
Birthday: May 04, 1914
Death: January 07, 1968
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Hugo D. Butler (4 May 1914 – 7 January 1968) was a Canadian born screenwriter working in Hollywood who was blacklisted by the film studios in the 1950s. Born in Calgary, Alberta, his father had acted and written scripts in silent films. Hugo Butler worked as a journalist and playwright before moving to Hollywood in 1937 where he wrote the first of his thirty-four screenplays. His work on Edison the Man (1940) led to his nomination (with Dore Schary) for the Best Writing, Original Story Academy Award. In 1940 he married actress Jean Rouverol, later an author and screenwriter. Shortly thereafter Butler's career was interrupted when he served in the United States military during World War II. After being blacklisted, he wrote under various pseudonyms as well as using a fellow member of the Writers Guild of America as a front to submit screenplays to the movie studios on his behalf. He and his wife went to Mexico where he worked on scripts for directors Luis Buñuel and Carlos Velo. He was a handful of blacklisted artists responsible for the Nuevo Cine movement in Mexico, according to Rebeca Shreiber's Cold War Exiles in Mexico. They did not return to the United States on a permanent basis for thirteen years. Hugo Butler suffered from arteriosclerotic brain disease for several years before he died from a heart attack in 1968 in Hollywood, California. In 1997, the Board of Directors of the Writers Guild of America voted to posthumously give him official credit for scripts he had written. He is survived by Becky Butler, Emily Butler, Mary Butler, Debbie Butler and screenwriter Michael Butler.

December 01, 1943

May 25, 1951

June 20, 1951

December 16, 1938

September 05, 1960

May 01, 1972

October 04, 1962

December 07, 1951

May 10, 1940

April 30, 1945

September 03, 1937

August 05, 1954

March 15, 1940

January 29, 1942

February 10, 1939

March 16, 1950

May 11, 1949

June 09, 1960

May 09, 1957

March 02, 1946

March 21, 1939

October 03, 1962

August 21, 1968

April 07, 1941

August 01, 1956

January 31, 1952

September 13, 1940

September 01, 1942

March 31, 1963

August 15, 1941

March 06, 1950

March 04, 1946

January 31, 1954