Frank Siedel
- Writer
Frank Elmer Siedel (Sept. 5, 1914 - May 9, 1988) was a writer, historian, educator, and broadcaster. Siedel wrote thousands of radio, TV and movie scripts.
The son of Frank and Mary Ann Junglas Siedel, he was born in Strongsville, Ohio. His father owned a general store. Frank would join the neighborhood characters who gathered around the pot-bellied stove in the rear of the store where they swapped stories of the "old" days and spun yarns about hunting experiences and encounters with animals and episodes that made history in that part of the country. In later years, Siedel attributed his home-spun story-telling style of writing to his experiences listening to the pot-bellied stove storytellers.
Siedel graduated with a degree in journalism from Ohio State University. He began his script writing career in 1936 as a freelance writer, working for radio stations WHKC in Columbus, Ohio and WCAE in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. In 1940 he took a job with ESCAR Motion Pictures in Cleveland. He spent a year learning the movie business, pushing lights and carrying cables, and later writing and directing. When World War II broke out, he was put on the production of armed forces training films. Over the course of the war, he worked on 120 films for the military.
In 1946, Siedel worked with Cinecraft Productions as a writer-director. That year he met Bob Dailey of the McCann-Erickson Advertising Agency. He told Dailey of his idea for The Ohio Story, and Dailey took the concept to Ohio Bell Telephone. The first Ohio Story radio show aired in January 1947. On 4 October, 1953, The Ohio Story became a TV series as well. When the series ended in 1961, 1,309 radio and 175 TV episodes had been produced. At the time the series held the record for the longest-running regional scripted program in the nation.
The same year the Ohio Story went on air, Siedel started Storycraft, Inc., a Cleveland-based writing company, which wrote scripts and launched many young writers on successful careers. Storycraft became famous throughout the country for the radio and television shows and films they helped produce.
In 1950 Siedel published "The Ohio Story," a collection of 22 episodes from the Ohio Story radio series. In 1953 he published "Out of the Midwest," the second collection of 31 short stories about Ohioans gone but not forgotten. His book, How to "Win the Conference" (1956), written with his friend and colleague, Bill Ellis, was translated into three languages.
Siedel stated that he never earned money doing anything but writing. When once asked if would write without being paid, his answer was a resounding "No. That's for amateurs. I'm a professional. If I wrote without being paid for it, I'd never know if my writing was worthwhile."
Siedel was married twice: Alyce Louise van den Mooter (16 Jun 1911 - Jan 1978) and Mardith Ray Jacobson [later Hany] in 1982. In the 1980s, he moved to Catawba Island, Ohio. He died there in 1988 and is buried in the Catawba Island Cemetery. Siedel and Alyce had three children: sons James and Jonathan and a daughter, Jeri Siedel Audiano.
The son of Frank and Mary Ann Junglas Siedel, he was born in Strongsville, Ohio. His father owned a general store. Frank would join the neighborhood characters who gathered around the pot-bellied stove in the rear of the store where they swapped stories of the "old" days and spun yarns about hunting experiences and encounters with animals and episodes that made history in that part of the country. In later years, Siedel attributed his home-spun story-telling style of writing to his experiences listening to the pot-bellied stove storytellers.
Siedel graduated with a degree in journalism from Ohio State University. He began his script writing career in 1936 as a freelance writer, working for radio stations WHKC in Columbus, Ohio and WCAE in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. In 1940 he took a job with ESCAR Motion Pictures in Cleveland. He spent a year learning the movie business, pushing lights and carrying cables, and later writing and directing. When World War II broke out, he was put on the production of armed forces training films. Over the course of the war, he worked on 120 films for the military.
In 1946, Siedel worked with Cinecraft Productions as a writer-director. That year he met Bob Dailey of the McCann-Erickson Advertising Agency. He told Dailey of his idea for The Ohio Story, and Dailey took the concept to Ohio Bell Telephone. The first Ohio Story radio show aired in January 1947. On 4 October, 1953, The Ohio Story became a TV series as well. When the series ended in 1961, 1,309 radio and 175 TV episodes had been produced. At the time the series held the record for the longest-running regional scripted program in the nation.
The same year the Ohio Story went on air, Siedel started Storycraft, Inc., a Cleveland-based writing company, which wrote scripts and launched many young writers on successful careers. Storycraft became famous throughout the country for the radio and television shows and films they helped produce.
In 1950 Siedel published "The Ohio Story," a collection of 22 episodes from the Ohio Story radio series. In 1953 he published "Out of the Midwest," the second collection of 31 short stories about Ohioans gone but not forgotten. His book, How to "Win the Conference" (1956), written with his friend and colleague, Bill Ellis, was translated into three languages.
Siedel stated that he never earned money doing anything but writing. When once asked if would write without being paid, his answer was a resounding "No. That's for amateurs. I'm a professional. If I wrote without being paid for it, I'd never know if my writing was worthwhile."
Siedel was married twice: Alyce Louise van den Mooter (16 Jun 1911 - Jan 1978) and Mardith Ray Jacobson [later Hany] in 1982. In the 1980s, he moved to Catawba Island, Ohio. He died there in 1988 and is buried in the Catawba Island Cemetery. Siedel and Alyce had three children: sons James and Jonathan and a daughter, Jeri Siedel Audiano.