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William Marien Conselman (July 10, 1896 – May 25, 1940) was an American screenwriter who also wrote newspaper comic strips under his Bill Conselman byline and sometimes under the pseudonym Frank Smiley.
William M. Conselman. Writer: The Mad Game. William Marien Conselman was at the time of his death one of Hollywood's best-paid writers. Like many others, he came from the ranks of newspaper writers, having worked on papers in both Los Angeles and New York.
- Writer, Additional Crew, Producer
- July 10, 1896
- William M. Conselman
- May 25, 1940
William Conselman, screen writer and comics artist, (Los Angeles?), 1927-1929 — Calisphere. UCLA, Library Special Collections, Charles E. Young Research Library. Connell (Will) Papers.
1932 Business and Pleasure (adaptation - as William Conselman) / (dialogue - as William Conselman) 1932 Stepping Sisters. 1931 Heartbreak (titles) 1931 Young Sinners.
William M. Conselman is known as an Writer, Screenplay, Story, Adaptation, Additional Writing, Co-Writer, Treatment, and Comic Book. Some of his work includes The Little Colonel, Bright Eyes, Stowaway, Ella Cinders, Pigskin Parade, Whoopee!, George White's Scandals, and A Connecticut Yankee.
writer, author. 43 years biography, photo, best movies and TV shows, news, birthday and age, Date of Death. «If I Had My Way» (1940), «So This Is London» (1939), «That's Right – You're Wrong» (1939), «East Side of Heaven» (1939), «Keep Smiling» (1938)...
American screenwriter William Conselman came up from the newspaper comic-strip mills. In 1925, Conselman and artist Charles Plumb created the popular funny-pages attraction Ella Cinders. The following year, Conselman came to Hollywood to help write the screen version of his comic-strip creation.