Born in Manhattan, he majored in English at Queens College, then studied at Yale Drama School in 1958.[8] At age 24, his play, High Named Today, which was to have starred Jane Wyatt on Broadway, ended up running briefly Off Broadway in February 1954.[9] He was often sought as a "script doctor" because he could quickly identify screenplay flaws, as when Sherry Lansing brought him in to work on the thriller Fatal Attraction. According to his friend, the film and television producer Zev Braun, Goodman said to Lansing of the Glenn Close character: "You can't let her off the hook. You should kill her. Let's drown her!" [10]
Until his death, he was married for 61 years to Marjorie Goodman. Their daughter Kevis Goodman is an associate professor of English at UC Berkeley.[11]
(January 15, 1930 – September 26, 2011)
Partial filmography
- The Stranglers of Bombay (1960)
- Lovers and Other Strangers (1970 - co-screenplay)
- Monte Walsh (1970 - co-screenplay)
- Straw Dogs (1971 - co-screenplay)
- Man on a Swing (1974)
- Farewell, My Lovely (1975)
- Logan's Run (1976)
- March or Die (1977 - co-story & co-screenplay)
- Eyes of Laura Mars (1978 - co-screenplay)
- Fighting Back (1982 - co-screenplay)
- Man, Woman and Child (1983 - co-screenplay)
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