Art Cohn

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Art Cohn (April 5, 1909 in New York, New York - March 22, 1958) was an American sportswriter, screenwriter and author. He was a sportswriter and sports editor for the Oakland Tribune (Oakland, California) newspaper who wrote the sports column The Cohn-ing Tower. He also write for the Long Beach Press-Telegram. He was a controversial opinion writer of the time.[1] He was a boxing fan.

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[edit] Career as screen writer

He was a Hollywood screenwriter on many movies, including:

He was the author of the Joe E. Lewis biography The Joker Is Wild, published by Random House in 1955, on which the movie The Joker Is Wild (1957) was based.

[edit] Death in plane crash

Art Cohn died on March 22, 1958 in the same plane crash that killed Mike Todd, pilot Bill Verner and co-pilot Tom Barclay. The twin-engine, 12-passenger Lockheed Lodestar crashed during a storm in the Zuni Mountains of New Mexico near Grants, New Mexico. Ironically Todd had named the plane The Lucky Liz after wife Elizabeth Taylor. Cohn was writing Mike Todd's biography, The Nine Lives of Mike Todd, which was finished by Cohn's wife and released by Random House in 1958.

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ Columnist was early, angry voice against sports color line Los Angeles Times, March 23, 2008. Quote: Art Cohn died 50 years ago today. From Long Beach to the Bay Area, the newsman afflicted the sports world with hard questions about racial equality long before the civil rights movement.