Howard Clewes

English screenwriter (1912–1988) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Howard Clewes (27 October 1912 29 January 1988) was an English screenwriter and novelist. He wrote for eight films between 1951 and 1974. He also wrote twenty action novels from 1938 to 1979.[1] He was nominated for a BAFTA for Best Screenplay in 1960 for The Day They Robbed the Bank of England.

Born(1912-10-27)27 October 1912
York, England
Died29 January 1988(1988-01-29) (aged 75)
Yearsactive1938–1979
Quick facts Born, Died ...
Howard Clewes
Born(1912-10-27)27 October 1912
York, England
Died29 January 1988(1988-01-29) (aged 75)
OccupationsScreenwriter, Novelist
Years active1938–1979
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He was born in York, England. In 1946, he married Renata Faccincani della Torre, a wartime resistance fighter. She was an active (uncredited) editor in his literary and screenwriting projects.[1]

Filmography

Novels

  • Sailor Comes Home (1938)
  • Dead Ground (1946)
  • The Unforgiven (1947)
  • Quay South (1947)[2]
  • Thus am I Slayn (1948)
  • The Mask Of Wisdom (1949)
  • Green Grow the Rushes (1949)
  • The Long Memory (1951)
  • An Epitaph For Love (1953)
  • The Way The Wind Blows (1954)
  • Man On A Horse (1964)
  • The Libertines (1966)
  • I, The King (1979)

Play

Image in the sun (1955)

Television adaptations

Clewes 1947 novel Quay South was later adapted to television as an episode of the TV series ITV Television Playhouse. The play started Peter Barkworth as Lt. Shirley, Michael Bates as Captain Alan Gerard as Newton Blick as Fisherman, Allan Cuthbertson as Billy, Miriam Karlin as Hilda Thwaite, Roger Livesey as Captain Daniel Thwaite, Doria Noar as Agnes, Richard Pearson as Frederick Elwes, Frederick Piper as Spanish, Philip Ray as Uncle O'Hara, Peter Sallis as Corporal Foster Robert Sansom as Commanding Officer and Peter Wigzell as Sentry.[3]

References

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