Biography
Screenwriter Robert Riskin entered the film business as a teenager, at a time (1914) when anyone with a glimmer of talent was allowed to work on what were then called scenarios. During the 1920's, Robertson kept busy on Broadway, penning such popular plays as
Illicit and Bless You Sister. On the Columbia Pictures payroll in 1931, Riskin found himself adapting many of his own works for the screen -- including Bless You Sister, which ended up as the
Frank Capra production
The Miracle Woman. Riskin and Capra liked each other's work, and, as a result, Riskin contributed the wisecracking dialogue for Capra's
Platinum Blonde (1931). Future Riskin/Capra collaborations included
American Madness (1932),
Lady for a Day (1933),
It Happened One Night (1934) (which won Riskin an Oscar),
Broadway Bill (1934), Mr. Deeds Goes To Town (1936),
Lost Horizon (1937) and
You Can't Take It With You (1938). Free of their Columbia contracts in 1941, Riskin and Capra formed their own production company to put together
Meet John Doe. In later years, Capra would sometimes comment that he'd often have to tone down Riskin's Manhattan-bred cynicism; it's also likely that Riskin may have bristled at Capra's tendency to take all the credit for his collaborators' contributions. In 1937, Riskin ventured into directing for the first and last time with the Grace Moore musical
When You're In Love (1937). In 1942, he married actress
Fay Wray, who later put her own career on hold to nurse Riskin through a debilitating (and eventually fatal) neurological illness. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide