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  1. Gerald Green (April 8, 1922 – August 29, 2006) was an American author, journalist, and television writer. Biography. Green was born in Brooklyn, New York as Gerald Greenberg. He was the son of a physician, Dr. Samuel Greenberg. He was Jewish.

  2. Aug 31, 2006 · Gerald Green, a best-selling author and screenwriter whose most famous novel, “The Last Angry Man,” was the basis for the 1959 film starring Paul Muni as an altruistic doctor in a downtrodden...

  3. Sep 4, 2006 · Gerald Green, 84, author of “The Last Angry Man,” a 1956 book that told the story of a heroic doctor who worked in New York’s slums, died Tuesday of pneumonia in Norwalk, Conn. He also...

  4. Aug 29, 2006 · Green wrote many novels, the best known being The Last Angry Man, published in 1956. It was adapted into a movie by the same name which was nominated for Academy Awards for Best Actor in a Leading Role (Paul Muni) and Best Art Direction-Set Decoration, Black-and-White.

  5. Gerald Green (April 8, 1922 – August 29, 2006) was an American author, journalist, and television writer. Biography. Green was born in Brooklyn, New York as Gerald Greenberg. He was the son of a physician, Dr. Samuel Greenberg. He was Jewish.

  6. www.college.columbia.edu › cct_archive › nov_dec06Columbia College Today

    Gerald Green ’42, a best-selling author and screenwriter who wrote, among many other works, the 1978 TV miniseries Holocaust; the book The Last Angry Man, the basis for his 1959 film and 1974 TV show; and the book, with Lawrence Klingman, His Majesty O’Keefe, a 1954 film, died of pneumonia on August 29, 2006, at 84.

  7. Jan 1, 2001 · He wrote the teleplay for Holocaust, a critically acclaimed 1978 TV miniseries that won eight Emmy Awards, including one for "Outstanding Writing in a Drama Series," and was credited with persuading the West German government to repeal the statute of limitations on Nazi war crimes.