Devery Freeman (February 13, 1913 – October 7, 2005) was an American screenwriter, short-story writer, novelist, television producer, and union activist, who helped to establish the Writers Guild of America. His negotiations with studios resulted in the guild's right to determine film writing credits. He was the younger brother of writer/producer Everett Freeman.
Youth and World War II
Born in Brooklyn, New York City on February 13, 1913, to Jewish parents, Freeman attended Brooklyn College and began his career writing short stories for The Saturday Evening Post, The New Yorker and the British magazine Punch.[1] After the attack on Pearl Harbor, he volunteered for service in the United States Navy, went through officer training and then was assigned to Armed Forces Radio, becoming one of the co-founding members of the Navy unit of Armed Forces Radio, where he wrote training films and entertainment programs for sailors and marines.
In later years, Freeman wrote Father Sky, a novel about a military school whose cadets revolt when threatened with the disarming and closure of the school, hoping for aid from a legendary U.S. Army general nicknamed "Father Sky." The novel, with a different, darker conclusion, was adapted into the 1981 motion picture Taps, starring Timothy Hutton, George C. Scott, Sean Penn and Tom Cruise. Leonard B. Stern, a fellow writer who worked on Get Smart with him, said in a statement by the Writers Guild of America, West: "His love of language never went unfulfilled in his writing, and he never exempted himself from the concerns and problems of writers," when announcing Freeman's death on behalf of WGA.[1]
Family
Freeman, a widower, had sons Seth and Jonathan.[1] In 2006, his son Seth donated his father's extensive archive to the Brooklyn College Library Archive.[4]
Death
Freeman, who had been in poor health since the 1990s due to cardiac problems, had to undergo open-heart heart surgery in March 2005. Never fully recovering, he died from surgery complications in Los Angeles on October 10, 2005.[1] He was buried at Mount Sinai Memorial Park Cemetery.