Clarence Greene

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Clarence Greene
Born(1913-08-10)August 10, 1913
Pillow Talk

Clarence Greene (August 10, 1913 – June 17, 1995) was an American

films noir
and television episodes produced in the 1950s.

Career

Starting with the 1944 film The Town Went Wild, Greene co-wrote many stories and scripts with Russell Rouse. The partners are noted for their work on a series of six film noirs, starting with D.O.A. (directed by Rudolph Maté-1949).[2][3][4]

With

House of Numbers
(1957).

In the late 1950s, Greene and Rouse formed Greene-Rouse Productions, which created the television series

Tightrope
that ran for one season (1959–1960) as well as two films in the 1960s.

In addition to their noir work, Rouse and Greene produced two westerns:

Pillow Talk was based on their story. Their careers drew to a close shortly after the unsuccessful film The Oscar (1966).[5]

Rouse and Greene were nominated for the

Pillow Talk (1959) (with Maurice Richlin and Stanley Shapiro). D.O.A. has been preserved in the National Film Registry. That film has been remade several times, and they were credited as writers on two of them: the Australian remake Color Me Dead from 1969 and the D.O.A
remake of 1988.

References

  1. AllMovie
    . Retrieved 2009-09-30.
  2. .
  3. ISBN 978-0-306-80996-5. Richard (sic) Rouse wrote and directed several interesting noirs, such as The Well, an insightful look at crowd violence and race relations; The Thief, a Cold War noir known primarily for its gimmick of having not one word of dialogue spoken throughout the entire film; and New York Confidential, one of the better "confidential" movies inspired by Senator Estes Kefauver's public investigation of organized crime. Wicked Woman is Rouse's cheapest and seediest work, and although the dialogue keeps the script from being hackneyed, there is no one to like in the film.[permanent dead link
    ]
  4. . Apart from The Well and D.O.A., not many of these films are actually very good, but Rouse's other film New York Confidential, a crime film without a heart that portrays its central characters as family and businessmen, is very well acted by Broderick Crawford, Anne Bancroft and Richard Conte, and pre-dates The Godfather by 17 years ...
  5. . As a movie, The Oscar was the worst publicity that Hollywood could have devised for itself. Panned by all the critics, it was a fiasco at the box office. "Obviously the community doesn't need enemies as long as it has itself," wrote The New York Times's Bosley Crowther.

External links