
Andrew Peter Solt (June 7, 1916 – November 4, 1990) was a Hungarian-born Hollywood screenwriter for film and television. Born as Endre Peter Strausz, he began his career as a playwright in Budapest. Solt is best known for writing the screenplay forIn a Lonely Place (1950), a critically acclaimedfilm noir directed byNicholas Ray and starringHumphrey Bogart andGloria Grahame. The film is on theTime magazine "All-Time 100 Movies" list of greatest films since 1923.[1] In 2007, it was selected for preservation by theNational Film Registry[2] of theLibrary of Congress for being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant."
Solt also co-wrote the screenplay forJoan of Arc (1948), collaborating with Pulitzer Prize-winning playwrightMaxwell Anderson. Adapted from Anderson's hit Broadway showJoan of Lorraine (1946), the production starredIngrid Bergman and was nominated for seven Oscars and won two.[3]
Solt was born in Budapest, Austria-Hungary just before the end of World War I (Hungary became an independent country in 1918). His parents were Jewish and owned one of the city's top hotels, the Bristol. The adjacent Bristol Café was a popular meeting spot for Budapest's literary and artistic community.[4] Growing up amidst Budapest's thriving musical, theatrical and cabaret culture, Solt started writing plays when in his teens. Five musicals were successfully staged by the time he was 21.[5]
Solt's journey to Hollywood and a career as screenwriter was propelled by a fortuitous chance encounter withCardinal George Mundelein, the influential Archbishop of Chicago, known in the United States for his outspoken support ofPresident Franklin D. Roosevelt and theNew Deal. In 1938, Mundelein came to Budapest to attend the 34thInternational Eucharistic Congress, a gathering of Catholic Church prelates hundreds of thousands of others from around the world. Mundelein happened to be staying at the Bristol and met Solt who was working at the family hotel's reception desk. Solt told the Cardinal that if he wanted to see Budapest he could accompany him on a drive around the city. He so impressed Mundelein during the auto tour that the Cardinal offered to sponsor him if he ever wanted to come to the United States.
Solt soon took him up on his offer, and in 1939 was on a ship to New York City. It didn't take long for him to get caught up in the city's vibrant theater scene. One of his plays had been a smash hit throughout Europe in 1938. Translated into English asAccidents Don't Happen, it was attracting keen interest from a number of Broadway producers. The play wound up being optioned by famed songwriterIrving Berlin andBuddy DeSylva, the stage and screen producer. DeSylva wanted to doAccidents as a musical with Berlin, but the plans fell through.[6] However, in 1944 theShubert Organization bought the play, opening it on Broadway as a musical comedy in 1945.[7]
By then Solt was already a screenwriter in Hollywood, having gone there at the suggestion of Berlin who told him the motion picture studios were always on the lookout for new writers and new properties like his plays. Solt arrived on the West Coast in 1940. He started as a $250-a-week contract writer forColumbia Pictures, then quickly earned his first credit for a movie adaptation of another of his plays,The Orchestra Bride. The film version,They All Kissed the Bride, was released in 1942, and starredJoan Crawford andMelvyn Douglas in the screwball comedy.

Solt, universally known to friends and colleagues by his nickname Bundy, went on to write a string of screenplays and adaptations for major films from the 1940s through the 1950s.[8] They includedWithout Reservations (1946) starringJohn Wayne andClaudette Colbert;The Jolson Story (1946) withLarry Parks;Joan of Arc (1946); a remake of the 1933 classicLittle Women (1949) with the four March sisters played byElizabeth Taylor,June Allyson,Margaret O'Brien andJanet Leigh;Whirlpool (1949), a film noir withGene Tierney andRichard Conte, co-written withBen Hecht;In a Lonely Place (1950); mysteryThunder on the Hill (1951) withClaudette Colbert andAnn Blyth; and aMario Lanza musical set in Capri,For the First Time (1959); it turned out to be the popular singer's final movie (he died two months after it opened).
Over that span, Solt worked on films guided by some of Hollywood's leading directors includingVictor Fleming,Mervyn LeRoy,Otto Preminger,Rudolph Maté,Douglas Sirk,William Dieterle,Tay Garnett and Nicholas Ray.
Fleming—best known for helming two of the most popular movies in cinema history,The Wizard of Oz andGone With The Wind, both released in 1939—directedJoan of Arc.[9] Fleming not only had Solt and Anderson's ambitious screenplay and Bergman's star power to work with, but also a budget of $5 million, an enormous sum in those days, provided by veteran independent producerWalter Wanger, who had a reputation as a socially conscious movie executive who produced provocative message movies and glittering romantic melodramas.[10]
Joan of Arc got a lukewarm reception from moviegoers—its box office slightly exceeded its budget—and critics gave it mixed reviews. WroteNew York Times film criticBosley Crowther: "Pictorially, it is one of the most magnificent films ever made, bespeaking the vast sum of money and the effort expended on it. Dramatically, it has moments of tremendous excitement and shock. And emotionally it has glimmers of the deep poignancy of the Maid. But, somehow, the huge combination of pageantry, legend and pathos—of spectacle, color, court intrigues and the historic ordeal of a girl—while honestly intended, fails to come fully to life or to give a profound comprehension of the torment and triumph of Joan."[11]
The film, however, did get recognized byAcademy Awards voters. At the 1949 ceremonies,Joan of Arc won twoOscars—for best color photography and best costume design in a color film—out of a total of seven nominations. Bergman was nominated for best actress and co-starJosé Ferrer got the nod in the best supporting actor category. Other nominations were for best film editing, best art direction and set decoration, and best music. The film's producer,Walter Wanger, meanwhile received an honorary Academy Award for "distinguished service to the industry in adding to its moral stature in the world community by his production of the pictureJoan of Arc."[12] Wanger, who had received an honorary Oscar in 1946 for his service as president of theAcademy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (1939-1945) declined to accept the honor in 1949 out of pique thatJoan of Arc, which he considered one of his best movies, had not received a nomination for best picture of the year.[13]
Solt's most acclaimed screenplay is the one he wrote forIn a Lonely Place. In the film, Bogart, in one of his darkest roles, plays Dixon Steele, a gifted but paranoid screenwriter with a mean temper, especially when he gets boozed up. He gets into a rage that may or may not have led to a murder. He meets and falls in love with Laurel Gray (Gloria Grahame), a fledgling actress, and a romantic relationship ensues. But when another woman Steele has frequently been seen with is found murdered, he comes under suspicion.
Well-received when it first opened in 1950, critics in their appraisals since then have placed it in the top rank of film noir classics and singled it out as one of director Ray's best films. At its premiere in 1950, Crowther in hisNew York Times review praised Solt's script for being "almost as flinty as Bogart himself", noting that "because Mr. Solt did not compromise to fabricate a happy ending, the climax packs both surprise and a punch."[14] He also commented on its sardonic depiction of Hollywood, noting the movie "lets go with a few sharp barbs at the dynasty system in movieland." WhenTime's chief film criticRichard Schickel updated the magazine's all-time 100-best movies list and addedIn a Lonely Place, he said he "loved every minute of this sardonic portrayal of life on Hollywood's fringes (the characters surrounding Steele are etched in acid)."[15]
"Part of the enduring fascination ofIn A Lonely Place is how Ray and screenwriter Andrew Solt make it work on so many seemingly contradictory levels", a reviewer wrote when a Blu-ray-DVD version was put out in 2016 byCriterion, known for its curated catalog of film classics.[16] "It's a great and achingly romantic love story that also, no less thanHitchcock'sVertigo, lays bare the possessiveness, the willful blindness, and the derangement of romantic obsession." AndThe Wall Street Journal review of the 2016 DVD re-release stated: "There is no noir more profoundly sad than Nicholas Ray'sIn a Lonely Place, which unfolds with dark lyricism against a backdrop of violence, cynicism, and suspicion. One of Ray's most indelible stories involving characters who lash out in pointless fury—and one of his most personal films—it incorporates melodrama, echoes of Shakespeare, and heart-stopping performances by Humphrey Bogart and Gloria Grahame."[17]
In the 1950s Solt took up writing scripts for television, mostly for the weekly anthology series that were popular at the time. He wrote a number of teleplays forAlfred Hitchcock Presents (still seen in reruns), and also forGeneral Electric Theater,Schlitz Playhouse of Stars andFord Theatre.
Even after he had turned to screenwriting full-time, Solt continued to be involved in the theater. In 1945, a tour was launched for his playA Gift for the Bride.[18] It starredLuise Rainer, who had the unique distinction of being the only person to win the Best Actress Oscar two years in a row, forThe Great Ziegfeld (1937) andThe Good Earth (1938). In 1946Judy O'Connor, a play he wrote with Hollywood producerFrank Ross, opened in Boston[19] and starredDon DeFore, but never made it to Broadway. (Solt and Ross worked on a number of projects together. Solt did an early treatment ofThe Robe (1953), a tale of the Christ in Roman times, which became one of Ross's biggest hits, and is still remembered as the first movie released in widescreenCinemaScope.)
One of his most tantalizing endeavors involvedSomerset Maugham, the world-famous British novelist and short-story writer. Solt's acquaintanceLady Mendl (Elsie de Wolfe), the international socialite and renowned decorator, convinced her friend Maugham that the young Hungarian writer would be the perfect person to turn his first novel,Liza of Lambeth, into a play.[20] Maugham, who had resisted such proposals in the past, approved Solt's version, and the play was scheduled to open on Broadway in 1949. But this project never came to fruition.
When Solt arrived in Hollywood, he fit right in with the town's roster of actors, directors, and writers who were either born in Hungary or of Hungarian descent—among themGeorge Cukor,Michael Curtiz,Leslie Howard,Zoltan Korda, andAndre de Toth.
Probably the Hungarian entertainment personality most familiar to the American public wasZsa Zsa Gabor, the movie actress (Moulin Rouge,Touch of Evil) who was perhaps best known for her glamorous lifestyle, multiple marriages and frequent appearances on television talk shows. Solt knew her, having grown up in Budapest with her and her sistersMagda andEva (who also went on to an acting career). The matriarch of the family,Jolie Gabor, had opened a jewelry boutique in the lobby of the Bristol.[21][22] Solt renewed his friendship with the Gabors when the family arrived in Hollywood in 1942. He remained a lifelong friend of Zsa Zsa, and frequently accompanied her to movie premieres and to parties at well-known Hollywood haunts likeCiro's,Chasen's andRomanoff's where he was also often seen dining with other celebrity friends likeJoan Crawford,James Mason,Ginger Rogers andKathryn Grayson.[23][24] Solt and Gabor's careers also overlapped at times. Gabor appeared in two movies on which Solt was a writer:Lovely to Look At andFor the First Time. Solt is said to have had a hand in getting her a co-starring role in the Lanza film. There was also an ill-fated venture. Solt wrote a script for a Western that was to star Gabor and Dominican playboyPorfirio Rubirosa, with whom she was having an affair at the time.[25] The film, tentatively titledA Western Affair and laterRubi Rides Again was in pre-production when theImmigration and Naturalization Service ruled that Rubirosa was not eligible to work on the movie.[26] He appealed but lost and the movie never got made.
During theRed Scare era of the early 1950s when blacklisting and naming names infected Hollywood and ruined careers, Solt found himself entangled in a strange case of mistaken identity. In a tabloid magazine article about him, Solt was misidentified in a photo caption as "a well-known Communist." He was confused with then-blacklisted screenwriterWaldo Salt because of their similar last names.[27] He was even receiving mail for the writer. (Salt, who refused to testify before theHouse Un-American Activities Committee, had acknowledged he had been a member of the American Communist Party from 1939 to 1955.) Solt successfully sued for a retraction to avoid ever again being labeled a Communist. In fact he was a staunch anti-Communist and had sued the Soviet-dominated government of Hungary to regain his family' s hotel in Budapest which had been illegally seized.
Solt's life and screenwriting career are documented in theUniversity at Albany, SUNY's German and Jewish Intellectual Émigré Collections.[28] Included in the archive is a collection of Solt's personal papers along with a taped interview with his brother George Solt (now deceased) in which he reminisces about the family history and the details of his sibling's entertainment career.
Solt's nephew isAndrew W. Solt, producer, writer and director of movies and television documentaries; andJohn Solt, a poet and writer specializing in Japanese and Asian studies—he is the author ofShredding the Tapestry of Meaning: The Poetry and Poetics of Kitasono Katue.[29]