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Pierre Collings


Pierre Collings

Birthday:

09/22/1900

Place of birth:

Nova Scotia, Canada:

Biography:

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Lysander Pierre Collings (September 22, 1900 - December 21, 1937), known professionally as Pierre Collings, was a writer and filmmaker who, along with Sheridan Gibney, won two Academy Awards in 1936 for The Story of Louis Pasteur. Their screenplay was adapted from their own work, leading to awards for both Best Adapted Screenplay and Best Story. Collings started in the motion picture industry at 17 as a messenger boy and worked as a cameraman before becoming known for his writing. He wrote a number of screenplays in the mid-late 1920s and although he was less active and suffered from a number of personal issues in the 1930s, it was then that his best known work was released. The Story of Louis Pasteur was nominated for Best Picture and won Best Actor for Paul Muni, in addition to winning Best Story and Best Adapted Screenplay for Collings and Gibney. Unusually, the pair won Best Adapted Screenplay for adapting their own work. The Best Story category was discontinued in 1957 in favor of Best Original Screenplay.



Credits

The Story of Louis Pasteur (1936)
Screenplay
The Story of Louis Pasteur (1936)
Story
Animal Crackers (1930)
Continuity
Dangerous Nan McGrew (1930)
Writer
The Hole in the Wall (1929)
Writer
The Red Dance (1928)
Adaptation
Time to Love (1927)
Screenplay
Knockout Reilly (1927)
Writer
The Show Off (1926)
Screenplay
Good and Naughty (1926)
Writer
A Social Celebrity (1926)
Writer
The Grand Duchess and the Waiter (1926)
Screenplay
A Woman of the World (1925)
Writer
Untamed Youth (1924)
Cinematography