Beta Breuil | |
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Beta Breuil, photographed 1912. Signed, “Vitagraphically yours.”
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Born |
Elizabeth Donner Vanderveer 1876 New York, New York, U.S |
Occupation | Screenwriter |
Years active | 1911–1918 |
Beta Breuil was the professional name and nom de plume of Elizabeth Donner Vanderveer. Breuil worked as a script editor and screenwriter for several motion picture companies in the early 1900s.
Born in 1876, in New York City, Breuil was the daughter of Frank S. Vanderveer, a lawyer. Her family was well off and she attended schools in both New York City and Germany.
On November 21,1893, Breuil married Frank Milne Willard, who owned a forge business and was fairly wealthy. The two were about to divorce but Williard died before they could, in 1904. This caused something of a scandal after his death. Breuil attempted to collect a life insurance policy, but was taken to court by his family. The story was written about in The New York Times.
Breuil remarried in 1904 to Hartmann Breuil, whose last name she kept for her professional title. Four years after they married, Hartmann Breuil died at the age of 36. After the death of two husbands, Beta Breuil turned to the entertainment industry to make a living.
Breuil was over thirty when she started her professional career in the entertainment industry. She first attempted to find work as an actress in theater before she started work for the Vitagraph Company of America, a motion picture studio based in Brooklyn. According to a 1913 article in The New York Times, Breuil submitted scenarios to the Vitagraph Company and was subsequently hired as an assistant there in 1910. She worked her way up from assistant to head editor of the department in just four months.
Vitagraph was known for its exceptional scenario department and the efficiency with which the staff read and approved or discarded potential manuscripts. Breuil herself described the process as “weeding-out” the good manuscripts from the bad in an article she wrote for Moving Picture World, a film industry magazine, “All scripts are considered the day they arrive (arranging in numbers from seventy-five to one hundred a day), receiving sound judgment from two well trained readers. Those that are deemed worthwhile are submitted to the editor.” A New York Times article confirms that Vitagraph received up to 500 manuscripts a week, which all went to the department headed by Breuil. Some credited the productivity of this department to Breuil herself, by describing her as “the woman who organized and brought to a point of great efficiency the scenario department of the Vitagraph Company of America.”
After Breuil quit the Vitagraph Company, she worked as a freelance worker, writing scenarios “to order.” In 1914, she took the position of “artistic advisor” to the North American Film Corporation. Epes Winthrop Sargent described this position in Moving Picture World by writing, “Her undeniable talent is not limited to any particular line.... Here her genius for devising effects and working out ideas will have an absolutely unlimited scope, for she will have no one between herself and the company”.