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(Top)
 


1 Life and career  





2 Select credits  



2.1  Film screenplays  





2.2  TV plays  





2.3  Plays  







3 Bibliography  





4 References  





5 External links  














Frederick Knott






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Frederick Knott
BornFrederick Major Paull Knott
(1916-08-28)28 August 1916
Hankou, China
Died17 December 2002(2002-12-17) (aged 86)
New York City, New York
Occupationplaywright, screenwriter
LanguageEnglish

Frederick Major Paull Knott (28 August 1916 – 17 December 2002) was an English playwright and screenwriter known for complex crime-related plots. Although he was a reluctant writer and completed a small number of plays, two have become well-known: the London-based stage thriller Dial M for Murder, later filmed in Hollywood by Alfred Hitchcock, and the 1966 play Wait Until Dark, which was adapted to a Hollywood film directed by Terence Young. He also wrote the Broadway mystery Write Me a Murder.

He has a son named Tony Knott who attended Princeton Day School in the 1970s.

Life and career

[edit]

Knott was born in Hankou, China, the son of English missionaries, Margaret Caroline (née Paull) and Cyril Wakefield Knott.[1] He became interested in theatre after watching performances of Gilbert and Sullivan works held by the Hankow Operatic Society.[2] Descended from a line of Lancashire mill-owners, Knott came from a wealthy enough background to be sent back to England to be schooled privately, and from 1926 he was educated at Sidcot School and then, from 1929, at Oundle SchoolinNorthamptonshire.

In 1934, Knott went up to Downing College, Cambridge, to read law.[3] An exceptional tennis player (a profession he gave the central character in Dial M for Murder), he became a Blue, and in 1937 was a member of the Oxford-Cambridge tennis team that played the Harvard-Yale squad at Newport. He graduated in 1938 with a third-class degree in law,[3] but the outbreak of the Second World War prevented his competing at Wimbledon.

He served in the British Army Artillery as a signals instructor from 1939 to 1946, rising to the rank of major, and eventually moved to the United States. He met Ann Hillary in 1952 and married her in 1953; they lived in New York for many years.[2]

Although Dial M for Murder was a hit on the stage, it was originally a BBC television production. As a theatre piece, it premiered at the Westminster Theatre in Victoria, London in June 1952, directed by John Fernald and starring Alan MacNaughtan and Jane Baxter. This production was followed in October by a successful run in New York City at the Plymouth Theater, where Reginald Denham directed Maurice Evans, Richard Derr. Gusti Huber. Knott also wrote the screenplay for the 1954 Hollywood movie which Hitchcock filmed for Warner Brothersin3D, starring Ray Milland and Grace Kelly, with Anthony Dawson and John Williams reprising their characters from the New York stage production, which had won Williams a Tony Award for his role as Inspector Hubbard. He previously sold the screen rights to Alexander Korda for only £1,000. The play was also made into a 1981 TV movie starring Christopher Plummer and Angie Dickinson, as the 1985 film Aitbaar in India, and as A Perfect Murder in 1998 with Michael Douglas and Gwyneth Paltrow.[2] Based on the same plot, a Soviet TV film Tony Wendice's Mistake (ru:Ошибка Тони Вендиса) was released in 1981.

In 1960, Knott wrote the stage thriller Write Me a Murder, produced at the Belasco Theatre in New York in October 1961. It was directed by George Schaefer and included Denholm Elliott and Kim Hunter in the cast.

In 1966, Knott's stage play Wait Until Dark was produced on Broadway at the Ethel Barrymore Theatre. The director was Arthur Penn and the play starred Lee Remick who received a Tony Award nomination for her performance. Later the same year, Honor Blackman played the lead in London's West End at the Strand Theatre. The film version, also titled Wait Until Dark and released in 1967, had Audrey Hepburn in the lead role. The play ran on Broadway in 2001, featuring Quentin Tarantino.[2]

Knott stopped writing plays, choosing to live comfortably on the income from his earlier works. "I don't think the drive was there any more. He was perfectly happy the way things were," said his wife Ann Hillary.[2] He died in New York City in December 2002.

Select credits

[edit]

Film screenplays

[edit]

TV plays

[edit]

Plays

[edit]

Bibliography

[edit]

References

[edit]
  • ^ a b c d e "Frederick Knott". The Independent. 26 December 2002. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  • ^ a b "University News", The Times, 18 June 1938, p. 19.
  • [edit]
    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Frederick_Knott&oldid=1223682239"

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    This page was last edited on 13 May 2024, at 17:45 (UTC).

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