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Morton Fine

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Nationality
  
American

Role
  
Screenwriter

Name
  
Morton Fine

Known for
  
I Spy, The Pawnbroker

Occupation
  
Screenwriter


Born
  
December 24, 1916 (
1916-12-24
)
Baltimore, Maryland

Alma mater
  
St. John's College University of Pittsburgh

Died
  
March 7, 1991, Santa Monica, California, United States

Education
  
University of Pittsburgh, St. John's College

TV shows
  
The Most Deadly Game, Frontier

Awards
  
Writers Guild of America Award for Best Written Drama

Movies
  
I Spy, The Pawnbroker, The Fool Killer, The Nativity, Caboblanco

Similar People
  
David Friedkin, Edward Lewis Wallant, Betty Thomas, J Lee Thompson, Sidney Lumet

Morton Fine (December 24, 1916, Baltimore, Maryland – March 7, 1991, Santa Monica, California) was an American screenwriter.

A native of Baltimore, Maryland, Fine worked in an advertising agency, a bookstore, and an aircraft factory before joining the Army Air Force in 1942. A graduate of St. John's College in Annapolis, Fine returned to school after his military service ended in 1944 and earned a master's degree in English from the University of Pittsburgh. After an unprofitable stint writing for magazines, he moved to California and turned to writing for radio programs. It was then that he met David Friedkin and began a long writing partnership. Fine wrote several nationally broadcast radio shows in collaboration with David Friedkin, including Broadway Is My Beat and Crime Classics.

The writing duo then moved on to film and television where their credits include The Pawnbroker (for which he won the Writers Guild of America Award for Best Written American Drama in 1965), The Nativity, The Greek Tycoon, I Spy, The Next Man, The Most Deadly Game, and several television Westerns including The Rifleman, The Big Valley, Maverick, The Virginian and more.

References

Morton Fine Wikipedia