Marshall Brickman
0.2Writing

Marshall Brickman

Aug 25, 1939 - Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

​From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  

Marshall Brickman (born August 25, 1941 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil) is a screenwriter, best known for his collaborations with Woody Allen. He is also known for playing the banjo with Eric Weissberg in the 1960s, and for a series of comical parodies published in The New Yorker.

Description above from the Wikipedia article Marshall Brickman, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Credits

Cast

Media
Movie1988FunnySelf
Movie2011Woody Allen: A DocumentarySelf
Movie1989That's AdequateSelf
Movie2001Sounds from a Town I Love(uncredited)
Movie2003A Decade Under the InfluenceSelf
Movie2001The Concert for New York City
TV Show1962The Merv Griffin ShowSelf1
TV Show1953The OscarsSelf1

Crew

Media
Movie1979ManhattanScreenplayWriting
Movie1993Manhattan Murder MysteryScreenplayWriting
Movie1986The Manhattan ProjectDirectorDirecting
Movie1973SleeperScreenplayWriting
Movie1991For the BoysScreenplayWriting
Movie1977Annie HallWriterWriting
Movie1994IntersectionScreenplayWriting
Movie1983LovesickDirectorDirecting
Movie1983LovesickScreenplayWriting
Movie1980SimonDirectorDirecting
Movie2014Jersey BoysMusicalWriting
Movie2001Sister Mary Explains It AllDirectorDirecting
Movie1986The Manhattan ProjectProducerProduction
Movie1986The Manhattan ProjectWriterWriting
Movie1980SimonScreenplayWriting
Movie1967Woody Allen Looks at 1967WriterWriting
Movie2014Jersey BoysScreenplayWriting
Movie1980SimonStoryWriting
Movie1973SleeperAssociate ProducerProduction
TV Show1958Kraft Music HallWriterWriting