The Historical Dictionary of the American Theater

SHERWOOD, ROBERT E.

(1896-1955)
Robert Emmet Sherwood was born in New Rochelle, New York, and graduated from Harvard University, where he wrote and worked on theatricals for theHarvard Lampoonand studied withGeorge Pierce Baker. Sherwood's service with the Canadian Black Watch duringWorldWar I led to his pacifist stance and mistrust of government. After various writing assignments withVanity Fair, Life, andScribner 's, Sherwood's first important play,The Road to Rome(1927), was an antiwar comedy set in ancient times starring Jane Cowl, but it was followed by more overtly commercial offerings, includingThe Love Nest(1927),The Queen's Husband(1928), andThis Is New York(1930). The tragic wartime romance of Sherwood'sWaterloo Bridge* (1930) was not well-received, but it proved enduringly popular in two motion picture versions in 1931 and 1940. Sherwood's post-1930 plays were his most important, includingReunion in Vienna* (1931),The Petrified Forest* (1935), and three Pulitzer PRiZE-winners,Idiot's Delight* (1936),Abe Lincoln in Illinois* (1938), andThere Shall Be No Night* (1940). During World War II, Sherwood was a speech-writer for President Franklin D. Roosevelt and was appointed director of the Overseas Branch of the Office of War Information, but his postwar plays were less appreciated than his prewar works.