
Actor
Charles Bennett
Born 1899 · Shoreham-by-Sea, England
Born just before the century turned, Charles Bennett made his writing debut as a child in 1911, fought in France during World War I while still a teen and resumed his acting career after the war's end. In 1926 he dropped acting to concentrate on being a playwright, later turning one of his most famous plays, "Blackmail," into a screenplay for production under the direction of Alfred Hitchcock. The affiliation with "Hitch" continued into the early 1940s, by which time both Bennett and the director were working in Hollywood. He wrote for producers ranging from Cecil B. DeMille to Irwin Allen to the penny-pinching folks at AIP. "If I couldn't write, I wouldn't want to live," commented Bennett, who had projects (including a remake of "Blackmail") going right up to the time of his death.
Directed
Acting
Writing

The Man Who Knew Too Much
Story · 1956

The 39 Steps
Adaptation · 1935

Foreign Correspondent
Screenplay · 1940

Night of the Demon
Screenplay · 1957

The Man Who Knew Too Much
Writer · 1934

Sabotage
Screenplay · 1937

Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea
Writer · 1964

Blackmail
Theatre Play · 1929

Young and Innocent
Screenplay · 1937

The Wild Wild West
Writer · 1965

Secret Agent
Screenplay · 1936

Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea
Screenplay · 1961





