Known to friends and co-workers as "Tibby," British screenwriter T.E.B. Clarke briefly pursued careers in advertising and journalism after graduating from Cambridge. Clarke also worked as a London police offer, a wide-ranging experience that would ever after serve as grist for his creative mill. Though he authored fifteen novels, a stage play, and several dramatic screenplays, Clarke is best remembered for his droll, lightly satirical scripts for the Ealing Studios in the 1940s and 1950s. He was honored with an Academy Award for The Lavender Hill Mob, which hopefully compensated for the mere 1500 pounds (approximately $4000) that Ealing paid him. In 1974, T.E.B. Clarke penned his autobiography, This is Where I Came In.
| Title | Year | Editors' Rating | User Rating | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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A Hitch in Time
Screenwriter |
1978 | |||
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A Man Could Get Killed
Screenwriter |
1966 | |||
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Sons and Lovers
Screenwriter |
1960 | |||
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A Tale of Two Cities
Screenwriter |
1958 | |||
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Gideon of Scotland Yard
Screenwriter |
1958 | |||
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Law and Disorder
Screenwriter |
1958 | |||
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All at Sea
Screenwriter |
1957 | |||
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Who Done It?
Screenwriter |
1956 | |||
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The Rainbow Jacket
Screenwriter |
1954 | |||
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The Titfield Thunderbolt
Screenwriter |
1953 | |||
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Encore
Screenwriter |
1951 | |||
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The Lavender Hill Mob
Screenwriter |
1951 | |||
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The Magnet
Screenwriter |
1950 | |||
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Passport to Pimlico
Screenwriter |
1949 | |||
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The Blue Lamp
Screenwriter |
1949 | |||
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Train of Events
Screenwriter |
1949 | |||
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Against the Wind
Screenwriter |
1948 | |||
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Hue and Cry
Screenwriter |
1947 | |||
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Dead of Night
Screenwriter |
1945 | |||
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Johnny Frenchman
Screenwriter |
1945 | |||
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For Those in Peril
Screenwriter |
1944 | |||
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The Halfway House
Screenwriter |
1944 |
