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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Paul_DehnPaul Dehn - Wikipedia

    Paul Edward Dehn (/ ˈdeɪn / DAYN; 5 November 1912 – 30 September 1976) was a British screenwriter, best known for Goldfinger, The Spy Who Came in from the Cold, Planet of the Apes sequels and Murder on the Orient Express. Dehn and his life partner, James Bernard, won the Academy Award for Best Story for Seven Days to Noon. Biography and work.

  2. Oct 19, 2021 · Paul Dehn (1912-1976) was an extraordinary man who achieved eminence in three fields. He is perhaps best known for being an Academy-Award winning screenwriter, picking up his Oscar for the 1952 Cold War spy thriller, Seven Days to Noon.

  3. Paul Dehn. Writer: Murder on the Orient Express. Paul Dehn's show-business career began in 1936 as a movie reviewer for several London newspapers. He later wrote plays, operettas and musicals for the stage. Dehn's first screenplay, for Seven Days to Noon (1950), garnered him an Oscar.

  4. Jan 18, 2013 · How did Paul Dehn become the preeminent screenwriter of the Cold War? Like most information about screenwriters, the answer might as well be top secret. There exists no biographical dictionary of screenwriters.

  5. Major Paul Dehn (second from left) with other officers at Camp X, Britains secret spy-training school in Canada, c. 1943. It was said that every one of the five hundred soldiers who graduated from Camp X could kill a man with his bare hands in fifteen seconds.

  6. Paul Dehn was a well-acclaimed screenwriter. He is also called Paul Edward Dehn. He was honored with awards like the Edgar Award for Best Motion Picture Screenplay, the BAFTA Award for Best British Screenplay, and the Academy Award for Best Story.

  7. Born a hundred years ago today, the poet and critic Paul Dehn trained spies, won an Oscar and, notwithstanding his long, loving co-habitation with another man, helped create the epitome of 20th-century heterosexual virility—yet even Google all but asks, “Paul who?”