
Birthday: January 01, 1860
Death: May 01, 1939
Frank E. Woods (1860 – May 1, 1939) was an American screenwriter of the silent era. He wrote for 90 films between 1908 till 1925. He first became a writer with the Biograph Company. Woods was also a pioneering film reviewer. As a writer, his contributions to film criticism are discussed in the 2009 documentary, For the Love of Movies: The Story of American Film Criticism. Woods worked for the Kinemacolor Company of America, directing at their Hollywood studios and writing the script for the unreleased The Clansman (1911). He was also known for his screenplay collaborations with D. W. Griffith, including the co-scripting of The Birth of a Nation. He later publicly expressed regret for his involvement with the film. He is interred in the Hollywood Forever Cemetery in Hollywood, CA. Woods was one of the 36 founders of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. From Wikipedia.

March 08, 1915

April 21, 1913

August 01, 1914

April 19, 1915

June 26, 1913

July 24, 1913

September 02, 1909

November 01, 1913

February 18, 1917

September 14, 1924

May 27, 1909

August 01, 1914

June 30, 1910

May 01, 1914

December 02, 1909

October 15, 1923

January 04, 1925

April 24, 1914

Unknown

November 26, 1916

June 07, 1909

May 09, 1914

May 20, 1909

November 03, 1909

March 08, 1914

March 08, 1914

September 04, 1916

May 03, 1909

October 06, 1910

January 21, 1909

July 01, 1909

April 14, 1917

March 04, 1917

March 24, 1917

January 24, 1910

December 22, 1910

November 10, 1910

June 06, 1912

September 06, 1909

June 01, 1913

July 10, 1912

July 06, 1913

October 08, 1922

November 24, 1909

December 13, 1909

November 29, 1909

December 23, 1909

August 26, 1912

August 24, 1910

August 15, 1910

November 17, 1908

November 03, 1908

September 25, 1908

February 08, 1909

December 09, 1909

October 03, 1909

June 17, 1909

October 06, 1909

August 02, 1909

March 20, 1910

July 16, 1916

October 14, 1909

March 29, 1925

May 11, 1924

August 18, 1910

June 08, 1911