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  1. Lawrence D. Cohen

    Lawrence D. Cohen

    American screenwriter

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  1. Lawrence D. Cohen is an American screenwriter and producer, best known for his work on several adaptations of Stephen King's Carrie, including Brian De Palma's 1976 film and Kimberly Peirce's 2013 film. Career. Carrie was both the first Stephen King novel to be published and the first to be adapted into a feature film.

  2. Lawrence D. Cohen. Writer. Producer. Script and Continuity Department. IMDbPro Starmeter See rank. Lawrence D. Cohen is an American screenwriter who, although hardly prolific, has worked with some of the most respected names in the genre movie and genre fiction industry.

    • Lawrence D. Cohen
  3. The Tommyknockers is a 1993 television miniseries based on the 1987 novel of the same name by Stephen King. Broadcast on ABC, it was directed by John Power, adapted by Lawrence D. Cohen and starred Marg Helgenberger and Jimmy Smits . Plot.

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  5. Lawrence D. Cohen. Lawrence D. Cohen's first feature script was his adaptation of Stephen King's debut novel, Carrie (1976). His screenplay for the classic Brian de Palma film earned him an Edgar Award nomination from the Mystery Writers of America.

  6. Lawrence D. Cohen: The initial Royal Shakespeare Company production -- first in Stratford-Upon-Avon in London and then in New York on Broadway -- was a singularly insane experience, but not for the reasons people think. With the exception of Betty Buckley and Linzi Hately's remarkable performances as Margaret and Carrie, the rest of the show as ...

  7. Dec 16, 1981 · John Irvin, the director of ''Ghost Story,'' and Lawrence D. Cohen, who adapted and considerably reduced Peter Straub's best-selling novel for the screen, begin very well, right in the...

  8. About Lawrence D. Cohen. Lawrence D. Cohen is an American screenwriter and librettist. He began his career as a film and theatre critic and then was an assistant to director-choreographer Michael Bennett on his Broadway productions of Twigs and Seesaw in 1971 and 1973, respectively.

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