Mamet has written screenplays, fiction, teleplays and short stories.[1][2][3] She sold her first screenplay using her married name, Lynn Weisberg; the studio only learned her maiden name after purchasing it.[4] In 1996, the
Los Angeles Times described Mamet as "one of the busiest screenwriters in Hollywood."[5]
Her latest and most notable work is as a producer and writer for Law & Order and The Unit. In addition to her work on television, she has also written and directed her own plays, including The Walking Wounded, The Fathers, The Job, The Divorce, and The Lost Years at Playwright's Kitchen Ensemble and the Sanford Meisner Theatres.
^Perkins, Ken Parish (19 January 1997). "Straight shooter Brash writer Lynn Mamet doesn't use a silencer when talking about her life".
Fort Worth Star-Telegram.
^
abcMcCulloh, T.H. (28 March 1996). "Plays". Los Angeles Times.
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^Garmel, Marion (18 January 1997). "'All Lies End in Murder' is a fine tale of police corruption and responsibility (review)".
Indianapolis Star.
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^Bobbin, Jay (19 January 1997). "Wife's Happiness Threatened in "Lies" (film review)". Palm Beach Post.
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