Louis K. Anspacher
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Louis Kaufmann Anspacher (March 1, 1878 in Cincinnati, Ohio[1] – May 10, 1947 in Nashville, Tennessee) was an American poet, playwright and script writer.[2]
He was the author of Challenge of the Unknown: Exploring the Psychic World, with an introduction by Waldemar Kaempffert, which was published by Allen and Unwin, in the USA in 1947 by Current Books, and in Great Britain in 1952 by Henderson and Spalding.
Anspacher's poem "Ocean Ode" served as the basis of a tone poem, The Ocean, by Henry Kimball Hadley, composed between 1920 and 1921.[3]
Plays
- The Embarrassment of Riches (1906)
- A Woman of Impulse (1909)
- Our Children (1915)
- The Unchastened Woman (1915) (*filmed in 1918 and 1925)
- That Day (1922)
- Dagmar (1923)
- The Rhapsody (193)
References
- ^ "Anspacher, Louis Kaufman". Who was who among North American authors, 1921-1939, vol. 1. Detroit: Gale Research Co. 1976. p. 47. ISBN 0810310414.
- ^ Louis K. Anspacher at the Internet Broadway Database
- ^ "HADLEY: Symphony No. 4 / The Ocean / The Culprit Fay". Retrieved April 3, 2016.
External links
- Louis K. Anspacher at IMDb
- Louis K. Anspacher at the Internet Broadway Database
- portrait of Anspacher(New York Public Library, Billy Rose collection)
Categories:
- Internet Broadway Database person ID same as Wikidata
- Articles with short description
- Short description is different from Wikidata
- Articles with FAST identifiers
- Articles with ISNI identifiers
- Articles with VIAF identifiers
- Articles with WorldCat Entities identifiers
- Articles with GND identifiers
- Articles with J9U identifiers
- Articles with LCCN identifiers
- Articles with NLA identifiers
- Articles with NTA identifiers
- Articles with CINII identifiers
- Articles with DTBIO identifiers
- Articles with Trove identifiers
- Articles with SNAC-ID identifiers
- Articles with SUDOC identifiers
- 1878 births
- 1947 deaths
- American male poets
- American male dramatists and playwrights
- American male screenwriters
- 20th-century American poets
- 20th-century American dramatists and playwrights
- Writers from Cincinnati
- Poets from Ohio
- 20th-century American male writers
- Screenwriters from Ohio
- 20th-century American screenwriters
- All stub articles
- American poet, 19th-century birth stubs