Lee Wilson Dodd
Lee Wilson Dodd (July 11, 1879 - May 16, 1933) was a playwright, poet, and novelist. Several of his plays were made into films. He also wrote short stories and poems[1] as well as reviews. He was also a professor.
Dodd was born in Franklin, Pennsylvania.[2] He began his career as a lawyer.
Yale University has a collection of his papers.[3]
Several of his works were published in Harper's Magazine.[4] He had a poem published in Poetry, A Magazine of Verse.[5] In 1919, Dodd's novel The Book of Susan was serialized in the Saturday Evening Post.[6]
Dodd rented a camp at the Pocono Lake Preserve for many years, along with Henry Seidel Canby, before becoming one of the founders of the Yelping Hill Association.[6]
He corresponded with Albert Johannsen.
Dodd is quoted as having written: "Much that I sought, I could not find; much that I found, I could not bind; much that I bound, I could not free; much that I freed, returned to me."
Bibliography
- The Book of Susan
- His Majesty Bunker Bean, a Comedy in Four Acts and Five Scenes
- A Modern Alchemist, and Other Poems (1906)
- The Middle Miles and Other Poems
- Lilia Chenoworth
- The Book of Susan, a Novel (1920)
- The Golden Complex: A Defence of Inferiority (1927)
- A Garnerof Fugitive Pieces
Plays
- The Return of Eve (1909)
- Speed (1911)
- His Majesty Bunker Bean (1916)
- Pals First (1917)
- The Changelings (1923)
- A Strong Man's House (1929)[7]
Filmography
- The Return of Eve (1916), an adaptation of one of Wilson's plays
- Pals First, a Wilson play adapted into films in 1918 and 1926
- Bunker Bean adapted from Wilson's play that was an adaptation of a Harry Leon Wilson novel
- His Majesty, Bunker Bean (1925 film), also an adaptation of a Wilson 1916 play adapted from a Harry Leon Wilson novel
References
- ^ "Lee Wilson Dodd (1879-1933) · Artists & Authors · Cornwall Historical Society". www.cornwallhistoricalsociety.org.
- ^ "Lee Wilson Dodd". Playbill.
- ^ "Collection: Lee Wilson Dodd papers | Archives at Yale". archives.yale.edu.
- ^ "Lee Wilson Dodd | Harper's Magazine". harpers.org.
- ^ "Lee Wilson Dodd. Age and Youth. Harriet Monroe, ed. Poetry: A Magazine of Verse. 1912-22". www.bartleby.com.
- ^ a b Zug, James (2004). Pocono Lake Preserve: A Centennial History 1904-2004. Pocono Lake, PA: Pocono Lake Preserve. p. 183. ISBN 0-9755733-0-6.
- ^ "Lee Wilson Dodd – Broadway Cast & Staff | IBDB". www.ibdb.com.
External links
- Findagrave entry
- Lee Wilson Dodd Papers. Yale Collection of American Literature, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library.