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  1. Sam Spewack was born on 16 September 1899 in Bakhmut, Yekaterinoslav Governorate, Russian Empire. Sam was a writer and producer, known for My Favorite Wife (1940), Move Over, Darling (1963) and Week-End at the Waldorf (1945).

  2. www.imdb.com › name › nm0818415Bella Spewack - IMDb

    Bella Spewack was born on 25 March 1899 in Bucharest, Romania. She was a writer, known for My Favorite Wife (1940), Move Over, Darling (1963) and Week-End at the Waldorf (1945). She was married to Sam Spewack.

  3. My Three Angels. (play) My Three Angels is a comedy play by Samuel and Bella Spewack. The play is based on the French play La Cuisine Des Anges by Albert Husson, and is their only play that is regularly performed in repertory theater .

  4. Aug 16, 2023 · Sam died in 1971. Bella in 1990. Revivals of their most successful Broadway shows have kept their names in the news. In 2000, Broadway director Aaron Frankel created the one-act play A Letter to Sam from Bella as a fund-raiser for the Columbia University Archives, which houses the Spewack collection of personal papers. According to Frankel, the ...

  5. Educated at Columbia University. He and his wife, Bella Spewack, were nominated for a 1998 Laurence Olivier Theatre Award for Kiss Me Kate performed at the Open Air Theatre for Outstanding Musical Production of 1997. He and his wife, Bella, were awarded the 2001 London Critics Circle Theatre Award for Best Musical for Kiss Me Kate performed at the Victoria Palace Theatre in London, England. In ...

  6. Samuel Spewack was a journalist, novelist, stage and screen writer, and documentary film maker. He began his career as a reporter for the New York World, which sent him and his wife, Bella, to Moscow as news correspondents. Bella and Samuel collaborated on several plays and movies characterized by slapstick humor and stereotypical comic characters.

  7. Spewack worked first as a journalist, starting at the socialist newspaper The New York Call. Her impressive writing garnered her work at other papers, including The New York Times, The New York Herald Tribune, and the Evening Mail. Her writing also caught the eye of fellow reporter Sam Spewack, whom she married around 1922.

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