Brown, Lionel Barrymore, Nils Grandlund, and Theda Bara. Her sales were frequently mentioned in the Hollywood Reporter and her clients included Basil Rathbone, Joe E. Klausner commuted back and forth from a Hollywood office from the late 1940s until 1960, when she decided to close it to remain exclusively in New York. She developed a wide reputation based upon her creativity, integrity, and dedication to promising writers. By 1945 she decided to concentrate on representing writers and founded the Bertha Klausner International Literary Agency, Inc. In 1938 she left her syndicate to become an agent for cartoonists and artists. The Independent Publishers Syndicate was the model for current features such as Parade and This Week. Bertha Klausner developed one of the first national newspaper syndicates in the early 1930s.
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