- Won the 1934 Pulitzer Prize for Drama for the play "Men in White".
- From 1935, he (and his wife,the actress Madge Evans) lived in an 18th century house on a 250-acre estate near Oakland.
- Studied at Cornell University on a scholarship, graduating with a Bachelor of Arts in 1928. He briefly flirted with the acting profession, before moving to Hollywood to work as a scenario reader for Columbia. For three years, he worked on his first play, "Men in White", which was first performed by the Group Theatre in 1933 and turned into a movie the following year.
- Served in the U.S. Army during World War II, attaining the rank of lieutenant.
- Was a board member of both Cafe La Mama and the Martha Graham dance company.
- His hobbies included painting, sculpture, woodworking and collecting early American artefacts.
- At one time, President of the Dramatists Guild. From 1977, founding chairman of New Jersey's Motion Picture and Television Development Commission.
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