Inez Asher (née Inez Harriett Silverberg; January 1, 1911 – May 8, 2006) was a novelist and television writer.

Inez Asher
Dick Powell, Inez Asher
Born
Inez Harriett Silverberg

January 1, 1911
DiedMay 8, 2006 (aged 95)
Other namesInez Hirsch
Occupation(s)Television writer, novelist
Spouses
Alvin Asher
(m. 1933; died 1967)
James M. Hirsch
(m. 1982)
Children1

Early years

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Inez Asher was the only child of Minor Silverberg, a Des Moines, Iowa real estate agent, and Edna Harris Silverberg. When Asher was six years old, General Frederick Funston was holding her in his arms as he collapsed and died from a heart attack in the lobby of The St. Anthony Hotel[1] in San Antonio, Texas.[2][3] Asher was a member of the class of 1928, Theodore Roosevelt High School, attended Miss Orton's Classical School for Girls and UCLA; she was elected to Phi Beta Kappa in her junior year.[4][5]

Radio and television writer

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Asher co-wrote the episode "Robert E. Lee" for the Famous Children of History radio program.[6] With Emilie Roberts, Asher composed a short lecture, "Irene Talking."[7] Asher wrote "The Last Orchid", the first episode of the Philco Players television program (1948).[8] Asher wrote for the 1954 televised series of Lassie.[9] and co-wrote "Welcome to Washington," an unsold television pilot for the proposed series The Claudette Colbert Show which aired as an episode of the anthology series Colgate Theatre in 1958.[10][11]

Political

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Like many Hollywood writers of the 1930s, Asher was singled out for her left-wing views. In 1934 she was listed in Elizabeth Dilling's self-published The red network; a "who's who" and handbook of radicalism for patriots.[12]

Novelist and poet

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Asher published one novel, Family Sins (Pinnacle Books, New York 1983), the story of an American widow who travels to the Orient in pursuit of a Korean orphan and ends up in the arms of a handsome but married Japanese doctor. Asher was co-author (with illustrator Alice Rovinsky) of two illustrated books of verse: Look at Me! A See Yourself Book for Boys and Look at Me! A See Yourself Book for Girls (Garden City Books, Garden City, New York 1951).[13] Parents would paste a child's photo in the designated spot inside the back cover and as the child turned the pages he would see his face, through a hole cut in each page, in all the people he wanted to be: pilot, railroad conductor, etc. "Look at me, and you will see, all the things I'd like to be. If I were a fireman brave, Folks in danger I would save!" or "To be a cowboy, Bronco Bill, That would give me such a thrill!" Publishers Weekly called the books "A delightful novelty."[14]

Personal

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Asher was married to Alvin Asher, an attorney for MGM,[15] and to James Marvin Hirsch.[16]

Later years

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Asher worked as a coordinator in the International Student Center at the University of California, Los Angeles.[17][18] She died in Yonkers, New York.

References

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  1. ^ The Virtual Museum of the city of San Francisco
  2. ^ Friday, March 2, 1917, Greensboro Daily News (North Carolina) Page: 7
  3. ^ Tuesday, February 20, 1917 Omaha World-Herald (Nebraska) Page: 1
  4. ^ 1940 U.S. Federal Census
  5. ^ "Engagement of Inez Silverberg Told to Friends". Los Angeles Times; Jan 8, 1933; pg. B2
  6. ^ Catalog of Copyright Entries. Part 1. [C] Group 3. Dramatic Composition and Motion Pictures. Pt I V 9 p 5351 Library of Congress Copyright Office 1937
  7. ^ Catalog of Copyright Entries. Part 1. [B] Group 2. Pamphlets, Etc. New Series. Library of Congress. Copyright Office 1937
  8. ^ "KTSL Grabs three sponsors". Variety. Wednesday August 25, 1948 p 30
  9. ^ Inez Asher on the Internet Movie Database
  10. ^ Variety. Wednesday, November 8, 1958 p 35
  11. ^ Inez Asher Turner Classic Movies
  12. ^ Elizabeth Kirkpatrick Dilling. The red network; a "who's who" and handbook of radicalism for patriots. 1934 p 146
  13. ^ Catalog of Copyright Entries. Third Series: 1951. Library of Congress. Copyright Office
  14. ^ The Publishers Weekly – Volume 160, Issues 1–13 – Page 275, 1951
  15. ^ "Alvin M. Asher, 64; Attorney for Studios". Los Angeles Times; Oct 2, 1967; pg. 19
  16. ^ Who's Who of American Women. First edition, 1958–1959. Wilmette, Illinois: Marquis Who's Who, 1958. Addenda (WhoAmW 1A); Who's Who of American Women. Second edition, 1961–1962. Wilmette, Illinois: Marquis Who's Who, 1961. (WhoAmW 2); Who's Who of American Women. Third edition, 1964–1965. Wilmette, Illinois: Marquis Who's Who, 1963. (WhoAmW 3)
  17. ^ Mark de la Vina. Orange County Register. October 28, 1988
  18. ^ Stefan Congrat-Butlar. Translation & translators: an international directory and guide. R. R. Bowker Co., 1979 p 94
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