Tripti Joshi (Editor)

David Shaber

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Years active
  
1964–1991

Children
  
Sam Shaber, Remy Shaber

Education
  
Yale School of Drama


Role
  
Screenwriter

Name
  
David Shaber

Ex-spouse
  
Alice Shaber

David Shaber iamediaimdbcomimagesMMV5BMTgzNzk2MDEyOV5BMl5

Born
  
January 1, 1929 (
1929-01-01
)
Cleveland, Ohio, United States

Occupation
  
Screenwriter Theatre producer

Died
  
November 4, 1999, New York City, New York, United States

Movies
  
The Warriors, Nighthawks, Flight of the Intruder, Last Embrace, Those Lips - Those Eyes

Similar People
  
Sol Yurick, Bruce Malmuth, Paul Sylbert, Lawrence Gordon, Walter Hill

David Shaber (1929 – November 4, 1999) was an American screenwriter and theatre producer, who wrote the screenplays for The Warriors, Nighthawks, Rollover, Last Embrace and Flight of the Intruder. He also wrote the final draft, though uncredited, for the John McTiernan film The Hunt for Red October.

Biography

Shaber was born and raised in Cleveland, Ohio, and abandoned a pre-med education for the Yale Drama School. He wrote and produced plays, and also wrote forty commissioned screenplays, eight of which were made into feature films, in the 1970s and 1980s. In the 1990s, he taught advanced screenwriting at Columbia University in New York City.

His 1980 semi-autobiographical film Those Lips, Those Eyes told the story of a 1950s touring stock theatrical company, set in the fictional Ohio town of Kempton Hills; the film starred Frank Langella and Thomas Hulce and was directed by Michael Pressman. Shaber also authored a novel based on the screenplay (Dell, 1980), though he was personally loath to call it a "novelization", as it was written from the first person perspective of its main character and contained much additional material that was either cut from the finished film or created specifically for the book.

Shaber was married to Alice Shaber, and had two daughters, Remy Shaber (dancer) and Sam Shaber (musician).

He died on November 4, 1999 at Mount Sinai Hospital in Manhattan of an aneurysm, at age 70.

References

David Shaber Wikipedia