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Charles Marquis Warren
Born (1912-12-16)December 16, 1912
Baltimore, Maryland, USA
Died August 11, 1990(1990-08-11) (aged 77)
West Hills, California, USA
Occupation Motion picture and television writer, producer, and director
Years active 1948–1969

Charles Marquis Warren (December 16, 1912 – August 11, 1990) was an American motion picture and television writer, producer, and director who specialized in the western genre. He is notable for his involvement in creating the television series Rawhide and in adapting the radio series Gunsmoke for television.

Biography[]

Warren was born in Baltimore, Maryland, and was the son of a real estate broker and the godson of American writer F. Scott Fitzgerald. He was educated at Baltimore High School and Baltimore City College. During his college years he developed an interest in writing, resulting in a play entitled No Sun, No Moon, which was staged at Princeton University. Warren decided to go to Hollywood in 1933 when Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer took an option on the play. With the help of his godfather, Warren secured a position as a staff writer for the studio. His early assignments included working on the scripts for Mutiny on the Bounty (1935) starring Charles Laughton and Clark Gable, and Top Hat (1935) with Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers. He made the latter film on loan out to RKO Radio pictures. Warren eventually left Hollywood for New York where he found success as a fiction writer for various pulp magazines. Several of his writings were published in The Saturday Evening Post. Three of his Post stories, Only the Valiant, Bugles Are for Soldiers, and Valley of the Shadow, were published as novels and became best-sellers.

In 1941 he married Anna Crawford Tootle. They had a daughter, Anne.

During World War II Warren joined the United States Navy and served in the Photo Science Laboratory. He rose to the rank of commander and, while serving in the South Pacific in 1944, was wounded by a Japanese grenade. For his wounds and service he received a Purple Heart, a Bronze Star and five battle stars. During his recovery at Guadalcanal his novel, Only the Valiant, was purchased by Warner Bros.

Following his discharge, Warren returned to Hollywood and re-established himself as a screenwriter specializing in westerns. He was the screenwriter for Beyond Glory (1948) starring Alan Ladd, Streets of Laredo (1949) with William Holden and Macdonald Carey, Oh! Susanna (1951) with Rod Cameron, The Redhead and the Cowboy (1951) with Glenn Ford and Rhonda Fleming, and Springfield Rifle (1952) with Gary Cooper. Only the Valiant was adapted by other writers for a 1951 film starring Gregory Peck.

In 1951 Warren began directing films as well as writing them, starting with Little Big Horn, a western starring Lloyd Bridges. He followed this with Hellgate (1952) with James Arness and produced by Commander Films Corporation, a company that Warren founded. In 1953 he moved to Paramount where he wrote the screenplay for Pony Express starring Charlton Heston as Buffalo Bill. In the same year he wrote and directed Arrowhead with Heston and Jack Palance, and the 3-D adventure Flight to Tangier with Palance and Joan Fontaine. Warren also directed Seven Angry Men (1955), an Allied Artists production starring Raymond Massey.

In 1955 CBS offered Warren the position of director and producer of Gunsmoke, a new television series based on the popular radio series of the same name and produced by Norman Macdonnell. Initially interested in only making motion pictures, Warren accepted the offer when CBS agreed to pay him $7000 per week. He produced the entire first season of the series and directed the first 26 of its 39 episodes. Warren continued as producer for the second season of Gunsmoke but left the series in mid-season due to a difficult professional relationship with Macdonnell, who worked as the series' associate producer.

After leaving Gunsmoke, Warren returned to working in the cinema as a writer, director, and producer. His films from this era include the horror films Back From the Dead (1957) with Peggie Castle and The Unknown Terror (1958) with John Howard, and the war film Desert Hell (1958) with Brian Keith. His westerns include Trooper Hook (1957) with Joel McCrea and Barbara Stanwyck, Copper Sky (1957) with Jeff Morrow, Ride a Violent Mile (1958) with John Agar, Blood Arrow (1958) with Scott Brady, and Cattle Empire (1958) with Joel McCrea.

Warren also continued working in television. In 1957 he wrote, produced, and directed an episode of the anthology series Playhouse 90 entitled "Without Incident", which starred Errol Flynn. In 1959 he became producer and occasional writer and director for the series Rawhide starring Eric Fleming and Clint Eastwood. He also served briefly as producer or executive producer for two other western series, The Iron Horse with Dale Robertson and The Virginian with James Drury. He returned to films as the writer of Day of the Evil Gun (1968) with Glenn Ford and as the writer and director of Charro! (1969) starring Elvis Presley.

Warren died of a heart aneurysm in 1990 at the age of 77, and is buried at Arlington National Cemetery.

Filmography[]

Year Title Credited as
Producer Director Screenwriter Story
1948 Beyond Glory Yes
1949 Streets of Laredo Yes
1951 Oh! Susanna Yes
The Redhead and the Cowboy Yes
Only the Valiant Yes
Fighting Coast Guard Yes
Little Big Horn Yes Yes
1952 Woman of the North Country Yes
Hellgate Yes
Springfield Rifle Yes
1953 Pony Express Yes
Arrowhead Yes Yes
Flight to Tangier Yes Yes
1955 Seven Angry Men Yes
1956 The Black Whip Yes
1957 Trooper Hook Yes Yes
The Unknown Terror Yes
Back from the Dead Yes
Copper Sky Yes Yes
Ride a Violent Mile Yes Yes Yes
1958 Blood Arrow Yes Yes
Cattle Empire Yes Yes
Desert Hell Yes Yes
1968 Day of the Evil Gun Yes Yes
1969 Charro! Yes Yes Yes

References[]

The information in this article was derived from the following sources:

External links[]

All or a portion of this article consists of text from Wikipedia, and is therefore Creative Commons Licensed under GFDL.
The original article can be found at Charles Marquis Warren and the edit history here.
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