Original series The author Frederick Schiller Faust, writing as
Max Brand, created the character of Dr. James Kildare as a fictionalized version of his college friend,
Dr. George Winthrop "Dixie" Fish, a New York surgeon. He first introduced the character in a short story, "Internes Can't Take Money", that appeared in the March 1936 issue of
Cosmopolitan magazine. A second Kildare story, "Whiskey Sour", was published in
Cosmopolitan in April 1938. In these early stories, Dr. James "Jimmy" Kildare is an aspiring surgeon who leaves his parents' farm to practice at a fictional big-city hospital, and through his work, comes into contact with underworld criminals. The first Kildare film, ''
Internes Can't Take Money'' (1937), based on the short story of the same title and made by
Paramount, followed this version of the character. In 1938,
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM) contracted with Faust to acquire the rights to the Kildare character along with Faust's services as a film story writer. Faust then made major changes to the character to fit MGM's idea for a new movie series, including changing Kildare's specialty to diagnostics rather than surgery, introducing the character of Kildare's superior Dr. Leonard Gillespie, de-emphasizing the criminal elements, and restarting the story from Kildare's first arrival at the city hospital. Faust (as Brand) collaborated with MGM on its Kildare film series starting with the first MGM series release,
Young Dr. Kildare (1938) and continuing through
The People vs. Dr. Kildare (1941). During this time, Faust wrote several original Kildare stories which were first published in magazines, later republished in novel form, and made into films by MGM. The stories were written prior to the films being made, and were not published as movie
tie-ins. After
The People vs. Dr. Kildare, Faust and MGM parted ways. Faust was not involved in ''
Dr. Kildare's Wedding Day, Dr. Kildare's Victory'', or any of the subsequent films featuring Dr. Gillespie, although Faust (as Brand) continued to receive a credit for creating the characters. Faust's last two Kildare stories, "Dr. Kildare's Hardest Case" (published in 1942) and the unfinished story "Dr. Kildare's Dilemma" (posthumously published in the early 1970s), were not made into films. In 1944, Faust was killed in Italy while working as a
war correspondent.
Dr. Kildare story list This table lists the Max Brand-authored Kildare stories in chronological order of first publication. Due to the continuing popularity of the characters in film, radio and television series, many reprints, different formats, and different versions of the original Kildare books have since been released. Aside from the Kildare stories, Faust (as Brand) wrote only one other medical story, "My People", which appeared in the August 1940 issue of
Cosmopolitan. "My People" featured a character, "Dr. Maynard", who was similar to Dr. Kildare. By Robert C. Ackworth: •
Dr. Kildare (Lancer, 1962) •
Dr. Kildare: Assigned to Trouble (Whitman, 1963) (with Robert L. Jenney, illustrator) By
Norman A. Daniels: • ''Dr. Kildare's Secret Romance'' (Lancer, 1962) • ''Dr. Kildare's Finest Hour'' (Lancer, 1963) By William Johnston: •
Dr. Kildare: The Faces of Love (Lancer, 1963) •
Dr. Kildare: The Heart Has an Answer (Lancer, 1963) •
Dr. Kildare: The Magic Key (Whitman, 1964) (with Al Andersen, illustrator) ==Films==