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・ Joseph Ferrers
・ Joseph Ferriola
・ Joseph Ferris House
・ Joseph Fesch
・ Joseph Fessio
・ Joseph Fiametta
・ Joseph Fichera
・ Joseph Fickler
・ Joseph Fidel
・ Joseph Field
・ Joseph Fielding
・ Joseph Fielding McConkie
・ Joseph Fielding Smith
・ Joseph Fielding Smith (presiding patriarch)
・ Joseph Fielding Smith Institute for Church History
Joseph Fields
・ Joseph Fiennes
・ Joseph Fiery House
・ Joseph Fil
・ Joseph Filkowski
・ Joseph Filz
・ Joseph Finch Fenn
・ Joseph Finder
・ Joseph Fineberg
・ Joseph Finger
・ Joseph Finnegan
・ Joseph Finnegan (Brigadier general)
・ Joseph Finnegan (cryptographer)
・ Joseph Finnegan (Irish judge)
・ Joseph Finnemore


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Joseph Fields : ウィキペディア英語版
Joseph Fields

Joseph Albert Fields (February 21, 1895 – March 4, 1966)〔According to the State of California. ''California Death Index, 1940–1997''. Center for Health Statistics, California Department of Health Services, Sacramento, California. (ancestry.com )〕 was an American playwright, theatre director, screenwriter, and film producer.
==Life and career==
Fields was born in New York City, the son of vaudevillean Lew Fields. He graduated from DeWitt Clinton High School and attended New York University before enrolling in the American Expeditionary Force during World War I, after which he remained in Paris until 1922. His early writing career was spent churning out screenplays for mostly B-movies, beginning with ''The Big Shot'' in 1931.
Fields made his Broadway debut in 1938 with the play ''Schoolhouse on the Lot'', co-written with Jerome Chodorov, who became a frequent collaborator. The prolific pair went on to write ''My Sister Eileen'' (1940), ''Junior Miss'' (1941), ''The French Touch'' (1945), ''Wonderful Town'' (1953), ''The Girl in Pink Tights'' (1954), ''Anniversary Waltz'' (1954), and ''The Ponder Heart'' (1956). They also wrote the screenplay for the 1942 film adaptation of ''My Sister Eileen''.
With Anita Loos, Fields wrote the book for the Jule Styne musical ''Gentlemen Prefer Blondes'', and he collaborated with Oscar Hammerstein II on the book for ''Flower Drum Song''. He also co-produced and wrote the screen adaptation of the latter, garnering a Writers Guild of America Award nomination for Best Written American Musical.
Fields won the Tony Award for Best Musical for ''Wonderful Town'' and was nominated in the same category for ''Flower Drum Song''.
As a director, Fields helmed Arthur Miller's ''The Man Who Had All the Luck'' (1944), his own plays ''I Gotta Get Out'' (1947) and ''The Tunnel of Love'' (1957), and ''The Desk Set'' (1955).
Fields was the brother of writer/lyricist Dorothy and writer Herbert. He died in Beverly Hills;〔 according to his obituary in ''The New York Times'', "Joseph Fields...died here last night...Mr. Fields lived in New York but was wintering in California when he died."〔Special to the New York Times, Beverley Hills, California, March 4, 1966, "Joseph Fields, 71, Dies on Coast; Co-Author of 'My Sister Eileen'", March 5, 1966, p. 20〕

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