Dalton Trumbo

@Screenwriter, Family and Life

Dalton Trumbo was an American Academy Award-winning screenwriter

Dec 9, 1905

ColoradoAmericanWritersNovelistsSagittarius Celebrities
Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: December 9, 1905
  • Died on: September 10, 1976
  • Nationality: American
  • Famous: Screenwriter, Writers, Novelists
  • City/State: Colorado
  • Spouses: Cleo Beth Fincher (m. 1938–1976)
  • Known as: James Dalton Trumbo

Dalton Trumbo born at

Montrose, Colorado

Unsplash
Birth Place

Dalton Trumbo married Cleo Fincher in 1938 and together they had three children, Christopher Trumbo, a filmmaker and screenwriter by profession, Melissa, a photographer, and Nikola Trumbo, a psychotherapist.

Unsplash
Personal Life

He passed away on September 10, 1976 due to heart failure in Los Angeles. His body was donated to scientific research. His widow Cleo Trumbo passed away on October 9, 2009 in Los Altos at the age of 93.

Unsplash
Personal Life

Dalton Trumbo was born in Montrose, Colorado on December 9, 1905 to Orus Bonham Trumbo and Maud Trumbo. He attended Grand Junction High School. As a student, he worked as a cub reporter under Walter Walker for the ‘Grand Junction Daily Sentinel.’ *He went to the University of Colorado at Boulder where he worked as a reporter for the ‘Boulder Daily Camera’ and also contributed to their yearbook, campus humor magazine, and campus newspaper.

Unsplash
Childhood & Early Life

He later attended the University of Southern California. While studying there, he worked a few odd jobs while also writing movie reviews and short stories. He wrote a total of 88 short stories and six novels during that time. However, he failed to get any published as each one of them was rejected by various publications.

Unsplash
Childhood & Early Life

During the early 1930s, Dalton Trumbo’s hard work started paying off and he managed to get several of his stories published in various publications like ‘Saturday Evening Post’, ‘Hollywood Spectator’, ‘Vanity Fair’, and ‘McCall's Magazine’. Later, he was appointed by Warner Bros. studio as one of their readers.

Unsplash
Career

One of his initial published novels, ‘Eclipse,’ portrayed the social realities of the Great Depression era. It was deemed controversial in his hometown. In the late 1930s, he wrote another novel. Titled ‘Johnny Got His Gun’, it was an anti-war novel inspired by a Canadian soldier who loses his limbs in the World War I.

Unsplash
Career

After his success as a novelist, he established his credentials working as a screenwriter in Hollywood. He was among the highest-paid writers in the film industry during that time, earning as much as $4000 per week.

Unsplash
Career

Between 1940 and 1945, he delivered some of the most popular works of his career including the scripts of ‘Kitty Foyle’, ‘Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo’, and ‘Our Vines Have Tender Grapes.’ He was nominated for an Academy Award for his brilliant writing in ‘Kitty Foyle’.

Unsplash
Career

During the early 1940s, Dalton joined the Communist Party and his novel ‘The Remarkable Andrew’ reflected his views on the United States getting involved in the World War II. During the war, he received letters from pro-fascists demanding copies of ‘Johnny Got His Gun’ which he handed over to the FBI voluntarily.

Unsplash
Career

During his exile, Dalton Trumbo wrote some of his best scripts under various pseudonyms. One of these popular works was ‘The Brave One’, an anti-war film based on a Canadian soldier who loses his limbs during the course of the World War I. He wrote this script using the pseudonym of Robert Rich as he was blacklisted at that time. His efforts were eventually recognized and he was given the Academy Award for Best Story.

Unsplash
Major Works