Jean Holloway


Jean Holloway was an American film, radio, and television writer who worked in Hollywood from the 1940s through the 1970s.

Biography

Holloway was born in San Francisco, California, to Arthur Casey—an official with the U.S. Department of Justice—and Gratia Holloway. Her parents divorced when she was young.
In the late 1930’s Holloway was attending San Jose State University and had already gained notoriety for her writing abilities. From 1937 to 1940 she was writing, directing, and producing radio dramas through SJSU’s early radio program, the Radio Speaking Society, which was partnered with San Jose’s local radio station KQW, her radio dramas were also aired on San Francisco’s local radio station KYA.
At age 17, Holloway left college during her sophomore year and traveled to New York with the hopes of landing a career in acting, however, she was discovered by Ted Collins, the manager of Kate Smith for her radio program The Kate Smith Show and was offered to work on the show.
She later wrote for programs like Hallmark Playhouse, Mr. President, and The Railroad Hour before moving into writing for film. Holloway's first screenwriting credit was on the 1946 MGM film Till the Clouds Roll By. Though she wrote three musicals for the studio, she was frustrated by MGM's unwillingness to let her write dramas, so she moved primarily into writing for television in the 1950s. After the producer of Wagon Train accepted her first script submission in 1958, he put her under contact to continue writing for the show. She wrote more than 500 episodes of The First Hundred Years, wrote for Peyton Place, and was on staff at The Ghost & Mrs. Muir in the late 1960s.
Holloway was married to character actor Dan Tobin, who she met while working on the daytime soap opera The First Hundred Years.

Papers

Many of Holloway's radio scripts, screenplays, poetry, and coursework from her time at SJSU are stored in San Jose State University Special Collections & Archives.

Selected filmography