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  1. Interview with Ernest Lehman. In 1957, you were one of the most sought after screenwriters in Hollywood, and Alfred Hitchcock decided that he'd like you to write his next picture. That's right. MGM had bought a novel called The Wreck of the Mary Deare, and they told me that Hitch wanted me to write it. Had you met him before? Just once.

  2. Ernest Lehman war ein US-amerikanischer Drehbuchautor. Er schrieb für einige Filmklassiker wie Der unsichtbare Dritte, West Side Story und Meine Lieder – meine Träume die Drehbücher. 2001 erhielt er den Ehrenoscar für sein Lebenswerk.

  3. ERNEST LEHMAN. Though Ernest Lehman is best known today for his work in films (he has won more Best Screenplay Awards from the Writer’s Guild than anyone in the Guild’s history), his collection, which consists of over 2500 items from his personal and professional files, covers an entire career that spans over forty years in New York and Hollywood, not only as a screenwriter but also as a ...

  4. 9. Feb. 2023 · For more than 40 years, Ernest has dedicated himself as a Project Services Manager at major corporations such as Anglo American, Anglo Gold, and Debswana Diamond Company. Ernest was instrumental in handling Project Controls at De Beers Group and Murray & Roberts, and Project Management at Fluor and Hatch. He worked in leadership roles at global ...

  5. Ernest Lehman: The Sweet Smell of Success is the first biography of Ernest Lehman, one of the most successful screenwriters in film history. He created a remarkable string of iconic mid-Twentieth Century American films, including "Sabrina," "The King And I," "Somebody Up There Likes Me," "Sweet Smell of Success," "North By Northwest," "West Side Story," "The Sound of Music," "Who's Afraid of ...

  6. Ernest Lehman, the screenwriter to helped expand The Sound of Music and West Side Story to the big screen, died July 2 in Los Angeles at the age of 89, according to The New York Times.

  7. Interview with Ernest Lehman. In 1957, you were one of the most sought after screenwriters in Hollywood, and Alfred Hitchcock decided that he'd like you to write his next picture. That's right. MGM had bought a novel called The Wreck of the Mary Deare, and they told me that Hitch wanted me to write it. Had you met him before? Just once.