Louise Rousseau (1910-1981) was an American screenwriter known primarily for penning B Westerns in the 1940s.[1]
Louise Rousseau | |
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Born | Louise S. Rousseau July 22, 1910 Provincetown, Massachusetts, USA |
Died | September 25, 1981 (aged 71) Ojai, California, USA |
Education | Massachusetts Institute of Technology |
Occupation | Screenwriter |
Spouse(s) | John Belding (m. 1930) |
Louise was born in Provincetown, Massachusetts, to Louis Rousseau (a famous French tenor) and Frances Simkins (daughter of a prominent Texas lawyer).[2]
Her parents split up when she was a baby; her father returned to France, and she was sent to Texas to live with her aunts.[3] She later reconnected with her father in 1932.[2]
After graduating high school at age 15, she studied chemistry at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.[4] After school, she became a secretary to the manager of the Rivoli Theatre in New York before moving on to Pathe, where she became the assistant of Frank Donovan.[5]
Early on in her Hollywood career, she worked as a director (one of very few women at the time) of newsreels at Pathe-RKO.[4] She later made a living writing low-budget Westerns — at least until she was called to testify before the House Unamerican Activities Committee in 1951.[6][7]
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