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Thomas Wilton “Tommy” Phipps

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Thomas Wilton “Tommy” Phipps Veteran

Birth
New York, New York County, New York, USA
Death
20 Feb 2003 (aged 89)
Southampton, Suffolk County, New York, USA
Burial
Cremated Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Writer. born New York 30 November 1913; married 1936 Betty Brooks (one son deceased; marriage dissolved 1939), 1940 Donrue Leyton (marriage dissolved 1945), 1949 Mary Cheseboro (one son, one daughter); died Southampton, New York 20 February 2003.

Thomas Phipps was a successful television playwright in the 1950s golden era of American television, and his screenplays for the cinema include A Yank at Eton. He was the brother of the entertainer Joyce Grenfell.

Phipps was born in Manhattan in 1913, a descendant of governors of Bombay, Gold Coast and Mississippi. His father was the British architect Paul Phipps, who trained under Edwin Lutyens. His mother was Nora, the youngest of the Virginian Langhorne sisters who included Irene, wife of the American artist Charles Dana Gibson, and Nancy Astor. On the outbreak of the First World War, the family moved back to England. Tommy spent much of his childhood with his Astor cousins at Cliveden, on the River Thames in Buckinghamshire.

The Phipps family was part of wealthy Bohemian Chelsea. His grandmother Jessie Phipps was John Singer Sargent's cousin, a friend of Henry James and the first woman London county councillor. When Tommy was six, his sister Joyce bought him a silk top hat for sixpence at the Chelsea Theatrical Garden Party and Ivor Novello and Noël Coward came to tea.

When Phipps ran away from Highfield prep school, in Hampshire, the local stationmaster recognised his school cap and sent him straight back. Once, when he was at Eton, his aunt Nancy took him out to tea with Charlie Chaplin and Mahatma Gandhi. He left at 17 to join his mother in America; she had married Lefty Flynn, a silent film star. Scott Fitzgerald's story "The Intimate Strangers" was a thinly veiled account of their elopement. Phipps dismissed her claim that she had had a fling with Fitzgerald while she was helping him to dry out.

Phipps's first car was given to him by Henry Ford, whom he had met at Cliveden. Living in Manhattan in the 1930s he wrote for The New York Times, Harper's Bazaar and Vanity Fair and enjoyed life with friends such as David Niven and Hedy Lamarr. Phipps was so good-looking that his photograph was always included with his stories.

Returning to London in 1936 with his Texan first wife, Betty Brooks, he worked for the Daily Express and then Warner Brothers. In 1940, back in America, he joined the team in Hollywood writing Broadway Melody of 1940 starring Fred Astaire. He also co-wrote the screenplay for A Yank at Eton (1942), starring Mickey Rooney.

When the Second World War broke out, Phipps became an American citizen and joined the US Army in 1942. He rose to major during the liberation of Europe and returned to report on the Nuremberg trials. His first two marriages did not last but, when in 1949 he met the beautiful fashion model Mary Cheseboro, he knew it was forever and he settled down.

After the Phippses moved to Long Island in 1978 he played a lot of golf. One day he invited some visiting friends to play on one of Southampton's exclusive golf courses.

Thomas died on Feb 20 2003.
Writer. born New York 30 November 1913; married 1936 Betty Brooks (one son deceased; marriage dissolved 1939), 1940 Donrue Leyton (marriage dissolved 1945), 1949 Mary Cheseboro (one son, one daughter); died Southampton, New York 20 February 2003.

Thomas Phipps was a successful television playwright in the 1950s golden era of American television, and his screenplays for the cinema include A Yank at Eton. He was the brother of the entertainer Joyce Grenfell.

Phipps was born in Manhattan in 1913, a descendant of governors of Bombay, Gold Coast and Mississippi. His father was the British architect Paul Phipps, who trained under Edwin Lutyens. His mother was Nora, the youngest of the Virginian Langhorne sisters who included Irene, wife of the American artist Charles Dana Gibson, and Nancy Astor. On the outbreak of the First World War, the family moved back to England. Tommy spent much of his childhood with his Astor cousins at Cliveden, on the River Thames in Buckinghamshire.

The Phipps family was part of wealthy Bohemian Chelsea. His grandmother Jessie Phipps was John Singer Sargent's cousin, a friend of Henry James and the first woman London county councillor. When Tommy was six, his sister Joyce bought him a silk top hat for sixpence at the Chelsea Theatrical Garden Party and Ivor Novello and Noël Coward came to tea.

When Phipps ran away from Highfield prep school, in Hampshire, the local stationmaster recognised his school cap and sent him straight back. Once, when he was at Eton, his aunt Nancy took him out to tea with Charlie Chaplin and Mahatma Gandhi. He left at 17 to join his mother in America; she had married Lefty Flynn, a silent film star. Scott Fitzgerald's story "The Intimate Strangers" was a thinly veiled account of their elopement. Phipps dismissed her claim that she had had a fling with Fitzgerald while she was helping him to dry out.

Phipps's first car was given to him by Henry Ford, whom he had met at Cliveden. Living in Manhattan in the 1930s he wrote for The New York Times, Harper's Bazaar and Vanity Fair and enjoyed life with friends such as David Niven and Hedy Lamarr. Phipps was so good-looking that his photograph was always included with his stories.

Returning to London in 1936 with his Texan first wife, Betty Brooks, he worked for the Daily Express and then Warner Brothers. In 1940, back in America, he joined the team in Hollywood writing Broadway Melody of 1940 starring Fred Astaire. He also co-wrote the screenplay for A Yank at Eton (1942), starring Mickey Rooney.

When the Second World War broke out, Phipps became an American citizen and joined the US Army in 1942. He rose to major during the liberation of Europe and returned to report on the Nuremberg trials. His first two marriages did not last but, when in 1949 he met the beautiful fashion model Mary Cheseboro, he knew it was forever and he settled down.

After the Phippses moved to Long Island in 1978 he played a lot of golf. One day he invited some visiting friends to play on one of Southampton's exclusive golf courses.

Thomas died on Feb 20 2003.


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