Earl W. Wallace (October 23, 1942 – May 12, 2018) was an American screen and television writer who began his career in the 1970s writing episodes of the hit CBS Western series Gunsmoke, one of which inspired him, his wife Pamela, and William Kelley to develop the screenplay for the 1985 film Witness.
Wallace's first submission to Gunsmoke came while he was city editor of a regional newspaper, the Thousand Oaks Acorn. He had enrolled in a screenwriting class where the assignments included the creation of an original episode of Gunsmoke. The professor submitted Wallace's teleplay to the Gunsmoke writing staff, who accepted it and ran it as an episode. They invited Wallace to submit further work and eventually offered him a regular position on their writing staff. When the show ended in its 20th season, Wallace was its head writer.
Wallace wrote the teleplay for the pilot of the ill-fated 1979 TV series Supertrain and co-wrote the story with Donald E. Westlake; Wallace and Westlake shared "created by" credit.
Wallace adapted the Herman Wouk novel War and Remembrance for a twelve-part miniseries broadcast by ABC. He also wrote episodes of How the West Was Won, Seven Brides for Seven Brothers, and Quinn Martin's Tales of the Unexpected, and several television movies, including Wild and Wooly, If These Walls Could Talk, A Murderous Affair: The Carolyn Warmus Story, and Rose Hill.
For his work on Witness, Wallace won the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay, the Writers Guild of America Award for Best Original Screenplay, and the Edgar Award for Best Motion Picture Screenplay and was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Screenplay and the BAFTA Award for Best Original Screenplay. He is the recipient of the Western Writers of America Spur Award for Best Television Script for How the West Was Won.
Wallace died in 2018.[3]
References
Sources
External links
Awards for Earl W. Wallace |
|---|
|
|---|
- Preston Sturges (1940)
- Herman J. Mankiewicz and Orson Welles (1941)
- Michael Kanin and Ring Lardner Jr. (1942)
- Norman Krasna (1943)
- Lamar Trotti (1944)
- Richard Schweizer (1945)
- Muriel Box and Sydney Box (1946)
- Sidney Sheldon (1947)
- No Award (1948)
- Robert Pirosh (1949)
- Charles Brackett, D. M. Marshman Jr., and Billy Wilder (1950)
- Alan Jay Lerner (1951)
- T. E. B. Clarke (1952)
- Charles Brackett, Richard L. Breen, and Walter Reisch (1953)
- Budd Schulberg (1954)
- Sonya Levien and William Ludwig (1955)
- Albert Lamorisse (1956)
- George Wells (1957)
- Nathan E. Douglas and Harold Jacob Smith (1958)
- Clarence Greene, Maurice Richlin, Russell Rouse, and Stanley Shapiro (1959)
- I. A. L. Diamond and Billy Wilder (1960)
- William Inge (1961)
- Ennio De Concini, Pietro Germi, and Alfredo Giannetti (1962)
- James Webb (1963)
- S. H. Barnett, Peter Stone, and Frank Tarloff (1964)
- Frederic Raphael (1965)
- Claude Lelouch and Pierre Uytterhoeven (1966)
- William Rose (1967)
- Mel Brooks (1968)
- William Goldman (1969)
- Francis Ford Coppola and Edmund H. North (1970)
- Paddy Chayefsky (1971)
- Jeremy Larner (1972)
- David S. Ward (1973)
- Robert Towne (1974)
- Frank Pierson (1975)
- Paddy Chayefsky (1976)
- Woody Allen and Marshall Brickman (1977)
- Robert C. Jones, Waldo Salt, and Nancy Dowd (1978)
- Steve Tesich (1979)
- Bo Goldman (1980)
- Colin Welland (1981)
- John Briley (1982)
- Horton Foote (1983)
- Robert Benton (1984)
- William Kelley, Pamela Wallace, and Earl W. Wallace (1985)
- Woody Allen (1986)
- John Patrick Shanley (1987)
- Ronald Bass and Barry Morrow (1988)
- Tom Schulman (1989)
- Bruce Joel Rubin (1990)
- Callie Khouri (1991)
- Neil Jordan (1992)
- Jane Campion (1993)
- Quentin Tarantino and Roger Avary (1994)
- Christopher McQuarrie (1995)
- Joel Coen and Ethan Coen (1996)
- Ben Affleck and Matt Damon (1997)
- Marc Norman and Tom Stoppard (1998)
- Alan Ball (1999)
- Cameron Crowe (2000)
- Julian Fellowes (2001)
- Pedro Almodóvar (2002)
- Sofia Coppola (2003)
- Pierre Bismuth, Michel Gondry, and Charlie Kaufman (2004)
- Paul Haggis and Bobby Moresco (2005)
- Michael Arndt (2006)
- Diablo Cody (2007)
- Dustin Lance Black (2008)
- Mark Boal (2009)
- David Seidler (2010)
- Woody Allen (2011)
- Quentin Tarantino (2012)
- Spike Jonze (2013)
- Alejandro G. Iñárritu, Nicolás Giacobone, Alexander Dinelaris Jr., and Armando Bo (2014)
- Tom McCarthy and Josh Singer (2015)
- Kenneth Lonergan (2016)
- Jordan Peele (2017)
- Nick Vallelonga, Brian Currie and Peter Farrelly (2018)
- Bong Joon-ho and Han Jin-won (2019)
- Emerald Fennell (2020)
- Kenneth Branagh (2021)
- Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert (2022)
- Justine Triet and Arthur Harari (2023)
- Sean Baker (2024)
- Ryan Coogler (2025)
|
|
|---|
Original Drama (1969–1983) | |
|---|
Original Comedy (1969–1983) | |
|---|
Original Screenplay (1984–present) | |
|---|
|
Authority control databases |
|---|
| International | |
|---|
| National | |
|---|
| People | |
|---|
| Other | |
|---|