Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Elliott Baker

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Elliott Baker


Role
  
Screenwriter

Elliott Baker httpsleighgofffileswordpresscom2017026a56

Died
  
February 9, 2007, Los Angeles, California, United States

Education
  
Indiana University Bloomington

Books
  
The penny wars, And We Were Young, Unhealthful air

Awards
  
Spur Award for Best Nonfiction

Movies and TV shows
  
A Fine Madness, Lace, Adderly, Breakout, To Be the Best

Similar People
  
Irvin Kershner, Tom Gries, Winston Rekert, Shirley Conran, Jerome Hellman

Elliott Baker (December 15, 1922 – February 9, 2007), born Elliot Joseph Cohen, was a screenwriter and novelist.

Baker was born in Buffalo, New York, and graduated from Indiana University. He was the author of the comic novel A Fine Madness, which was published in 1964 by G.P. Putnam's Sons. He adapted the novel into a 1966 motion picture starring Sean Connery and Joanne Woodward.

A Fine Madness tells the story of Samson Shillitoe, a rebellious poet in Greenwich Village who battles a psychiatrist seeking to curb his mood swings via psychosurgery. The New York Times Book Review called the novel "a masterpiece of what one might call rebellious farce."

His other novels included Pocock & Pitt (Putnam, 1971), which was the basis for the television series Adderly, which Baker also created; Klynt's Law (Harcourt, Brace, Jovanovich, 1976); And We Were Young (Times Books, 1979); and Unhealthful Air (Viking, 1988). His novel The Penny Wars (Putnam, 1968) was adapted for the Broadway stage.

As a screenwriter he wrote a number of television movies, and was nominated for an Emmy award in 1976 for his adaptation of The Entertainer. He also wrote "Side Show", the most famous episode of Roald Dahl's 1961 television anthology horror series Way Out, which featured a carnival "electric woman with a light bulb for a head." He also wrote the mini-series adaptation of Lace from a novel by Shirley Conran and Lace 2. He wrote the script for the ABC mini-series Malibu starring William Atherton and Susan Dey..

References

Elliott Baker Wikipedia


Similar Topics