Noel Langley

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Noel Langley (December 25, 1911November 4, 1980) was a successful novelist, playwright, screenwriter and director. While under contract to MGM he was one of the screenwriters for The Wizard of Oz. He was chosen for the job on the basis of his children's story, The Tale of the Land of Green Ginger — a children's classic which has seldom been out of print since it was first published in 1937.

Born in Durban, South Africa, he was first an author and a successful Broadway playwright. Langley began writing for films in the 1930s. After World War II, Langley worked on many British films including the film noir They Made Me a Fugitive (1947), Tom Brown's Schooldays (1951), Scrooge (1951), Pickwick Papers (1952), Ivanhoe (1952) and The Prisoner of Zenda (1952).

Noel Langley continued to write novels and plays throughout his life. He also wrote short stories for the Saturday Evening Post and other magazines.

Langley died in 1980 in Desert Hot Springs, California.

[edit] Partial bibliography

  • Cage Me a Peacock, Arthur Barker, 1935. A humorous historical novel set in Rome at the end of the Tarquin era.
  • The Land of Green Ginger, Arthur Barker, 1936. A book for children, concerning Abu Ali, the son of Aladdin.
  • There's a Porpoise Close Behind Us, Arthur Barker, 1936. A comic drama about English theatre life.
  • Three Plays, Arthur Barker, 1936. Farm of Three Echoes, For Ever, and Friendly Relations.
  • The Land of Green Ginger, 1937. It was rewritten for a new edition in 1966 and again in about 1975. In 1965, New York radio station WBAI recorded and broadcast Langley reading this story. A shortened version was issued on LP and offered as a fund-raising incentive.
  • So Unlike The English, William Morrow, 1937.
  • Hocus Pocus, Methuen, 1941. A humorous tale set in Hollywood.
  • The Music of the Heart, Arthur Barker, 1946. A novel with a circus background.
  • The Cabbage Patch, Arthur Barker, 1947. A comic drama about twenty-four hours in the life of Daisy, Lady Buckering.
  • The True and Pathetic History of Desbarollda, The Waltzing Mouse, Lindsay Drummond, 1947. A children's book, illustrated by Edward Ardizzone.
  • Nymph In Clover, Arthur Barker, 1948. The Lysistrata debacle retold.
  • There's a Horse in My Tree, with Hazel Pynegar, Arthur Barker, 1948. A humorous book.
  • Little Lambs Eat Ivy, Samuel French, 1950. A Light Comedy in Three Acts - produced 1948.
  • Edward, My Son; A Play in Three Acts, with Robert Morley, French, 1948.
  • Somebody's Rocking My Dreamboat, with Hazel Pynegar, Arthur Barker, 1949. A World War II novel about a group of women fleeing from England on a tramp steamer.
  • The Inconstant Moon, Arthur Barker, 1949. The story of Dante and Beatrice.
  • Tales of Mystery and Revenge, Arthur Barker, 1950.
  • Cuckoo in the Dell, with Hazel Pynegar, Arthur Barker, 1951. A tale of a young Norman knight and moral idealism.
  • The Rift in the Lute, also known as The Innocent at Large, Arthur Barker, 1952. An innocent boy finds a colourful, exotic world of "gay sinners" in ancient China.
  • Where Did Everybody Go?, Arthur Barker, 1960. A story of a playwright.
  • An Elegance of Rebels, a play in three acts, Arthur Barker, 1960.
  • The Loner, Triton Books, 1967.
  • A Dream of Dragonflies, Macmillan, 1971.
  • The Return, Kessinger Publishing, 2005. A collection of Saturday Evening Post short stories.
  • Desbarollda, the Waltzing Mouse, Durrant Publishing, 2006. A new edition.
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