Ursula Parrott

E1005070

Ursula Parrott was an American writer best known for her popular 1929 novel "Ex-Wife," which explored modern marriage and divorce and was adapted into the Oscar-winning film "The Divorcee" (1930).

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Label Occurrences
Ursula Parrott canonical 1

Statements (52)

Predicate Object
instanceOf film
human
novel
novelist
screenwriter
short story writer
author Ursula Parrott NERFINISHED
awardReceived Academy Award for Best Actress
Academy Award for Best Writing, Adaptation NERFINISHED
basedOn Ex-Wife NERFINISHED
countryOfCitizenship United States of America
countryOfOrigin United States of America
United States of America
educatedAt Radcliffe College NERFINISHED
genre drama film
popular fiction
romantic fiction
romantic fiction
social novel
social novel
hasAdaptation The Divorcee NERFINISHED
The Divorcee NERFINISHED
hasChild Marc Parrott NERFINISHED
influenced popular representations of divorce in American fiction
languageOfWorkOrName English
English
mainSubject divorce
marriage
women’s emancipation
movement Jazz Age literature
notableFor depicting changing sexual mores in early 20th-century America
notableWork Ex-Wife NERFINISHED
Next Time We Live NERFINISHED
Strangers May Kiss NERFINISHED
The Ex-Wife (short stories collection, variant titles) NERFINISHED
The Gay Divorcee (story basis/related work) NERFINISHED
The Office Wife NERFINISHED
occupation novelist
screenwriter
short story writer
writer
publicationDate 1929
1930
sexOrGender female
spouse Charles T. Greenwood NERFINISHED
John Cuddihy NERFINISHED
John Wildberg NERFINISHED
Lindesay Marc Parrott NERFINISHED
workSubject divorce
modern marriage
urban romance
women’s independence

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

The Divorcee (1930) basedOnAuthor Ursula Parrott