John Warren (actor): Difference between revisions

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{{Short description|British screenwriter and actor (1916–1977)}}
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'''John Warren''' (1916–1977) was the stage and pen name of a British screenwriter and support actor. Specialising in comedy writing, he worked with several figures at the forefront of British comedy, such as [[Tommy Cooper]], [[Peter Sellers]], [[Dick Emery]] and [[Mike and Bernie Winters]].
'''John Warren''' (1916–1977) was the stage and pen name of a British screenwriter and support actor. Specialising in comedy writing, he worked with several figures at the forefront of British comedy, such as [[Tommy Cooper]], [[Peter Sellers]], [[Dick Emery]] and [[Mike and Bernie Winters]].


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Latest revision as of 11:33, 2 September 2024

John Warren (1916–1977) was the stage and pen name of a British screenwriter and support actor. Specialising in comedy writing, he worked with several figures at the forefront of British comedy, such as Tommy Cooper, Peter Sellers, Dick Emery and Mike and Bernie Winters.

He had several screenwriting projects with film director Val Guest whom he first encountered as an actor in 1948.

Biography

John (Jack) Warner was born on 13 November 1916 in England, UK. He was a writer and actor.

In the Second World War he served in the Royal Navy. Following his discharge, John pursued a career in films but only served in minor roles. He did however make many contacts and moved into scriptwriting in the late 50s, having considerably more success in this field.

John was known for Up the Creek (1958), Further Up the Creek (1958) and Hell Below Zero (1954).

He died on 9 February 1977 in Kingston upon Thames.[1]

Film Scripts

TV Show Scripts

Film Roles

A very frequent actor in support roles Warren was a well-known face but not a well-known name (and often went uncredited). His need to choose a new name stemmed from the pre-existence of the actor Jack Warner who was operating out of the same studios.

TV roles

References

  1. ^ "John Warren | Writer, Actor". IMDb. Retrieved 2024-03-07.
  2. ^ "John Warren". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2021-01-01.