Richard Sale

Birthday: 1911-12-17
Deathday: 1993-03-04
Birthplace: New York City, New York, USA
Gender: Male

​From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  

Richard Sale, (17 December 1911, New York – 4 March 1993, Los Angeles) was an American screenwriter and film director. He started his career writing for the pulps in the Thirties, appearing regularly in Detective Fiction Weekly (with the Daffy Dill series), Argosy, Double Detective, and a number of other magazines. In the Forties, he graduated to slick publications like The Country Gentleman and The Saturday Evening Post. In the mid-Forties, he made a career change from writing magazine fiction to screenplays. A big boost to Sale's success was his novel Not Too Narrow...Not Too Deep, filmed as Strange Cargo (1940) starring Joan Crawford and Clark Gable. He directed several films, including A Ticket to Tomahawk (1950), Meet Me After the Show (1951) with Betty Grable, Let's Make It Legal (1951) with one of Marilyn Monroe's earliest film appearances, Suddenly (1954), Malaga (1954), and Gentlemen Marry Brunettes (1955) with Jane Russell. He also authored many screenplays, The French Line (1954) and Gentlemen Marry Brunettes, both with Mary Loos, The Oscar (1966) and Assassination (1987) Together with his wife, they created the TV series Yancy Derringer.

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Credits

Year Title
1957-03-12 Abandon Ship
1955-10-29 Gentlemen Marry Brunettes
1954-06-24 Malaga
1953-05-13 The Girl Next Door
1952-10-09 My Wife's Best Friend
1951-10-31 Let's Make It Legal
1951-08-15 Meet Me After the Show
1951-05-05 Half Angel
1950-10-02 I'll Get By
1950-05-19 A Ticket to Tomahawk
1948-02-01 Campus Honeymoon
1947-04-23 Spoilers of the North