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  1. Premio Witers Guild of America ( WGA Award (Screen) Best Written American Drama) por Detective Story (1952) Distinciones. Premio Edgar (1952) [ editar datos en Wikidata] Philip Yordan ( Chicago, Illinois, 1 de abril de 1914 - La Jolla, California, 24 de marzo de 2003) fue un guionista y productor de cine estadounidense.

  2. Apr 5, 2003 · PHILIP YORDAN: Philip Yordan, the controversial and colourful Hollywood writer and producer who won an Oscar and who acted as a front for blacklisted colleagues during the McCarthy era, has died ...

  3. May 15, 2007 · BLU-RAY REVIEW I am updating this review (Dec. 9, 2008) to address the Blu-Ray edition of this movie which I feel is worthy of praise. In addition to a very impressive 1080p high definition picture which has nice contrast, vibrant colors and a fantastic level of detail (just witness the Christmas tree and flags in the first scene between Henry Fonda and Robert Ryan), the Blu-Ray also boasts a ...

    • Blu-ray
  4. Philip Yordan was born in 1914 to a Polish immigrant family. In the late '30s, he entered the movie business as a writer employed by director/producer William Dieterle. He earned a reputation in Hollywood during the 1940s for his ability to synopsize and pitch story ideas, and later for packaging the writing and production work on movies.

  5. Philip Yordan (1. april 1914 - 24. marts 2003) var en amerikansk manuskriptforfatter, som også producerede flere film. Han var også kendt som en højt respekteret script læge . Hans forældre var polske indvandrere, han tog en bachelorgrad ved University of Illinois og en juridisk embedseksamen ved Chicago-Kent College of Law .

  6. Philip Yordan. retrieved. 9 October 2017. place of death. La Jolla. 0 references. manner of death. natural causes. 1 reference. based on heuristic. inferred from ...

  7. Anna Lucasta is a 1944 American play by Philip Yordan.Inspired by Eugene O'Neill's Anna Christie, the play was originally written about a Polish American family.The American Negro Theatre director Abram Hill and director Harry Wagstaff Gribble adapted the script for an all African American cast, and presented the first performance on June 16, 1944.

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