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Gerald Butler (author)

Gerald Butler
Born Gerald Alfred Butler
(1907-07-31)July 31, 1907
England
Died February 1, 1988(1988-02-01) (aged 80)
Eastbourne, East Sussex, England, UK
Occupation Novelist, screenwriter, chemist
Nationality English
Period 1940–1972
Genre Crime, thriller, and mystery

Gerald Butler (1907-1988) was an English crime, mystery, thriller and pulp writer and screenwriter. He was born on July 31, 1907 and worked as a chemist prior to becoming a novelist. He later worked as a director of an advertising firm. He was sometimes referred to as the "English James M. Cain".

He was thirty-seven years old when his first novel, Kiss the Blood Off My Hands, was published in 1940 by Jarrolds Publishing, which became a best-seller. By 1945, it had sold over 232,000 copies in England alone. In 1945, American publishers Farrar & Rinehart, were the first to publish one of Butler's novels outside of England. Their first release of Butler's work was his 1943 novel, Their Rainbow Had Black Edges, issued under the title Dark Rainbow. Farrar & Rinehart went on to publish four more of his novels for the American market, between 1946 and 1951.

Following the publication of his first four novels, Eagle-Lion Films bought the film rights to Kiss the Blood Off My Hands in 1946, hoping to turn it into a Robert Donat film. After the option expired, the novel's film rights were sold to actor-turned-producer Burt Lancaster in mid-1947. The film was the first project for Lancaster's new production company, Norma Productions, and hit the screens in October 1948. The film starred Joan Fontaine, Burt Lancaster and Robert Newton and was released in some markets under the names The Unafraid or Blood on My Hands, due to censor issues.

Meanwhile, producer/director Mario Zampi approached Butler in 1947 to collaborate on a film noir thriller, The Fatal Night. Butler adapted Michael Arlen's famous short story, The Gentleman From America into a screenplay for the film which was released in April 1948. Butler and Zampi collaborated again a year later for the Zampi-produced Third Time Lucky, Butler's own film adaptation of his novel They Cracked Her Glass Slipper. The film was released in January 1949 and was directed by Gordon Parry.


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