Waldemar Young(1878-1938)
- Writer
- Script and Continuity Department
American screenwriter, of Mormon parentage. Young's first job was on
the editorial staff of the Salt Lake Herald. He subsequently studied at
Stanford University, but did not manage to attain a degree. Before
entering the motion picture industry, he was engaged as a story writer
and drama editor, respectively by the San Francisco Chronicle and the
San Francisco Examiner. After a stint as a publicist for various
theatrical personalities, he began his film career under contract to
Universal, from 1917 to 1919. He subsequently moved on to Famous
Players/Lasky, commuting between Hollywood and Paramount's Astoria
studios in Long Island. Young wrote some of his most highly regarded
screenplays for MGM (1924-29) and Paramount (1930 and 1932-36). The
latter included notable collaborations on
Cecil B. DeMille epics
(The Sign of the Cross (1932),
Cleopatra (1934)), as well as several
of Gary Cooper's biggest box-office
hits of the period
(The Lives of a Bengal Lancer (1935),
The Plainsman (1936)).