Edith Fitzgerald (1889-1968) was an American screenwriter and playwright active primarily during the 1930s.
Edith Fitzgerald | |
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| Born | January 23, 1889 |
| Died | February 4, 1968 (aged 79) |
| Occupation | Screenwriter, playwright |
Born and raised in Burnside, Kentucky, Edith Pearl Fitzgerald was one of 12 children born to John Fitzgerald and Dora Roberts.
During the course of her career, she co-wrote several Broadway plays with Robert Riskin, her then-boyfriend, including Her Delicate Condition.[1][2] The two parted ways after they moved to the West Coast, and they never married despite press reports to the contrary.[3]
She was married to Elmer Griffin, a star tennis player, and she became a tennis champion in her own right.[4] She died in 1968 in Charlotte, North Carolina, after a brief illness.[5]
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