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Bess Taffel Boyle (December 10, 1913 – July 21, 2000) was an American screenwriter, whose career was effectively ended after she was identified as a member of the Communist Party during the McCarthy period. Taffel is known for writing such films as Elopement.
Sep 4, 2000 · Bess Taffel, a screenwriter blacklisted in Hollywood after refusing to answer to the House Un-American Activities Committee, has died. Taffel died July 21 of a stroke at UCLA Medical Center,...
Bess Taffel Boyle was an American screenwriter, whose career was effectively ended after she was identified as a member of the Communist Party during the McCarthy period.
Boyle's wife, Bess Taffel, whose career began in the Yiddish theatre, was a Hollywood blacklistee, whose film career ended in 1951 after she was "named" by Leo Townsend, although her husband's career was apparently unharmed. They lived in a house that Bob designed and built in The Hollywood Hills, for their entire marriage.
Bess Taffel. American politician (1913-2000) Bess Taffel Boyle; Statements. instance of. human. 1 reference. imported from Wikimedia project. English Wikipedia. sex ...
While traveling to New York by train, Bill Baker, a recently discharged serviceman, meets Vickie North, an aspiring artist from Wisconsin, her young brother Jamie and Louie, a gangster.
81-82 mins | Comedy | December 1951. Cast: Clifton Webb, Anne Francis, Charles Bickford [ More ] Director: Henry Koster. Writer: Bess Taffel. Producer: Fred Kohlmar. Cinematographer: Joseph LaShelle. Editor: William B. Murphy. Production Designers: Lyle Wheeler, Richard Irvine. Production Company: Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp. HISTORY. DETAILS.