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Oscar-winning screenwriter Frank Pierson dies at 87

Written By Unknown on Tuesday 24 July 2012 | 11:19


A writer by the time she could remember, Frank Pierson wrote his most famous phrase, "What we have here is a lack of communication," for decades for the script of 1967 "Cool Hand Luke."

At the moment, I thought there was any way a refined line she may be decided by the team captain of the south, just to teach Luke Paul Newman is a brutal lesson.

To ensure the state line, Pierson wrote a biography at all to the captain, who has never used, because no one has ever questioned the quote that has become one of the most iconic in the history of film.

This commitment and dedication to the history of the language Pierson helped establish one of the best writers of his generation, and ended up three Oscar nominations and one win for his 1975 screenplay for "Afternoon of dogs." It is one of many honors awarded to the director about six to ten years of his career in Hollywood.

Pierson died Sunday night atCedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles after fighting a brief illness, said his manager, Susan Landau. He was 87 years.

The son of a businessman father and screenwriter mother, Pierson began his career as an entertainment correspondent for Time magazine, before they broke into television as a writer of the history of the Western Balkans "Have Gun. In San Francisco "has worked on numerous television shows and settled in the film world with his first film script," The explosive naive. " The comic western starring Jane Fonda and Lee Marvin won him his first Oscar nomination.

Two years later, he collaborated with the novelist Donn Pearce in the adaptation of "Cool Hand Luke" on a chain gang prisoner played by Newman and challenge other inmates and prison guards.

In 1975, Pierson won the Oscar for his screenplay "Dog Afternoon", not difficult to write a script the man who had known the true life story of the movie is based.

"It was confusing, had these contradictory statements about him and that was for everyone who knew him," Pierson said in an interview with the contemporary. "It took me several months before I was able to conceive of it, because until you have a character motivations are understood, there is no way that you write consistently."

Pierson still mainly identified with being a writer, sitting almost every morning at 10 and head writer until he got into the lunch hour, the leadership transition in the 1970 film "The War the Looking Glass. " He also directed the 1976 remake of "King of the Gypsies", "A Star Is Born" with Barbra Streisand and Kris Kristofferson, and 1978.

Pierson has spent most of his career in Hollywood service organizations that help make it a success. "He was the president of the Writers Guild of America for two separate periods, has been teaching at the Sundance Institute, has been an adjunct professor at the USC film school and was the artistic director of the American Film Institute.

It He served as president 31 ยบ Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences 2001-2005, and was a governor of the branch of the writers of 17 years.

"Young rock 'n' rollers are always the old blues musicians as models of how to keep their art more years strong and rebels. For screenwriters, Frank was our master, the old blues for a long time "Phil Alden Robinson Academy governor said in a statement. "It was a great and good man. I miss ya, and I feel very, very fortunate to have known him."

Pierson, born May 12, 1925, in Chappaqua, New York, served in the Army during World War II and earned a degree in cultural anthropology from Harvard University before launching his career.

More recently, Pierson was working as a production consultant and writer on the television series "Mad Men" and "The Good Wife."

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