Actor
Jerome Cady
Born 1903 · Cabell County, West Virginia, USA
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jerome Cady (August 15th, 1903 – November 7th, 1948) was a Hollywood screenwriter. What promised to be a lucrative and successful career as a film writer - graduating up from Charlie Chan movies in the late 1930s to such well respected war films as Guadalcanal Diary (1943), a successful adaptation of Forever Amber (1947) and the police procedural Call Northside 777 (1948) - came to an abrupt end when he died of a sleeping pill overdose onboard his yacht off Catalina Island in 1948. At the time of his death he was doing a treatment for a documentary on the Northwest Mounted Police. There was a Masonic funeral service for him. He received an Oscar nomination for Best Original Screenplay for Wing and a Prayer in 1944. A native of West Virginia, Cady started as a newspaper copy boy. He was later a reporter with the Los Angeles Record, before joining the continuity staff of KECA-KFI, Los Angeles in June 1932. He spent time in New York in the 1930s with Fletcher & Ellis Inc., as its director of radio, returning to Los Angeles in 1936. He joined 20th Century Fox in 1940, having previously been employed at RKO between radio jobs.
Writing

Call Northside 777
Screenplay · 1948

Cry Danger
Story · 1951

Five Came Back
Screenplay · 1939

Winner Take All
Story · 1939

Forever Amber
Writer · 1947

Charlie Chan at Monte Carlo
Screenplay · 1937

Mr. Moto's Gamble
Writer · 1938

Inside Story
Writer · 1939

Wing and a Prayer
Story · 1944

Thunder in the Valley
Writer · 1947

Guadalcanal Diary
Adaptation · 1943

The Purple Heart
Writer · 1944