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Harry Brown

 
American Author:

Harry Brown

  • Born: 1917
  • Died: 1986

Novelist and screenplay writer Harry Brown was best known for his acclaimed book, A Walk in the Sun, the tale of an American army platoon's experience during the invasion in Italy. The book was made into an Academy Award-winning film, with Brown winning the Oscar for Best Screenplay.

Brown started his writing career as a poet, succeeding in seeing many of his poems published when he was a student at Harvard University; over the years he published five books of poems. Among the films he was involved in writing were Arch of Triumph (1948), The Sands of Iwo Jima (1949), A Place in the Sun (1951) (won Academy Award), El Dorado (1966) (taken from his novel, The Stars in Their Courses), The Virgin Queen (1955) and the original Ocean's 11 (1960).

Most Famous Works

  • The Violent (1944)
  • Poems 1941-1944 (1945)
  • A Walk in the Sun (1945)
  • The Beast in his Hunger (1949)
  • The Stars in Their Courses (1960)
  • A Quiet Place to Work (1968)
  • The Wild Hunt (1973)
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Works:

Works by Harry Brown

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(1917-1986)

1944A Walk in the Sun. The writer of humorous sketches in Yank about a Brooklyn G.I. (collected in Artie Greengroin, Pfc., 1945) offers a more serious depiction of war in this realistic story of an American army platoon during the invasion of Italy. Brown would win an Academy Award for his screenplay for the 1945 film version.

Director:

Harry Joe Brown

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  • Born: Sep 22, 1890 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
  • Died: Apr 28, 1972 in Palm Springs, California
  • Occupation: Director, Writer, Cinematographer
  • Active: '20s-'50s
  • Major Genres: Western, Drama
  • Career Highlights: The Tall T, Everything Happens at Night, Comanche Station
  • First Major Screen Credit: Mask of Lopez (1923)

Biography

A stage actor and director, Brown began assisting on films in 1920, and worked on the lighting of Erich von Stroheim's Foolish Wives in 1922. He began producing and directing westerns and actioners starring Reed Howes in 1925; two years later he also helmed Ken Maynard westerns, starting with The Land Beyond the Law and Gun Gospel. Brown accompanied Maynard into talkies with such films as Parade of the West and Sons of the Saddle, but turned from directing to producing in 1933. He helmed only one more film, the 1944 musical Knickerbocker Holiday. As a producer his notable films include Michael Curtiz' Captain Blood, Howard Hawks' Ceiling Zero, Gerd Oswald's Screaming Mimi, and several of Budd Boetticher's westerns with Randolph Scott: The Tall T, Decision at Sundown, Buchanan Rides Alone, Ride Lonesome, and Comanche Station. ~ All Movie Guide
Wikipedia:

Harry Brown(writer)

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Harry Peter McNab Brown, Jr. (April 30, 1917 – November 2, 1986) was an American poet, novelist and screenwriter.

Contents

Life

Born in Portland, Maine, he was educated at Harvard University, where he was friends with American poet, Robert Lowell. Brown dropped out of Harvard after his sophomore year to write poetry, work at Time magazine, and contributed to and became a sub editor of The New Yorker.

Charles Scribner's Sons, of New York, published, in 1941, Brown's sustained unified poem, "The Poem of Bunker Hill". The 158 page poetic epic won praise for its author's literary gifts as a poet and for the timely presentation of a vital topic - young men and war. Louise Bogan, from the New Yorker, was quoted, "Brown...possesses one of the most unmistakable poetic gifts which have recently appeared. Such a talent is not only basically good from the beginning but exhibits, also from the first, all the signs of virtuosity." Also published, early in that year, was Brown's first full-length book, "The End of a Decade".

From the American Revolutionary warfare of "The Poem of Bunker Hill", Harry Brown went directly to modern military operations. Brown enlisted in July 1941 in the US Army Corps of Engineers where he served at Fort Belvoir, Virginia. In 1942 he joined the staff of Yank magazine.

Brown wrote a column for the magazine under the nom de plume of "PFC Artie Greengroin" with a book published in 1945 of the columns under that title. Brown also wrote a play A Sound of Hunting that was produced on Broadway in 1946 starring Burt Lancaster and Frank Lovejoy. It was later filmed by Stanley Kramer under the title Eight Iron Men with a different cast of Bonar Colleano, Lee Marvin, and Arthur Franz in 1952, then was a 1961 television production with Peter Falk, Robert Lansing, and Sal Mineo directed by Seymour Robbie.

Brown wrote the novel A Walk in the Sun in 1944, which was made into a film in 1945. Director Lewis Milestone asked Brown to come to Hollywood as a screenwriter were he worked on films including Sands of Iwo Jima (1949), A Place in the Sun (1951) (winning an Oscar), and Ocean's Eleven (1960). Brown also was credited for his work on the first Ocean's Eleven when it was remade in 2001.

Brown died from emphysema in 1986

Awards

  • 1938/1939 Shelley Memorial Award
  • 1936 The Young Poets Prize , awarded by Poetry magazine
  • 1937 Lloyd McKim Garrison Award

Works

Poetry

  • The Poem of Bunker Hill. C. Scribner's sons. 1941. 
  • The beast in his hunger: poems. A.A. Knopf. 1949. 
  • The Violent: New Poems. New Directions. 1943. 
  • The end of a decade. New Directions. 1940. 

Novels

Plays

  • A sound of hunting: a play in three acts. A.A. Knopf. 1946. 

Screenplays

  • Harry Brown, L S B Shapiro, Ivan Moffat (1955). The Sixth of June. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.. 
  • Steven Soderbergh, Peter Andrews, George Clayton Johnson, Ted Griffin, Harry Brown, Jack Golden Russell, Charles Lederer (1960). Ocean's eleven. Pocket Books. 

References



 
 

 

Copyrights:

Answers Corporation American Author. © 1999-2009 by Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
Works. The Chronology of American Literature, edited by Daniel S. Burt. Copyright © 2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Director. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Harry Brown (writer)" Read more

 
TV Listings
Harry Joe Brown at LocateTV.com

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