Jimmy Starr
Jimmy Starr (3 February 1904 – August 13, 1990) was an American screenwriter and columnist.
Star began his career in Hollywood at 15 as an office boy at MGM. In 1923, Starr was hired as motion-picture editor of the now defunct Los Angeles Evening Post-Record, to which he contributed the “Cinematters” column through 1930.[1] Starr worked as a screenwriter in Hollywood during the 1930s. From the 1940s he worked as a film writer and columnist, providing reviews and insights into the film world, and made occasionally appeared in cameo roles in film. His novel The Corpse Came C.O.D. was made into a 1947 film.
After retirement from the Hollywood scene, Starr moved to Phoenix, Arizona, where he worked for many years as Director of Advertising and Public Relations for Ramada Inn, which was then headquartered in Phoenix.[2]
He gave many of his papers and photographs to Arizona State University in the 1970s.[3]
References
- Jimmy, Starr (2001). Barefoot on Barbed Wire: An Autobiography of a Forty-Year Hollywood Balancing Act. Scarecrow Press: Lanham, MD, 2001. ISBN 9780810839410. Retrieved January 28, 2023 – via Internet Archive.
- Standard & Poor's Register of Corporations, Directors and Executives. 1975 edition. Volume 2: Directors and Executives. Standard & Poor's Corp., 1975.
- Arizona State University Library Archived 2016-05-30 at the Wayback Machine.
Further reading
- "Jimmy Starr", Contemporary Authors, Volume 132. Gale Research, 1991.
- "Jimmy Starr", Biography Index, Volume 27. H. W. Wilson Co., 2002.
- A Jimmy Starr Omnibus (Ramble House, 2011).