Cedric Henning Belfrage was born in
Marylebone, London, on 8 November 1904, the son of Frances Grace (née Powley) and
Sydney Henning Belfrage, a physician and author. He was educated at
Gresham's School, before entering
Corpus Christi College,
Cambridge. There he had the same room as
Christopher Marlowe had in the 16th century. While still a Cambridge student, Belfrage began a writing career as a film critic, with a first article in
Kinematograph Weekly in 1924. In 1927, he went to
Hollywood, where he was hired by the
New York Sun and
Film Weekly as a correspondent. Belfrage returned to London in 1930 as
Sam Goldwyn's press agent. Returning again to Hollywood, he became politically active, joining the
Hollywood Anti-Nazi League and co-editing the left-wing literary magazine
The Clipper. He decided to make the United States his home and took out first papers for citizenship in 1937, although he failed to complete the process within the statutory seven-year time limit. Belfrage joined the
Communist Party USA in 1937 but withdrew his membership a few months later. Despite his non-membership in the American Communist Party, Belfrage remained a believer that it functioned as "the core of the radical movement." ==World War II==