Lorenzo Semple Jr.

Lorenzo Elliott Semple III (March 27, 1923  March 28, 2014) was an American screenwriter and sometime playwright, best known for his work on the campy television series Batman, and received writing credit on the political/espionage films The Parallax View (1974) and Three Days of the Condor (1975).[1][2][3] He was professionally known as Lorenzo Elliott Semple Jr.

Lorenzo Semple Jr.
Semple in 2008
Born
Lorenzo Elliott Semple III

(1923-03-27)March 27, 1923
DiedMarch 28, 2014(2014-03-28) (aged 91)
Alma materBrooks School, Yale University
OccupationWriter
Spouse(s)Joyce Miller (m. 1963–2014, his death)
ChildrenTwo daughters, including writer, Maria Semple, one son, one stepson
Tom Poston, Constance Ford, and Robert Elston in the Broadway production of Golden Fleecing (1959), written by Semple

Biography

Semple attended the Brooks School in North Andover, Massachusetts, graduating in 1940.[4] He then attended Yale University, but left in 1941 to join the American Field Service in North Africa, where his boyish beard earned him the nickname "the goat". Aged 19, he was awarded the Médaille militaire and Croix de Guerre for his service as a volunteer ambulance driver with the Free French forces in Libya.[5] Wounded in action at Bir Hakeim, he returned to the United States where he was drafted into the army, serving as an intelligence officer in Europe.[6][7]

Early work

Semple's writing career started in 1951, as a short story contributor to magazines such as The Saturday Evening Post and Collier's Weekly. Semple also tried writing for the theatre and had a play produced on Broadway, Tonight in Samarkand (1955), a melodrama adapted from the French.

He wrote an episode for The Alcoa Hour called "Archangel Harrison" (1955).

He wrote another play, Golden Fleecing, which was filmed for Matinee Theatre in 1958 and premiered on Broadway in 1959.[8]

Semple wrote "China Boy" for the TV series Buckskin (1958), "Four Against Three Millions" and "Money Go Round" for Target (1958), and "Epitaph for a Golden Girl" for Pursuit (1958). "Golden Fleecing" was bought by MGM and produced under the title The Honeymoon Machine (1961), starring Steve McQueen, following which Semple relocated to Hollywood and established himself as a writer for several television shows, including Kraft Suspense Theatre ("Knight's Gambit" 1964), Breaking Point ("Never Trouble Trouble Till Trouble Troubles You" 1964), The Rogues ("Death of a Fleming " 1964), Theatre of Stars ("The Fliers" 1965), Burke's Law (several episodes)'.


Batman

Semple is best known as a writer for TV's Batman (1966-68) starring Burt Ward and Adam West

While living in Spain in 1965, Semple was approached by producer William Dozier to develop a television series for ABC based on the comic book Batman. Semple wrote a pilot which was promptly picked up, and the series based on it put on the air, with popular success. Semple wrote the first four episodes. Semple also served as Executive Story Editor.

At the same time he provided the screenplay for the 1966 Batman feature film version.

He also wrote one double episode of the television series The Green Hornet called "Beautiful Dreamer," which was broadcast in October 1966.

He co-wrote a TV movie Thompson's Ghost (1966) and did episodes of The Rat Patrol (1966) and wrote "You're Only Young Twice" for Vacation Playhouse (1967).

Film career

From the late 1960s onwards, Semple focused on films. His success with the Batman film saw he and director Leslie Martinson re-teamed on Fathom (1967), a spy spoof for Raquel Welch.

His script for the critically acclaimed cult film Pretty Poison (1968) won the award of the New York Film Critics Circle Awards as best screenplay of its year.

He rewrote Larry Cohen's script Daddy's Gone A-Hunting (1969), and wrote the little seen The Sporting Club (1971). The Marriage of a Young Stockbroker (1971) was an attempt to match the success of The Graduate.

Semple was one of several writers on the box office hit Papillon (1973). He received writing credit on a series of thrillers: The Super Cops (1974), The Parallax View (1974), The Drowning Pool (1975) and Three Days of the Condor (1975).

Dino De Laurentiis

The Days of the Condor had been produced by Dino De Laurentiis, who hired Semple repeatedly over the next few years. He wrote the popular but critically assailed King Kong-remake (1976); Hurricane (1979), a major box office flop starring Mia Farrow, on which Semple is also credited as Executive Producer; and Flash Gordon (1980), again a comic strip derivative, done in a deliberately over-the-top style reminiscent of the "Batman" sensibility. As with his Batman, serious comic-strip devotees assailed Semple for the allegedly disrespectful approach he took to the printed originals.

After Never Say Never Again (1983), a non-Eon Productions film in the James Bond series which brought Sean Connery back to the role for the last time, Semple wrote a final comic book adaptation, Sheena (1984), based on the comic book Sheena, Queen of the Jungle.

He wrote a TV movie. Rearview Mirror (1984) and an Imperial war film that was never completed, The Bengal Lancers! (1984).

He was credited on Never Too Young to Die (1986) and the TV movie Rapture (1993).

Later career

Subsequently, Semple and retired agent and producer Marcia Nasatir reviewed movies on YouTube as the Reel Geezers.

In September 2008, he was hailed by the Writers Guild of America as a Living Legend. In 2010, the American Cinemateque presented a two-night retrospective of his movies in Santa Monica.

In January 2013, author Jon Dambacher dedicated his short novel "A Strange, Sickly Beauty" to him.

Death

Semple died of natural causes at his home in Los Angeles, California, just one day after his 91st birthday.[9]

Screenplays

Television

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References

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