Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Edward_HumeEdward Hume - Wikipedia

    Edward Chalmers Hume (May 18, 1936 – July 13, 2023) was an American film and television writer, best known for creating and developing several TV series in the 1970s, and for writing the 1983 TV movie The Day After.

  2. Sep 13, 2023 · Edward Hume, the Emmy-nominated writer of “The Day After” and creator of “The Streets of San Francisco,” has died, his rep confirmed to Variety. He was 87.

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Edward_HumesEdward Humes - Wikipedia

    Edward Humes is an American journalist and non-fiction writer. Biography. Humes was born in Philadelphia and attended Hampshire College. [citation needed] In 1989 he received the Pulitzer Prize for specialized reporting for investigative stories he wrote about the United States military for the Orange County Register. [1]

  4. Sep 13, 2023 · Edward Hume, a prolific TV writer who created or developed such 1970s episodic crime classics as The Streets of San Francisco, Cannon and Barnaby Jones, and was Emmy-nominated for the startlingly...

  5. www.imdb.com › name › nm0401742Edward Hume - IMDb

    Edward Hume was born on 18 May 1936 in Chicago, Illinois, USA. He was a writer, known for The Day After (1983), Toma (1973) and Common Ground (1990). He was married to Mindy Elaine Huffman, Suzanne Hope Canner and Sandra Gershwin Godowsky. He died on 13 July 2023 in the USA.

    • Writer
    • May 18, 1936
    • Edward Hume
    • July 13, 2023
  6. Sep 13, 2023 · Edward Hume was an Emmy-nominated film and TV writer who created the 1983 nuclear war drama The Day After. He also wrote several TV shows and the biographical film The Terry Fox Story, which won a Genie Award.

  7. People also ask

  8. Sep 14, 2023 · Edward Hume, legendary Television writer, has died at the age of 87. The writer was nominated for an Emmy for the astonishingly realistic, widely viewed nuclear holocaust thriller The Day After from 1983. He also produced or developed such 1970s episodic crime classics as The Streets of San Francisco, Cannon, and Barnaby Jones.