Dale Eunson, who for seven decades successfully wrote nearly anything that fit on paper--short stories, novels, plays, motion picture scripts and teleplays--has died. He was 97.
Eunson died Feb. 20 at the Motion Picture and Television Hospital in Woodland Hills of causes associated with aging.
A child of the frontier, Eunson mined his rich background for many of his best-loved works. They included the true story of his father, Robbie, who as a 12-year-old newly orphaned son of Scottish immigrants trudged through the Wisconsin snows on Christmas Eve of 1868 to find good homes for his five younger siblings. The tale became a Christmas magazine story, a children's novel, a motion picture, a television movie and a radio narrative.
That charming novel, "The Day They Gave Babies Away," was not Eunson's first but certainly became one of his most popular efforts. Published in 1946, it was reprinted in 1970 and was still popular in 1991, when one reviewer suggested a paperback version as a last-minute Christmas stocking stuffer, calling it "no-frills prose perfect for reading aloud."
In 1957, Eunson co-scripted the movie made from the book, "All Mine to Give," starring Cameron Mitchell and Glynis Johns.
Eunson told of his Montana sheep ranch childhood in two other books, the novel "Homestead" in 1934, and a children's book of reminiscences, "Up On the Rim" in 1970. A Times reviewer commented on the latter: "It is a tribute to Eunson's skill and loving memory of those bygone years that his work achieves such a pleasing, entertaining quality. To read this book is to return, however briefly, to a vanished America of emotion and events recollected in tranquillity and to values and certainties that made those pioneer years so critical in our history."
In 1989, Eunson turned a longtime friendship into another popular novel about two boyhood pals from Montana and their intertwined lives, "Philip's Chair," with one boy clearly his alter ego. A Times reviewer wrote, "Eunson writes fluently, highly literately, with delightful and often sly humor, and with painstaking insight.... Trust me, 'Philip's Chair' will enthrall you."
Moving to Los Angeles with his father and stepmother in the early 1920s, Eunson attended USC for one year but dropped out for lack of money. He worked as a publicist for movie studios and then became secretary to novelist and George Washington biographer Rupert Hughes. Some might question who worked for whom, because Hughes became a nurturing mentor, encouraging Eunson to rewrite his short stories and helping him sell them to New York magazines.