
Richard L. Breen
48
								years   1967
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" and "Robert Breen".
Text from Wikipedia.
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Directing (1 movie)
| Title | Year | Job | 
|---|---|---|
| A Foreign Affair | 1948 | Screenplay | 
| Isn't It Romantic? | 1948 | Writer | 
| Miss Tatlock's Millions | 1948 | Screenplay | 
| Top o' the Morning | 1949 | Screenplay | 
| Appointment with Danger | 1950 | Writer | 
| The Mating Season | 1951 | Writer | 
| The Model and the Marriage Broker | 1951 | Writer | 
| O. Henry's Full House | 1952 | Screenplay | 
| Niagara | 1953 | Writer | 
| Titanic | 1953 | Screenplay | 
| Dragnet | 1954 | Screenplay | 
| Pete Kelly's Blues | 1955 | Screenplay | 
| Seven Cities of Gold | 1955 | Screenplay | 
| 24 Hour Alert | 1955 | Screenplay | 
| Stopover Tokyo | 1957 | Screenplay | 
| The FBI Story | 1959 | Screenplay | 
| Wake Me When It's Over | 1960 | Writer | 
| State Fair | 1962 | Screenplay | 
| PT 109 | 1963 | Screenplay | 
| Mary, Mary | 1963 | Screenplay | 
| Captain Newman, M.D. | 1963 | Screenplay | 
| Do Not Disturb | 1965 | Screenplay | 
| A Man Could Get Killed | 1966 | Screenplay | 
| Tony Rome | 1967 | Writer | 
| Dragnet | 1969 | Writer | 
