Jack Cunningham  | |
|---|---|
| Born | April 1, 1882 Ionia, Iowa, US  | 
| Died | October 4, 1941 (aged 59) | 
| Occupation | Screenwriter | 
| Years active | 1913–1939 | 
Jack Cunningham (April 1, 1882 – October 4, 1941) was an American screenwriter. He wrote for more than 130 films between 1913 and 1939. He was born in Ionia, Iowa, and died from a cerebral hemorrhage in Santa Monica, California.
Selected filmography
- The Stainless Barrier (1917)
 - The Medicine Man (1917)
 - A Stormy Knight (1917)
 - The Wrong Man (1917)
 - Limousine Life (1918)
 - A Law Unto Herself (1918)
 - Hands Up! (1918)
 - The Bells (1918)
 - The Border Raiders (1918)
 - A Burglar for a Night (1918)
 - The Narrow Path (1918)
 - The Goddess of Lost Lake (1918)
 - The Ghost of the Rancho (1918)
 - Little Red Decides (1918)
 - All Wrong (1919)
 - The False Code (1919)
 - The Joyous Liar (1919)
 - Todd of the Times (1919)
 - Daredevil Jack (1920)
 - The Dream Cheater (1920)
 - The House of Whispers (1920)
 - $30,000 (1920)
 - Number 99 (1920)
 - Live Sparks (1920)
 - The Green Flame (1920)
 - The Devil to Pay (1920)
 - Double Adventure (1921)
 - A Wife's Awakening (1921)
 - The Rowdy (1921)
 - Where Lights Are Low (1921)
 - The Avenging Arrow (1921)
 - Beyond the Rocks (1922)
 - A Trip to Paramountown (1922, short)
 - The Covered Wagon (1923)
 - A Gentleman of Leisure (1923)
 - Homeward Bound (1923)
 - The Light That Failed (1923)
 - The Man Who Fights Alone (1924)
 - Just a Woman (1925)
 - The Black Pirate (1926)
 - The Adventurer (1928)
 - The Viking (1928)
 - The Iron Mask (1929)
 - The Guilty Generation (1931)
 - The Deceiver (1931)
 - The Rider of Death Valley (1932)
 - The Texas Bad Man (1932)
 - The Fourth Horseman (1932)
 - Flaming Guns (1932)
 - Terror Trail (1933)
 - The Thundering Herd (1933)
 - Under the Tonto Rim (1933)
 - To the Last Man (1933)
 - It's a Gift (1934)
 - Mississippi (1935)
 - Painted Desert (1938)
 - Union Pacific (1939)
 
External links
- Jack Cunningham at IMDb
 - Jack Cunningham papers, 1922 - 1939, held by the Billy Rose Theatre Division, New York Public Library for the Performing Arts
 
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