Reginald Rose

About Reginald Rose

Who is it?: Writer, Producer
Birth Day: December 19, 2010
Birth Place:  Manhattan, New York City, New York, United States
Birth Sign: Capricorn

Reginald Rose Net Worth

Reginald Rose was born on December 19, 2010 in  Manhattan, New York City, New York, United States, is Writer, Producer. Reginald Rose was born on December 10, 1920 in Manhattan, New York City, New York, USA. He was a writer and producer, known for 12 Angry Men (1957), The Defenders (1961) and Studio One (1948). He was married to Ellen McLaughlin and Barbara E. Langbart. He died on April 19, 2002 in Norwalk, Connecticut, USA.
Reginald Rose is a member of Writer

💰 Net worth: Under Review

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Biography/Timeline

1942

Rose was born in Manhattan, the son of Alice (Obendorfer) and william Rose, a Lawyer. Rose attended Townsend High School and briefly attended City College (now part of the City University of New York) before serving in the U.S. Army in 1942-46, where he became a first lieutenant.

1943

Rose was married twice, to Barbara Langbart in 1943, with whom he had four children, and to Ellen McLaughlin (not the Playwright and actor) in 1963, with whom he had two children. He died in 2002 from complications of heart failure.

1950

He sold his first teleplay, Bus to Nowhere, in 1950 to the live CBS dramatic anthology program Studio One, for which he wrote Twelve Angry Men four years later. This latter drama, set entirely in a room where a jury is deliberating the fate of a teenage boy accused of murder, was inspired by Rose's Service on just such a trial.The play was later made into the 1957 black-and-white film of the same name.

1956

Rose was a Screenwriter of many dramas, beginning with Crime in the Streets (1956), an adaptation of his 1955 teleplay for The Elgin Hour. He made four movies with the British Producer Euan Lloyd: The Wild Geese, The Sea Wolves, Who Dares Wins and Wild Geese II.

1957

Rose received an Emmy for his teleplay and an Oscar nomination for its 1957 feature-length film adaptation. Rose wrote for all three of the major broadcast networks of the 1950-80 period. He created and wrote for The Defenders in 1961, a weekly courtroom drama spun off from one of Rose's episodes of Studio One; The Defenders would go on to win two Emmy awards for dramatic writing.

1963

His teleplay The Incredible World of Horace Ford was the basis for an episode of The Twilight Zone in 1963 starring Pat Hingle, Nan Martin, and Ruth White. The episode was broadcast on April 18, 1963, on CBS as Episode 15 of Season Four. The theme was how the past is always glorified due to the repression and self-censorship of the negative aspects: we remember the good while we forget the bad. The teleplay had originally appeared as a Studio One episode in 1955.