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  1. 20 de mar. de 2015 · Elmer Rice, the noted American playwright and novelist, died in a Southampton hospital yesterday of pneumonia at the age of 74. He was taken off the liner France last week after suffering a heart ...

  2. Revised by Stewart Ronk (April 13, 2008) Today most people have never heard of Elmer Rice. But in the 1920s and 1930s, he was a playwright who was as popular as Eugene O'Neill. His career is an example of the great American success story because as an amateur, his very first professionally produced play was a great success.

  3. Elmer Rice (born Sept. 28, 1892, New York City—died May 8, 1967, Southampton, Hampshire, Eng.) was an American playwright, director, and novelist noted for his innovative and polemical plays. Rice graduated from the New York Law School in 1912 but soon turned to writing plays. His first work, the melodramatic On Trial (1914), was the first ...

  4. Title: Elmer Rice Papers. Dates: 1909-1967. Extent: 100 document boxes, 1 half-document box (44.5 linear feet), 2 oversize folders (osf), 3 galley files (gf) Abstract: The Elmer Rice papers consist of contracts, correspondence, manuscript drafts, notebooks, photographs, royalty statements, scripts, and theater programs belonging to the ...

  5. Elmer Rice (born Sept. 28, 1892, New York City—died May 8, 1967, Southampton, Hampshire, Eng.) was an American playwright, director, and novelist noted for his innovative and polemical plays. Rice graduated from the New York Law School in 1912 but soon turned to writing plays. His first work, the melodramatic On Trial (1914), was the first ...

  6. Elmer Rice Dramaturgo estadounidense Elmer Rice nació el 29 de septiembre de 1892 en Nueva York, en cuya universidad estudió Derecho. Se inició como dramaturgo con On Trial (1914), que es la primera obra de teatro estadounidense que usa la técnica del flashback.

  7. The publication of a selection of Elmer Rice’s plays (Seven Plays, Viking Press,” $5.00, 524 pp.), concurrent with the brief run on Broadway of his Not for Children, here provides HENRY POPKIN with a vantage point from which to analyze the course of Mr. Rice’s thought and dramatic work.