Famous Like Me > Writer > R > Reginald Rose
Profile of Reginald Rose
on Famous Like Me |
|
Name: |
Reginald Rose |
|
|
|
Also Know As: |
|
|
|
Date of Birth: |
10th December 1920 |
|
|
Place of Birth: |
New York, New York, USA |
|
|
Profession: |
Writer |
|
|
From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia Reginald Rose (December 10, 1920-April 19, 2002) was an American film and television writer most famous for his work in the early years of television drama. Born in Manhattan, he briefly attended City College before joining the Army, eventually earning the rank of First Lieutenant.
He sold his first teleplay, "Bus To Nowhere" in 1950 to CBS's live dramatic anthology program Studio One, for whom he would eventually write his breakaway hit 12 Angry Men in 1954. This drama, set entirely in the jury room of a murder case, was inspired by a real-life experience. "It was such an impressive, solemn setting in a great big wood-paneled courtroom, with a silver-haired judge It knocked me out," he said of his jury-duty experience. "I was overwhelmed. I was on a jury for a manslaughter case, and we got into this terrific, furious, eight-hour argument in the jury room. I was writing one-hour dramas for 'Studio One' then and I thought, wow, what a setting for a drama."
Rose received an Emmy for his teleplay and an Oscar nomination for his 1957, feature-length adaptation. He would go on to write for all three networks, finding his greatest success with The Defenders in 1961, a weekly court-room drama that he created and wrote for. For his efforts on The Defenders Rose would win an additional two emmy awards for dramatic writing.
Rose also later moved into screenwriting for films, and made four films with the British producer Euan Lloyd; The Wild Geese, The Sea Wolves, Who Dares Wins and Wild Geese II.
This biographical article related to television is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
This content from
Wikipedia is licensed under the
GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the Wikipedia article Reginald Rose
|