Actor
F. McGrew Willis
Born 1891 · Pleasanton, Iowa, USA
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia F. McGrew Willis (August 18, 1891 – October 13, 1957) was an American screenwriter of the silent and early sound film eras. Born Frank McGrew Willis on August 18, 1891, in Pleasanton, Iowa, he broke into the film industry writing film shorts in 1914 and 1915 as a freelance screenwriter. His first feature credit came in 1915, with The Quest, the first of three features he would pen in 1915. Over the next fourteen years he would write the scripts or stories for 43 silent films, three of which, The Girl in the Pullman (1927), Annapolis (1928), and A Blonde for a Night (1928), he also produced for either De Mille Pictures and/or Pathé Exchange. He would also produce another three films in 1928. In 1929, and through the next 6 years of the blossoming talking picture era, he would write the screenplays or stories for another 18 films. In the late 1930s he would work in England, where he scripted 6 films during the remainder of the decade. His final screenwriting credit would come on 1941's Sis Hopkins, for which he wrote the story. Willis died on October 13, 1957, in Menlo Park, California, and was buried in Mountain View Cemetery in Oakland, California.
Writing

Twin Beds
Screenplay · 1929

His Divorced Wife
Scenario Writer · 1919

The Pagan God
Writer · 1919

The Forty-Niners
Writer · 1932

Almost a Lady
Writer · 1926

The Light That Failed
Adaptation · 1923

Two Weeks Off
Writer · 1929

The Winner
Story · 1926

Everyman's Price
Writer · 1921
The Burden Bearer
Writer · 1915

Getting Gertie's Garter
Adaptation · 1927

Midshipman Jack
Screenplay · 1933

