Nunnally Hunter Johnson (December 5, 1897 – March 25, 1977) was an American screenwriter, film director, producer and playwright. As a filmmaker, he wrote the screenplays to more than fifty films in a career that spanned from 1927 to 1967. He also produced more than half of the films he wrote scripts for and directed eight of those movies. In 1940 he was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay for The Grapes of Wrath and in 1956, he was nominated for the Directors Guild of America Award for Outstanding Directing – Feature Film for The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit. Some of his other notable films include Tobacco Road (1941), The Moon Is Down (1943), Casanova Brown (1944), The Keys of the Kingdom (1944), The Woman in the Window (1944), The Mudlark (1950), (1951), My Cousin Rachel (1952), The Three Faces of Eve (1957), Mr. Hobbs Takes a Vacation (1962), and The Dirty Dozen (1967). As a playwright he wrote the books for several Broadway theatre musical theatre, including the musical revue Shoot the Works (1931), Arthur Schwartz's Park Avenue (1946), Bob Merrill's Henry, Sweet Henry (1967), and Jule Styne's Darling of the Day (1968). He also wrote the 1943 Broadway theatre play The World's Full of Girls.
Nunnally graduated from Columbus High School in 1915.Stempel. – p.24. While living in Columbus in 1919, at 1312 Third Street, Nunnally was a second lieutenant in the field artillery reserve corps of the U.S. Army during World War I. His brother Cecil graduated from Georgia Tech in 1924, married Gene Clair Norris, and moved to Bellingham, Washington, where he was first a gas department superintendent and later a vice president with Puget Sound Power & Light.
Finding work as a scriptwriter, Johnson was hired full-time as a writer by 20th Century-Fox in 1935. He began producing films as well and co-founded International Pictures in 1943 with William Goetz. Johnson also directed several films in the 1950s, including two starring Gregory Peck. He was nominated for the Academy Awards for Best Screenplay in 1940 for The Grapes of Wrath and the Directors Guild of America Best Director Award in 1956 for The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit. In 1964, Johnson adapted his daughter Nora Johnson's novel, The World of Henry Orient, into a film of the same title, starring Peter Sellers.
While filming The Grapes of Wrath, Johnson met his third wife, actress Dorris Bowdon, a Mississippi native. The two were married at the home of Charles MacArthur and Helen Hayes in Nyack-on-the-Hudson on February 4, 1940.Stempel. – p.103. They had three children. They resided in a mansion located at 625 Mountain Drive in Beverly Hills, California.Victoria Talbot, 'Beverly Hills Cultural Heritage Commission Splits 2 To 2 on Mountain Drive Landmark Vote', The Beverly Hills Courier, October 3, 2014, Vol. XXXXVIIII, No. 39, p. 4 It was designed by architect Paul R. Williams.
Actor Jack Johnson is his grandson.
| 1927 | Rough House Rosie | |||
| 1933 | A Bedtime Story | |||
| Mama Loves Papa | ||||
| 1934 | Moulin Rouge | |||
| The House of Rothschild | ||||
| Bulldog Drummond Strikes Back | ||||
| Kid Millions | ||||
| 1935 | Cardinal Richelieu | |||
| Baby Face Harrington | ||||
| Thanks a Million | ||||
| The Man Who Broke the Bank at Monte Carlo | ||||
| 1936 | The Prisoner of Shark Island | |||
| The Country Doctor | ||||
| Dimples | ||||
| The Road to Glory | ||||
| Banjo on My Knee | ||||
| 1937 | Nancy Steele Is Missing! | |||
| Cafe Metropole | ||||
| Slave Ship | ||||
| Love Under Fire | ||||
| 1939 | Jesse James | |||
| Wife, Husband and Friend | ||||
| Rose of Washington Square | ||||
| 1940 | The Grapes of Wrath | |||
| I Was an Adventuress | ||||
| Chad Hanna | ||||
| 1941 | Tobacco Road | |||
| 1942 | Roxie Hart | |||
| Moontide | ||||
| The Pied Piper | ||||
| Life Begins at Eight-Thirty | ||||
| 1943 | The Moon Is Down | |||
| Holy Matrimony | ||||
| 1944 | Casanova Brown | |||
| The Keys of the Kingdom | ||||
| 1945 | The Woman in the Window | |||
| The Southerner | ||||
| Along Came Jones | ||||
| 1946 | The Dark Mirror | |||
| 1947 | The Senator Was Indiscreet | |||
| 1948 | Mr. Peabody and the Mermaid | |||
| 1949 | Everybody Does It | |||
| 1950 | Three Came Home | |||
| The Gunfighter | ||||
| The Mudlark | ||||
| 1951 | The Long Dark Hall | |||
| 1952 | Phone Call from a Stranger | |||
| We're Not Married! | ||||
| O. Henry's Full House | ||||
| My Cousin Rachel | ||||
| 1953 | How to Marry a Millionaire | |||
| 1954 | Night People | |||
| Witness to Murder | ||||
| Black Widow | ||||
| 1955 | How to Be Very, Very Popular | |||
| 1956 | The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit | |||
| 1957 | Oh, Men! Oh, Women! | |||
| The Three Faces of Eve | ||||
| 1959 | The Man Who Understood Women | |||
| 1960 | The Angel Wore Red | |||
| Flaming Star | ||||
| 1962 | Something's Got to Give | |||
| Mr. Hobbs Takes a Vacation | ||||
| 1963 | Take Her, She's Mine | |||
| 1964 | The World of Henry Orient | |||
| 1965 | Dear Brigitte | |||
| 1967 | The Dirty Dozen |
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