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American screenwriter (1931–1985)
Lawrence Alan Hauben (3 March 1931 – 22 December 1985) was an American actor and screenwriter. Born in New York, he won the
Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay along with
Bo Goldman
[1] for
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (1975) at the
48th Academy Awards .
[2] He also won a
Golden Globe and a
Writers Guild of America Award .
He had a small role as a car salesman in
Point Blank (1967). In 1971, he released a documentary film, Venus , about his brief relationship with actress
Sally Kellerman .
[3]
[4]
He died of cancer on 22 December 1985, in
Santa Barbara, California .
[5]
Awards
References
^ Weinraub, Bernard (February 25, 1993).
"A Screenwriter Profits From His Years of Pain" .
The New York Times . Retrieved March 2, 2017 .
^
"Academy Awards Acceptance Speech Database" . Retrieved March 2, 2017 .
^
Kellerman, Sally (2013).
"Read My Lips: Stories of a Hollywood Life" . New York: Weinstein Books.
^
Thomas, Kevin (29 May 1971).
" 'Venus' Collage of Images" . The Los Angeles Times – via Newspapers.com.
^ Scott, Vernon (July 27, 1996).
"Since William Shakespeare wrote, 'The first thing we do,..." UPI .
External links
Awards for Lawrence Hauben
1928–1950
Benjamin Glazer (1928)
Hanns Kräly (1929)
Frances Marion (1930)
Howard Estabrook (1931)
Edwin J. Burke (1932)
Victor Heerman and
Sarah Y. Mason (1933)
Robert Riskin (1934)
Dudley Nichols (1935)
Pierre Collings and
Sheridan Gibney (1936)
Heinz Herald, Geza Herczeg, and
Norman Reilly Raine (1937)
Ian Dalrymple ,
Cecil Arthur Lewis ,
W. P. Lipscomb , and
George Bernard Shaw (1938)
Sidney Howard (1939)
Donald Ogden Stewart (1940)
Sidney Buchman and
Seton I. Miller (1941)
George Froeschel ,
James Hilton ,
Claudine West , and
Arthur Wimperis (1942)
Philip G. Epstein ,
Julius J. Epstein , and
Howard Koch (1943)
Frank Butler and Frank Cavett (1944)
Charles Brackett and
Billy Wilder (1945)
Robert Sherwood (1946)
George Seaton (1947)
John Huston (1948)
Joseph L. Mankiewicz (1949)
Joseph L. Mankiewicz (1950)
1951–1975 1976–2000 2001–present
1965–1975 1976–2000 2001–present
Adapted Drama (1969–1983) Adapted Comedy (1969–1983) Adapted Screenplay (1984–present)
International National Other