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{{short description|American novelist}}
'''Charles Robert Douglas Hardy Andrews''' (October 19, 1903 - November 11, 1976) was a novelist, screenwriter and [[radio drama]] scriptwriter.

'''Charles Robert Douglas Hardy Andrews''' (October 19, 1903 November 11, 1976) was a novelist, screenwriter and [[radio drama]] scriptwriter.


==Career==
==Career==
Andrews began his career as a reporter for the ''[[Chicago Daily News]]'', and edited that newspaper's magazine ''Midweek''.<ref name='Thurber'> {{cite journal | title = Soapland I - O Pioneers! | journal = The New Yorker | date = 15 May 1948 | first = James | last = Thurber | pages = 34–47| id = | url = http://www.newyorker.com/archive/1948/05/15/1948_05_15_034_TNY_CARDS_000213102 | accessdate = 10 July 2012}}</ref> He began writing radio [[soap opera]]s when the noted producer team of Frank and [[Anne Hummert]] were impressed by ''Three Girls Lost'', a work of serial fiction he had written for the ''Chicago Daily News''.<ref name='Thurber'/> Andrews wrote the story in seven days, on a bet, writing 15,000 words per day. ''Three Girls Lost'' was later published as a novel, and was the basis for a 1931 movie of the same title, directed by [[Sidney Lanfield]] and starring [[Loretta Young]] and [[John Wayne]]. His novel ''Windfall: A Novel about Ten Million Dollars'' was the basis for the 1932 movie ''[[If I Had a Million]]'', starring [[Gary Cooper]] and [[Charles Laughton]], and Andrews was credited for the story and/or screenplay of 46 other movies over the next 30 years, including ''[[Bataan]]'', ''[[The Cross of Lorraine]]'' and ''[[Salute to the Marines]]''.<ref> {{cite web | url = http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0028826/ | title = Robert Hardy Andrews | accessdate = 2012-07-10 | work = IMDB}}</ref>
Andrews began his career as a reporter for the ''[[Chicago Daily News]]'', and edited the newspaper's magazine ''Midweek''.<ref name='Thurber'>{{cite magazine | title = Soapland I - O Pioneers! | magazine = The New Yorker | date = 15 May 1948 | first = James | last = Thurber | pages = 34–47| url = https://www.newyorker.com/archive/1948/05/15/1948_05_15_034_TNY_CARDS_000213102 | access-date = 10 July 2012}}</ref> He began writing radio [[soap opera]]s when the noted producer team of [[Frank Hummert|Frank]] and [[Anne Hummert]] were impressed by ''Three Girls Lost'', a work of serial fiction he had written for the ''Chicago Daily News''.<ref name='Thurber'/> Andrews wrote the story in seven days, on a bet, writing 15,000 words per day. ''Three Girls Lost'' was later published as a novel, and was the basis for a [[Three Girls Lost|1931 movie of the same title]], directed by [[Sidney Lanfield]] and starring [[Loretta Young]] and [[John Wayne]]. His novel ''Windfall: A Novel about Ten Million Dollars'' was the basis for the 1932 movie ''[[If I Had a Million]]'', starring [[Gary Cooper]] and [[Charles Laughton]], and Andrews was credited for the story and/or screenplay of 46 other movies over the next 30 years, including ''[[Bataan]]'', ''[[The Cross of Lorraine]]'', ''[[Girls of the Road]]'' and ''[[Salute to the Marines]]''.<ref>{{cite web | url = https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0028826/ | title = Robert Hardy Andrews | access-date = 2012-07-10 | work = IMDB}}</ref>


Andrews wrote many of the Hummerts' early radio soap operas, beginning with ''The Stolen Husband'', and including ''[[Just Plain Bill]]'', ''[[Judy and Jane]]'' and ''[[Ma Perkins]]''. Andrews also wrote daytime radio serials for children, including ''[[Skippy (comic strip)#Radio|Skippy]]'', sponsored by [[General Mills]], which helped make [[Wheaties]] cereal a household word. He was a remarkably prolific writer, for years averaging over 100,000 words of material per week.<ref name='Thurber'/> In one 20-hour period, he wrote 32,000 words. At his peak, he was writing seven daily radio dramas at the same time. He wrote from noon to midnight, seven days a week, smoking as many as five packs of cigarettes a day and drinking 40 cups of coffee.<ref name='Thurber'/> For ''Just Plain Bill'' alone, he wrote 2600 scripts over a ten-year period.<ref name='Thurber2'> {{cite journal | title = Soapland III - Sculptors in Ivory | journal = The New Yorker | date = 12 June 1948 | first = James | last = Thurber | pages = 48–58| id = | url = http://www.newyorker.com/archive/1948/06/12/1948_06_12_048_TNY_CARDS_000215886 | accessdate = 11 July 2012}}</ref> One time a week of air-mailed scripts for ''Just Plain Bill'' were lost in a plane crash and he had no copies, so he dictated a new script for a show over the telephone and a stenographer typed it out while the show was on the air, delivering it to the actors page by page.<ref name='Thurber4'> {{cite journal | title = Soapland IV - The Invisible People | journal = The New Yorker | date = 3 July 1948 | first = James | last = Thurber | pages = 40–48| id = | url = http://www.newyorker.com/archive/1948/07/03/1948_07_03_040_TNY_CARDS_000215474 | accessdate = 13 July 2012}}</ref>
Andrews wrote many of the Hummerts' early radio soap operas, beginning with ''The Stolen Husband'', and including ''[[Just Plain Bill]]'', ''[[Judy and Jane]]'' and ''[[Ma Perkins]]''. Andrews also wrote daytime radio serials for children, including ''[[Skippy (radio)|Skippy]]'', sponsored by [[General Mills]], which helped make [[Wheaties]] cereal a household word. He was a prolific writer, for years averaging over 100,000 words of material per week.<ref name='Thurber'/> In one 20-hour period, he wrote 32,000 words. At his peak, he was writing seven daily radio dramas at the same time. He wrote from noon to midnight, seven days a week, smoking as many as five packs of cigarettes a day and drinking 40 cups of coffee.<ref name='Thurber'/> For ''Just Plain Bill'' alone, he wrote 2,600 scripts over a ten-year period.<ref name='Thurber2'>{{cite magazine | title = Soapland III - Sculptors in Ivory | magazine = The New Yorker | date = 12 June 1948 | first = James | last = Thurber | pages = 48–58| url = https://www.newyorker.com/archive/1948/06/12/1948_06_12_048_TNY_CARDS_000215886 | access-date = 11 July 2012}}</ref> One time a week of air-mailed scripts for ''Just Plain Bill'' were lost in a plane crash and he had no copies, so he dictated a new script for a show over the telephone and a stenographer typed it out while the show was on the air, delivering it to the actors page by page.<ref name='Thurber4'>{{cite magazine | title = Soapland IV - The Invisible People | magazine = The New Yorker | date = 3 July 1948 | first = James | last = Thurber | pages = 40–48| url = https://www.newyorker.com/archive/1948/07/03/1948_07_03_040_TNY_CARDS_000215474 | access-date = 13 July 2012}}</ref>


==Television==
==Television==
He was a consultant on the popular CBS television series ''[[The Millionaire (TV series)|The Millionaire]]'', which had the same premise as ''If I Had a Million''.<ref> {{cite web | url = http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0047758/fullcredits#cast | title = Full cast and crew for "The Millionaire" | accessdate = 2012-07-12 | work = IMDB}}</ref> Between 1954 and 1970, he wrote scripts for episodes of eight other television series, including ''[[Thriller (U.S. TV series)|Thriller]]'' and ''[[Death Valley Days]]''.
He was a consultant on the [[CBS]] television series ''[[The Millionaire (TV series)|The Millionaire]]'', which had the same premise as ''If I Had a Million''.<ref>{{cite web | url = https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0047758/fullcredits#cast | title = Full cast and crew for "The Millionaire" | access-date = 2012-07-12 | work = IMDB}}</ref> Between 1954 and 1970, he wrote scripts for episodes of eight other television series, including ''[[Thriller (U.S. TV series)|Thriller]]'' and ''[[Death Valley Days]]''.


==Bibliography==
==Bibliography==

===Books===
===Books===
*''Windfall: A Novel about Ten Million Dollars (1930)''
*''Windfall: A Novel about Ten Million Dollars ''(1930)
*''Three Girls Lost (1930)''
*''Three Girls Lost ''(1930)
*''One Girl Found (1930)''
*''One Girl Found ''(1930)
*''Legend of a Lady: The Story of Rita Martin (1949)''
*''Burning Gold ''(1945)
*''Legend of a Lady: The Story of Rita Martin ''(1949)
*''A Corner of Chicago (1963)''
*''Great Day in the Morning'' (1950)
*''A Corner of Chicago ''(1963)


===Radio===
===Radio===
Line 21: Line 26:
*''[[Judy and Jane]]''
*''[[Judy and Jane]]''
*''[[Ma Perkins]]''
*''[[Ma Perkins]]''
*''[[Skippy (comic strip)#Radio|Skippy]]''
*''[[Skippy (radio)|Skippy]]''
*''[[The Stolen Husband]]''
*''[[The Stolen Husband]]''
*''[[Terry and Mary]]''
*''[[Terry and Mary]]''
Line 30: Line 35:
==Further reading==
==Further reading==
*{{citation | title = Frank and Anne Hummert's Radio Factory | author = Jim Cox | isbn = 978-0-7864-1631-8 | year = 2003}}
*{{citation | title = Frank and Anne Hummert's Radio Factory | author = Jim Cox | isbn = 978-0-7864-1631-8 | year = 2003}}
*{{citation | title = The Great Radio Soap Operas | author = Jim Cox | isbn = 978-0-7864-3865-5 | year = 2008 [1999] }}
*{{citation | title = The Great Radio Soap Operas | author = Jim Cox | isbn = 978-0-7864-3865-5 | year = 2008 |orig-year=1999 }}


==External links==
==External links==
*{{IMDb name|id=0028826|name=Robert Hardy Andrews}}
*{{IMDb name|id=0028826|name=Robert Hardy Andrews}}


{{authority control}}
{{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]]. -->
| NAME = Andrews, Robert Hardy
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES = Andrews, Charles Robert Douglas Hardy
| SHORT DESCRIPTION = American writer
| DATE OF BIRTH = October 19, 1903
| PLACE OF BIRTH = Effingham, Kansas, USA
| DATE OF DEATH = November 11, 1976
| PLACE OF DEATH = Santa Monica, California, USA
}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Andrews, Robert Hardy}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Andrews, Robert Hardy}}
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[[Category:1976 deaths]]
[[Category:1976 deaths]]
[[Category:20th-century American novelists]]
[[Category:20th-century American novelists]]
[[Category:20th-century American male writers]]
[[Category:American male novelists]]
[[Category:American male novelists]]
[[Category:American radio writers]]
[[Category:American radio writers]]
[[Category:American soap opera writers]]
[[Category:American soap opera writers]]
[[Category:Writers from Kansas]]
[[Category:American male screenwriters]]
[[Category:Screenwriters from Kansas]]
[[Category:American male television writers]]
[[Category:American television writers]]
[[Category:20th-century American screenwriters]]

Latest revision as of 12:40, 15 June 2023

Charles Robert Douglas Hardy Andrews (October 19, 1903 – November 11, 1976) was a novelist, screenwriter and radio drama scriptwriter.

Career[edit]

Andrews began his career as a reporter for the Chicago Daily News, and edited the newspaper's magazine Midweek.[1] He began writing radio soap operas when the noted producer team of Frank and Anne Hummert were impressed by Three Girls Lost, a work of serial fiction he had written for the Chicago Daily News.[1] Andrews wrote the story in seven days, on a bet, writing 15,000 words per day. Three Girls Lost was later published as a novel, and was the basis for a 1931 movie of the same title, directed by Sidney Lanfield and starring Loretta Young and John Wayne. His novel Windfall: A Novel about Ten Million Dollars was the basis for the 1932 movie If I Had a Million, starring Gary Cooper and Charles Laughton, and Andrews was credited for the story and/or screenplay of 46 other movies over the next 30 years, including Bataan, The Cross of Lorraine, Girls of the Road and Salute to the Marines.[2]

Andrews wrote many of the Hummerts' early radio soap operas, beginning with The Stolen Husband, and including Just Plain Bill, Judy and Jane and Ma Perkins. Andrews also wrote daytime radio serials for children, including Skippy, sponsored by General Mills, which helped make Wheaties cereal a household word. He was a prolific writer, for years averaging over 100,000 words of material per week.[1] In one 20-hour period, he wrote 32,000 words. At his peak, he was writing seven daily radio dramas at the same time. He wrote from noon to midnight, seven days a week, smoking as many as five packs of cigarettes a day and drinking 40 cups of coffee.[1] For Just Plain Bill alone, he wrote 2,600 scripts over a ten-year period.[3] One time a week of air-mailed scripts for Just Plain Bill were lost in a plane crash and he had no copies, so he dictated a new script for a show over the telephone and a stenographer typed it out while the show was on the air, delivering it to the actors page by page.[4]

Television[edit]

He was a consultant on the CBS television series The Millionaire, which had the same premise as If I Had a Million.[5] Between 1954 and 1970, he wrote scripts for episodes of eight other television series, including Thriller and Death Valley Days.

Bibliography[edit]

Books[edit]

  • Windfall: A Novel about Ten Million Dollars (1930)
  • Three Girls Lost (1930)
  • One Girl Found (1930)
  • Burning Gold (1945)
  • Legend of a Lady: The Story of Rita Martin (1949)
  • Great Day in the Morning (1950)
  • A Corner of Chicago (1963)

Radio[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d Thurber, James (15 May 1948). "Soapland I - O Pioneers!". The New Yorker. pp. 34–47. Retrieved 10 July 2012.
  2. ^ "Robert Hardy Andrews". IMDB. Retrieved 2012-07-10.
  3. ^ Thurber, James (12 June 1948). "Soapland III - Sculptors in Ivory". The New Yorker. pp. 48–58. Retrieved 11 July 2012.
  4. ^ Thurber, James (3 July 1948). "Soapland IV - The Invisible People". The New Yorker. pp. 40–48. Retrieved 13 July 2012.
  5. ^ "Full cast and crew for "The Millionaire"". IMDB. Retrieved 2012-07-12.

Further reading[edit]

External links[edit]