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  1. Alfred Hayes (18 April 1911 – 14 August 1985) was an American screenwriter, television writer, novelist, and poet, who worked in Italy as well as the United States. His well-known poem about "Joe Hill" ("I dreamed I saw Joe Hill last night") was set to music by Earl Robinson, and performed by Pete Seeger, Joan Baez and many other artists.

  2. May 26, 2020 · The talented Alfred Hayes came very close to becoming one of those writers. In fact, the unrealities of movie-land became a major subject of his fiction.

    • Scott Bradfield
  3. Jul 6, 2018 · Like Asher, his cynical protagonist, Alfred Hayes was a successful Hollywood screenwriter who was sidelined by the studios in the late 1960s. Mel Brooks worked alongside Hayes at Columbia.

  4. Jun 5, 2017 · When studio work dried up, Hayes turned to TV, writing for Alfred Hitchcock, Mannix, Logan’s Run and Nero Wolfe. What makes Hayes unique was that during his stay in Hollywood, he would go on to produce more novels, including some of his best work, In Love and My Face For the World to See.

    • Woody Haut
  5. Hayes became a screenwriter in that wonderful post-war blossoming of realist Italian cinema. After the success of his film Rome Open City, Roberto Rossellini produced an episodic film, Paisan (1946), covering the end of the war in Italy from the allied invasion.

  6. Mar 25, 2021 · Over a period of some fifty-odd years Alfred Hayes worked as a reporter, a screenwriter, a novelist, and a poet. When he died in 1985 he left behind seven novels, three volumes of poetry, a collection of short stories, and at least a dozen screenplays.

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  8. Jun 15, 2020 · Resolutely unshowy, he's never out to prove that he's a great writer. Hayes writes with the unadorned clarity of the neorealist filmmakers. But he stirs in a ruthless, psychological...

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