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Lorna Moon

Lorna Moon was a British author and screenwriter from the early days of Hollywood. She is best known as the author of the bestselling novel Dark Star (1929) and as one of the earliest and most successful female screenwriters. As a screenwriter, she developed screenplays for notables including Gloria Swanson, Norma Shearer, Lionel Barrymore and Greta Garbo.

Life
Moon was born in Strichen, Aberdeenshire, in 1886, to plasterer Charles Low and Margaret Benzies (1863–1945). She was a socialist and an avowed atheist. In 1907 she met William Hebditch, a commercial traveller from Yorkshire who had stayed at the hotel run by her parents. The two were secretly married in Aberdeen and shortly after the couple left Britain for Alberta in Canada, where Moon gave birth to her first child, William Hebditch (1908–1990). Lorna Moon contracted tuberculosis and died in a sanatorium in Albuquerque, New Mexico, in 1930, aged 43. She was cremated and her ashes were returned to Scotland, where they were scattered on Mormond Hill near Strichen. == Career ==
Career
In 1920, Moon sent director Cecil B. DeMille a critique of his film Male and Female (1920) in which she "razzed him wickedly". She went on to train with DeMille at Famous Players–Lasky/Paramount Film Corporation, which later became Paramount Pictures. In the early 1920s, Moon suffered from tuberculosis and wrote short stories and plays from bed before returning to work in 1926. In 1926, Moon worked on screenplays for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer including Upstage (1926), After Midnight, Women Love Diamonds (1927), Mr. Wu (1927) and Love. Love was one of MGM's highest-earning films of 1927 and was considered a blockbuster, earning MGM $946,000 domestically and an additional $731,000 internationally. In 1929, Moon's novel Dark Star was released and reached the bestseller list. The novel was later adapted by Frances Marion into the 1930 film Min and Bill, starring Marie Dressler. Min and Bill is generally thought to have revived Dressler's career. ==Screen credits==
Screen credits
Her screen credits include The Affairs of Anatol (1921), ''Don't Tell Everything (1921), Her Husband's Trademark (1922), Too Much Wife (1922), Upstage (1926), After Midnight (1927), Women Love Diamonds (1927), Mr. Wu (1927), and Love'' (1927). ==Literary works==
Literary works
Her literary works include Doorways in Drumorty (1925), a collection of short stories, and the novel Dark Star (1929). Dark Star was a critical success, and in 1930 was adapted for the screen as Min and Bill, starring Marie Dressler and Wallace Beery. ==Recent developments==
Recent developments
The Collected Works of Lorna Moon, edited by Glenda Norquay, was published in 2002. In 2008 a plaque commemorating Lorna Moon was unveiled in Strichen. In 2010 a stage play, based on the stories in Doorways in Drumorty, was written by Mike Gibb and performed around Scotland by Red Rag Theatre. Further major Scottish tours were staged by Red Rag in 2011 and by Awkward Stranger 2019. Playwright and Author Mike Gibb also wrote Drumorty Revisited, a follow-up to Lorna Moon's Doorways in Drumorty, which was published by Hame Press in 2019. ==Notes==
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