Richard L. Breen

Personal Info

Know For

Writing

Gender

Male

Birthday

1918-06-26 (49 years old)

Deathday

1967-02-01

Place of Birth

Chicago, Illinois, USA

Richard L. Breen

Biography

Richard L. Breen (June 26, 1918 – February 1, 1967) was a Hollywood screenwriter and director. He began as a freelance radio writer. After a stint in the US Navy during World War II, he began writing for films and worked alone and in collaboration with such distinguished writers as Billy Wilder and Charles Brackett. He won an Oscar for his work on the screenplay to "Titanic" (1953), and was nominated for "A Foreign Affair" (1948) and "Captain Newman, M.D." (1963). In 1957, he directed "Stopover Tokyo", and then returned to screenwriting. He was president of the Screenwriters' Guild from 1952 to 1953. He was also credited as "Richard Breen"...

Production

1952

1967

Tony Rome

as Writer

1963

1962

State Fair

as Screenplay

1963

PT 109

as Screenplay

1955

Pete Kelly's Blues

as Screenplay

1954

Dragnet

as Screenplay

1948

A Foreign Affair

as Screenplay

1965

Do Not Disturb

as Screenplay

1953

Titanic

as Screenplay

1959

The FBI Story

as Screenplay

1953

Niagara

as Writer

1957

Stopover Tokyo

as Director

1957

Stopover Tokyo

as Screenplay

1966

1955

24 Hour Alert

as Screenplay

1963

Mary, Mary

as Screenplay

1955

1948

1951

1949

Top o' the Morning

as Screenplay

1948

1969

Dragnet

as Writer

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