 starring Edward Pawley and was not a success.[10] His next Broadway production was the original comedy Old Man Murphy which he wrote with Harry Wagstaff Gribble. It played at the Royale, then the Fulton, then after a hiatus at the Hudson; it ran for 112 performances [11][12] and was later adapted into the 1935 film His Family Tree.[13] Kearney's final Broadway play was also an original comedy, A Regular Guy, which opened off-season at the Hudson, and which he also directed. It flopped.[14]
Kearney's father was Alfred Kearney.[16] He had two daughters, Monica and Deirdre. Kearney's wife was named Elizabeth (later Elizabeth Coons after her remarriage to businessman Sheldon Coons, who raised Dierdre).[17][18] Despondent over the failure of his later plays and the consequent financial losses, Kearney killed himself in New York on March 28, 1933, at the age of 39.[19][20]
Kearney's sister, Elizabeth Kearney Coakley, met Theodore Dreiser at Kearney's funeral and became his secretary, protégé, and friend, and worked with Dreiser on adapting some of his short stories to the screen.[2]