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Hettie Gray Baker (July 12, 1880 – November 14, 1957) was an American film editor. Biography. Born in Hartford, Connecticut, the daughter of Josiah Q. Baker and his wife Lizzie A. Chipman, Hettie attended public high school in Hartford before undertaking a special course of study at Simmons College in Boston.
Hettie Gray Baker, who is as yet undiscovered by film historians, had a long and exceptional career in motion pictures. She was a writer of motion picture titles and scenarios; of library science, theatre, and fan magazine articles; and, later in life, of highly regarded books about cats.
Mar 22, 2015 · Hettie Gray Baker was a little-known writer for silent films in 1915 when movie producer William Fox hired acclaimed director Herbert Brenon. Fox shipped him to Jamaica to create a spectacle like nothing ever seen before.
Hettie Grey Baker is known as an Story, Editor, Writer, Screenplay, Scenario Writer, Title Graphics, and Title Designer. Some of her work includes An Odyssey of the North, Burning Daylight: The Adventures of 'Burning Daylight' in Alaska, The Real Thing in Cowboys, The Chechako, The Irony of Fate, and John Barleycorn.
Hettie Grey was a writer and editor, known for Tom Mix in Arabia (1922), Burning Daylight: The Adventures of 'Burning Daylight' in Alaska (1914) and John Barleycorn (1914). Hettie Grey died on November 14, 1957 in Porters Corners, New York, USA.
Oct 15, 2019 · Hettie Gray Baker, who is as yet undiscovered by film historians, had a long and exceptional career in motion pictures. She was a writer of motion picture titles and scenarios; of library science, theatre, and fan magazine articles; and, later in life, of highly regarded books about cats.