Background
Sherman Lowe was the son of Russian immigrants, Louis Lowenstein and Johanna Blumberg Lowenstein.
Sherman Lowe was the son of Russian immigrants, Louis Lowenstein and Johanna Blumberg Lowenstein.
Sherman was educated at the University of Utah and the University of Pennsylvania.
He served with the American Expeditionary Forces during World War I. A machine gun bullet wounded his right leg, September 29, 1918, at Gesnes. He was discharged with the rank of sergeant. According to the 1920 United States census, he worked in Detroit as a shoe salesman.
Lowe entered films in 1926.
He was a script reader at Universal Pictures for one year, then a writer for Universal. Among the films he worked on were Law of the Range, Black Arrow (serial), Captain Video: Master of the Stratosphere, and Parole, Incorporated.
In 1937, Lowe was a writer of the Frank Buck serial Jungle Menace.