Nedrick Young was never blacklisted

 


Nedrick Young, actor and screenwriter claimed that he was blacklisted throughout the 1950s and 1960s for refusing to confirm or deny membership of the Communist Party before the House Committee on Un-American Activities….well maybe not.

The fact is he was in 10 films before 1950, two of them uncredited. However he was in 15 film from 1950 through 1958, mostly in small parts. In six of those films, he was uncredited. He sold four screenplays from 1957 through 1968

His screen play The Defiant Ones received an Oscar for the "best screenplay written directly for the screen" in 1958.[2] For the same film, Young and co-writer Harold Jacob Smith won

In  1959 he won an  Award for Best Motion Picture Screenplay, from the Mystery Writers of America. His other screen play Inherit the Wind was also nominated for, but did not win, an Academy Award in 1960.

In 1960 he brought a lawsuit against the Motion Picture Association (MPAA) for 13 years of blacklisting. He lost the suit since he couldn’t prove his case of account for actual damages.

 

Questionably blacklisted

 Julian Zimet, screenwriter claimed to have been blacklisted after June 1954. Prior to 1954 he sold four screenplays one in 1947, 1948, 1949 and 1950. After his supposed blacklisting he sold a screen play in 1955 and one in 1958 and another in1964 and continued selling screenplays into the 1970s.

He fled to Mexico in October of 1951 to avoid a summons to the HUAC.