Oscar Brodney (February 18, 1907 – February 12, 2008) was an American lawyer-turned-screenwriter. He is best known for his long association with Universal Studios, where his credits included Harvey, The Glenn Miller Story (1954), several Francis movies and the Tammy series.[1]
Biography
He was born and raised in Boston, Massachusetts, the son of an immigrant fisherman. One of seven children, a younger brother was the painter Edward Brodney and his older brother Max a doctor.
Brodney attended both Boston University and Harvard College. He earned a law degree from the latter and became a lawyer. He began writing night club and vaudeville routines as a hobby and became a radio writer.
Early film career
Brodney was working as a "radio idea man" in 1941. He and writing partner Jack Rubin had submitted a number of stories to Hollywood studios and only got polite rejections. They pitched a vehicle for Charles Boyer called Appointment for Love to Universal producer Bruce Manning, who bought the story.[2][3][4]
A proposed musical starring O'Connor, Son of Robin Hood, was not made.[16]
Historical films
Brodney began working on more historical material with Scarlet Angel (1952) with Yvonne De Carlo and Rock Hudson. He was nominated for an Oscar for The Glenn Miller Story screenplay which he wrote with Valentine Davies in 1954. That year he signed a two-year contract with the studio, where he had been based since 1942, except for two years during the war.[17]
In the late 1950s he began to produce movies, his first one being When Hell Broke Loose at Paramount in 1958, where he was co-producer. The movie starred Charles Bronson.
In 1971, he was working on a biopic of Babe Didrikson Zaharias.[26] That year, he signed a two-picture deal with Robert Stone to write scripts, including one called Intrigue.[27] Neither of these appear to have been made.
In 1975 Brodney lived in the Smoke Tree neighborhood of Palm Springs, California.[28] Brodney died in 2008, six days before his 101st birthday. Some members of Brodney's family learned of his death through Amy S. Bruckman's "Nextbison" WordPress webpage, referencing information from Wikipedia.[29]
Death
Brodney died on February 12, 2008, in Los Angeles U.S. at the age of 100, just six days shy of his 101st birthday.
^"The Art of Putting Over a Gag". The Argus. No. 32, 048. Melbourne. 21 May 1949. p. 6 (The Argus Week-End Magazine). Retrieved 21 November 2017 – via National Library of Australia.
^Meeks, Eric G. (2014) [2012]. The Best Guide Ever to Palm Springs Celebrity Homes. Horatio Limburger Oglethorpe. pp. 305–306, 308. ISBN978-1479328598.