Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. R. S. Allen. Morris Saffian [1] (July 11, 1924 – October 17, 1981), better known by the pseudonyms Ray Saffian (R.S.) Allen, Ray Allen Saffian, and Ray Allen, was an American writer of radio, and television programs and motion picture screenplays, and a television producer .

  2. www.imdb.com › name › nm0020918R.S. Allen - IMDb

    R.S. Allen was born on 3 August 1924 in Brooklyn, New York, USA. He was a writer and producer, known for NBC Special Treat (1975), Girl Happy (1965) and Love, American Style (1969).

    • Writer, Producer
    • August 3, 1924
    • R.S. Allen
    • October 17, 1981
  3. R.S. Allen is known as an Screenplay, Writer, Executive Producer, Creator, Producer, Theatre Play, and Screenstory. Some of his work includes The Flintstones, The ...

  4. R.S. Allen. Credits (text only) Hide Show Writer (44 credits) 1990 The Honeymooners Anniversary Special (TV Movie documentary) ('Honeymooners' segments written by ...

  5. Jan 1, 2009 · R. S. (Bob) Allen, age 70, was born and reared in the foothills of the Great Smoky Mountains in East Tennessee. An athlete in his youth, Bob, after a federal law enforcement career, would years later return to his roots and author "Schoolboy: Jim Tugerson: Ace of the '53 Smokies," the story of a major league talent who had been denied his right to pitch because of skin color.

    • (11)
    • R.S. Allen, Steve O. Watson
  6. Dec 18, 2012 · Murder in Harrill Hills is the third non-fiction and second true crime book by R. S. Allen, the first two being SCHOOLBOY Jim Tugerson: Ace of the 53 Smokies and The Perrys Camp Murders (with Steve O. Watson), both published by Infinity Publishing.com. Allen, who grew up in East Tennessee, is a retired FBI Agent who investigated crime in Miami, Atlanta, and Baltimore before returning to the ...

    • Paperback
    • R S Allen
  7. Writer-producer R.S. Allen was integral part of 1970's American TV culture, working as a producer on the 1970-72 seasons of "Love, American Style," the forgotten syndicated family drama "Wait Till Your Father Gets Home" starring Tom Bosley from 1973 through 1974, and "Alice" in 1976-77.