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  1. William Percy Lipscomb (born 1887 in Merton, Surrey, England, died 25 July 1958) was a British-born Hollywood playwright, screenwriter, producer and director. He died in London in 1958, aged 71. Career. Lipscomb edited a brewery magazine and wrote sketches for gramophone companies in his spare time. [1] .

  2. www.imdb.com › name › nm0513744W.P. Lipscomb - IMDb

    Oscar-winner W.P. Lipscomb (born William Percy Lipscomb in 1887 in Merton, England) was a British playwright and screenwriter who also produced and directed motion pictures.

    • Writer, Producer, Director
    • October 1, 1887
    • W.P. Lipscomb
    • July 25, 1958
  3. W.P. Lipscomb. Writer: Pygmalion. Oscar-winner W.P. Lipscomb (born William Percy Lipscomb in 1887 in Merton, England) was a British playwright and screenwriter who also produced and directed motion pictures.

  4. Thank You, Mr. Pepys! is a historical play by the British writer W.P. Lipscomb. It was inspired by the three-volume biography of Samuel Pepys by historian Arthur Bryant, focusing in particular on his administration of the Royal Navy, and takes place in London and Oxford during the seventeenth century.

  5. Colonel Blood: Directed by W.P. Lipscomb. With Frank Cellier, Anne Grey, Mary Lawson, Allan Jeayes. The exploits of historical 17th-century renegade Thomas Blood and his attempted theft of the British Crown Jewels.

    • W.P. Lipscomb
    • 1934-01
    • Drama, History
    • 98
  6. W.P. Lipscomb is known as an Screenplay, Writer, Adaptation, Scenario Writer, Story, Producer, Dialogue, Script, Additional Writing, Director, Writers' Assistant, and Theatre Play. Some of his work includes Pygmalion, A Tale of Two Cities, Dunkirk, Les Misérables, A Town Like Alice, The Garden of Allah, Lloyd's of London, and The Speckled Band.

  7. Content description. Microfilm copy of ts transcriptions of a large numbers of letters (circa 735pp) written to his wife, Vera (January 1916 - December 1918), while serving with the Dorsetshire Regiment, with 7th Battalion (attached 3rd Entrenching Battalion, 32nd Division) (January 1916), and later 1st Battalion Dorsets (February 1916), in the ...