Josephine Lovett

AKA: Josephine Shaw
0.1481

1877-10-21

San Francisco, California, USA

Biography

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Josephine Lovett (21 October 1877 – 17 September 1958) was an American scenario writer, adapter, screenwriter and actress, active in films from 1916 to 1935. She was married to Canadian-born director, John Stewart Robertson. She is best known for her then-risqué film Our Dancing Daughters in 1928. Her screenplays typically included a heroine who was oftentimes economically and sexually independent. Josephine, also known as Mrs. John Stewart Robertson, was born October 21, 1877 in San Francisco, California. Although she later returned to California, she temporarily moved to New York, New York, where she started her career as a successful stage actress at Haverly’s 14th Street Theatre, on Sixth Avenue. Her husband also worked as a stage actor briefly at Haverly’s 14th Street in 1903. Lovett worked as a stage actress from 1899-1906 and made a motion picture appearance as an actress in 1916. She played the character of “Rachel Blake” in the 1916 drama entitled The Ninety and Nine, directed by Ralph Ince at the Vitagraph Company. Prior to her involvement in the film industry, Lovett was a Broadway actress appearing in various plays from 1899 to 1915. One popular play was 1901's Tom Moore starring Andrew Mack. Josephine was one of the most prominent female writers of her time. She was known for her ability to capture female audiences while simultaneously appeasing censors. By doing so, she along with the other female screenwriters of her generation, helped elaborate the modernization of American mentality from Victorianism to the flapper. Her screenplays and scenarios consisted of sexually suggestive material, just skirting censors. She is best known for her 1930 Academy Award-nominated film Our Dancing Daughters, produced by the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Company and novelized by Winifred Van Duzer. The 1928 drama was famous actress Joan Crawford’s breakthrough role, where she played Diana Medford, also known as “Dangerous Diana”, a young rebellious woman representing Lovett’s typical risqué content and visuals. The film’s plot surrounds the flamboyant and wild lifestyle of best friends Diana and Ann, who are in love with the same man. Critics and reviews mentioned the viewing of exposed “undies and much stocking”, and complained that “cocktails, flasks and mad dancing appear in quite a number of episodes [and] it is quite unnecessary to depict an intoxicated girl, as is done for a considerable length of this film”. Lovett and her husband collaborated for her final film, Captain Hurricane, in 1935. The RKO Radio Pictures-produced film was based on the life of a fisherman living in Cape Cod, Massachusetts. Robertson ended his directing career later that same year with the film Our Little Girl, starring the famous Shirley Temple. Lovett and her husband retired to Rancho Santa Fe, California, where she assisted Robertson with the establishment of the Rancho Riding Club in 1945. Thirteen years later, Lovett died at the age of eighty in Rancho Santa Fe, on September 17, 1958, six years before her beloved husband’s death in 1964. The couple are buried at the Mount Pleasant Cemetery in Ontario, Canada.

Crew Roles

Our Dancing Daughters
Story
Corsair
Screenplay
The Single Standard
Writer
The Spanish Jade
Writer
Jennie Gerhardt
Writer
Away Goes Prudence
Story
Hot Saturday
Adaptation
Tomorrow and Tomorrow
Writer
Shore Leave
Writer
The Road to Reno
Screenplay
Classmates
Writer
Annie Laurie
Screenplay
Captain Hurricane
Screenplay
Madame Butterfly
Screenplay
Tess of the Storm Country
Scenario Writer
Outcast
Screenplay
What a Widow!
Story
Sentimental Tommy
Writer
Soul-Fire
Writer
The Enchanted Cottage
Writer
Thunder Below
Writer
Two Alone
Screenplay
The Bugle Call
Writer
The Single Standard
Adaptation
Footlights
Scenario Writer
The Fighting Blade
Writer
Tess of the Storm Country
Writer
Footlights
Writer
Our Modern Maidens
Story
Our Modern Maidens
Screenplay
New Toys
Writer
The Rendezvous
Writer
Cast RolesCast Roles Played = {0}