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Crowned "The Unknown King of Comedy" by NEW YORK magazine in 1985, this former publicist and aspiring academic entered film comedy writing at the very highest level. The 26-year-old Bergman, having penned a 90-page treatment about a black militant cowboy entitled "Tex X", found himself collaborating with Richard Pryor and Mel Brooks on what would become the screenplay of "Blazing Saddles" (1974). Bergman received the sole writing credit for "The In-Laws" (1979), a wacky hit starring Peter Falk and Alan Arkin....

Filmography

Angelic Avengers - ( Producer / / Announced / )
Animal Attraction - ( Executive Producer / / Announced / )
Disorderly Conduct - ( Producer / / Announced / )
I Love You Again (Remake) - ( Screenplay / / Announced / )
Nothing But Blue Skies - ( Producer / / Announced / )
Sonny Bright - ( Director / / Announced / )
Isn't She Great - ( Director / 2000 / Released / )
Striptease - ( Director / 1996 / Released / )
Striptease - ( Screenplay / 1996 / Released / )
It Could Happen to You - ( Director / 1994 / Released / )
Little Big League - ( Executive Producer / 1994 / Released / )
The Scout - ( Screenplay / 1994 / Released / )
Undercover Blues - ( Executive Producer / 1993 / Released / )
Honeymoon in Vegas - ( Director / 1992 / Released / Ascii Pictures )
Honeymoon in Vegas - ( Screenplay / 1992 / Released / Ascii Pictures )
Soapdish - ( Screenplay / 1991 / Released / )
White Fang - ( Executive Producer / 1991 / Released / )
The Freshman - ( Theme Lyrics(- special parody lyrics) / 1990 / Released / Matlon )
The Freshman - ( Director / 1990 / Released / Matlon )
The Freshman - ( Screenplay / 1990 / Released / Matlon )
Big Trouble - ( Screenplay / 1985 / Released / )
Fletch - ( Screenplay / 1985 / Released / )
Oh, God! You Devil - ( Screenplay / 1984 / Released / Warner Bros. Pictures Distribution )
So Fine - ( Director / 1981 / Released / Warner Bros. Home Entertainment Group )
So Fine - ( Screenplay / 1981 / Released / Warner Bros. Home Entertainment Group )
The In-Laws - ( Screenplay / 1979 / Released / Columbia-EMI-Warner )
Blazing Saddles - ( Screenplay / 1974 / Released / Warner Bros. Home Entertainment Group )
Blazing Saddles - ( From Story / 1974 / Released / Warner Bros. Home Entertainment Group )
TV Credits
Brando ( 2007 / Released ): Actor
Mickey and Nora ( 1987 / Released ): Executive Producer / Writer
Full Biography (Back to top)

Crowned "The Unknown King of Comedy" by NEW YORK magazine in 1985, this former publicist and aspiring academic entered film comedy writing at the very highest level. The 26-year-old Bergman, having penned a 90-page treatment about a black militant cowboy entitled "Tex X", found himself collaborating with Richard Pryor and Mel Brooks on what would become the screenplay of "Blazing Saddles" (1974). Bergman received the sole writing credit for "The In-Laws" (1979), a wacky hit starring Peter Falk and Alan Arkin. PREMIERE writer Andy Webster observed that the comedy writer's work on that project "established his metier: fast-paced farces depicting middlebrow protagonists trapped in extreme situations". Bergman scripted and made his directorial debut with "So Fine" (1981), a sometimes boldly silly Ryan O'Neal vehicle about a professor who conquers the garment industry with an idea for see-through jeans. Bergman's screenplay for Michael Ritchie's popular comic mystery "Fletch" (1985) provided a superior showcase for Chevy Chase. He again served as a writer-director with "The Freshman" (1990), an engaging and well-received comedy starring Marlon Brando and Matthew Broderick.

Bergman formed Lobell/Bergman Productions with Michael Lobell in the mid-1980s. In addition to Bergman's projects, they have released several family-oriented adventures ("The Journey of Natty Gann" 1985; "White Fang" 1991) and comedies ("Chances Are" 1989; "Little Big League" 1994) with Bergman sometimes serving as an executive producer. His recent film works include the screenplay for the modestly successful "Soapdish" (1991), writing and directing "Honeymoon in Vegas" (1992), and helming "It Could Happen to You (1994), the latter two comedies both starring Nicholas Cage.

Bergman earned a Ph.D. in American history from the University of Wisconsin. His dissertation, a study of Depression-era Hollywood films, was published by NYU Press under the title "We're In the Money: Depression America and Its Films" in 1971 and subsequently reprinted in paperback by Harper and Row. Bergman's knowledge of 1930s screwball comedy doubtlessly influenced the "old-fashioned genre entertainment" feel of many of his films and more particularly the populist optimism conveyed by "Little Big League" and "It Could Happen to You." He has also written several mystery novels and a Broadway comedy, "Social Security".


Profession(s):
director, screenwriter, playwright, author, producer
Sometimes Credited As:
Warren Bogle
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Family
father:Rudy Bergman (wrote a radio and TV column for the New York "Daily News"; wrote for Victor Borge among others; introduced Bergman to Borge, Ernie Kovacs, and Bob and Ray)

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Education
Harpur College Binghamton, New York
University of Wisconsin Madison, Wisconsin PhD history 1970
Awards (Back to top)
Writers Guild of America Award Best-Written Comedy Written Directly for the Screen "Blazing Saddles" 1974

Milestones (Back to top)
2000 Directed the Jacqueline Susann biopic "Isn't She Great"
1991 First film credited as producer (co-executive with Lobell), "White Fang"
1987 TV debut, wrote and co-executive produced (with Lobell) TV sitcom pilot, "Mickey and Nora"
1986 Credited as Warren Bogle for producing and co-writing (with director John Cassavetes), "Big Trouble"
1985 First film produced for own production company, Bergman/Lobell Productions (with Michael Lobell), "The Journey of Natty Gann"
1981 Feature directing debut (also writer), "So Fine"
1979 Feature solo writing debut, "The In-Laws"
1974 Feature film co-writing debut (with Richard Pryor and director Mel Brooks), "Blazing Saddles" (also story)
Worked as publicist at United Artists; authored several books on Hollywood (fiction and non-fiction)


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