Norman Klenman, “Spring thaw ’70 [is a new bag]” file
- 14
- File
- [ca. 1970]
Part of Norman Klenman fonds
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Norman Klenman, “Spring thaw ’70 [is a new bag]” file
Part of Norman Klenman fonds
Part of Norman Klenman fonds
Part of Norman Klenman fonds
File includes the following scripts, articles and other material written by Norman Klenman: “Deadline” (n.d.); “The Ghost of Marlowe” (n.d.); “Is Dr. Leslie Bell a Vulture for Culture” (letter) (n.d.); "British Columbia Digest" articles “The Fabulous Jokers” (August 1946) and “No Comment” (July 1947); “The Word for Sonia” ([ca. 1948]); various articles in "The U.B.C. Thunderbird" ([ca. 1946]); “I go to Chicago : a radio play” (n.d.); “The Red-haired Boy” (New Liberty Contest, 1952); “The Truth of Marshal” (n.d.); “The Footnote” (n.d.); and “The Dark Patterns of Night and the Rain” (n.d.).
Part of Norman Klenman fonds
File includes business contracts and related records of Norman Klenman and Galanty Limited. Includes contracts with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, 20th Century Fox and Glen-Warren Productions Limited.
Part of Norman Klenman fonds
Omar Khyamh [Khayyam] script : [uncorrected draft 3]
Part of Norman Klenman fonds
Part of Norman Klenman fonds
File consists of scripts for "On the Scene", a program produced by Bill Bolt and written by Norman Klenman, which aired on the CBC between 1960 and 1964.
"[Our Man] Flint" : “Dead on Target” : draft two, August 25, 1975
Part of Norman Klenman fonds
File consists of Norman Klenman’s second draft of a script for a ninety minute episode of the television series Flint, titled “Dead on Target.”
Part of Norman Klenman fonds
Item is a screenplay written by Norman Klenman.
"Our Man Flint" : “Dead on Target,” August 1975
Part of Norman Klenman fonds
Part of Norman Klenman fonds
Series consists of articles, correspondence, and other material pertaining to the career and projects of Norman Klenman, his family and his colleagues. Includes material relating to CKVU television, his partnerships with Daryl Duke and William (Bill) Davidson, and the film "Now that April’s Here." Series also contains some autobiographical material written by Klenman, with emphasis on the chronology of his career.
Part of Norman Klenman fonds
File consists of a script for an episode of "Quest", executive produced by Daryl Duke and adapted for television by Norman Klenman. The episode was telecast May 27, 1962.
Part of Norman Klenman fonds
File includes a script for "Quest" : “The Secret of the World” episode, 1961; two “Eighth day of the week” scripts, February 23, 1962; a "Quest" : “Indian” script by George Ryga, October 1962; an undated submission from Klenman-Davidson Productions Limited to Peter McDonald, Director of TV Network Planning, C.B.C., Toronto, Ontario describing the company and outlining a projected series of films for television; and a script for “The Man with the Hand-Held Camera,” 1964.
R. Spicer’s early budget for “Woodsmen [of the West]”
Part of Norman Klenman fonds
Part of Norman Klenman fonds
File includes correspondence pertaining to the finances and current and proposed projects of Galanty Productions Limited / Galanty Limited.
[Research notes and outlines for potential projects]
Part of Norman Klenman fonds
File consists of story ideas and research notes for various projects, including an episode of the television show "Ironside", a television drama titled “A Gentleman of Toronto”, “The Story of Sir Henry Pellatt, Builder of Casa Loma”, “Vancouver Police Inquiry: 1955”, and several items pertaining to Frederick Phillip Grove.
Part of Norman Klenman fonds
File consists of notes and a screenplay for a proposed movie about Louis Riel. The screenplay contains several revisions in ink.
Russian versions of screenplay for "The Gambler"
Part of Norman Klenman fonds
File consists of Norman Klenman’s revised versions of the shooting script for “Passion” (based on Dostoyevsky’s "The Gambler").
"[Salt Spring Island] Tatlers" and "[Salt Spring Island] Spectators", 1994-2004
Part of Norman Klenman fonds
File contains drafts of the "Tatler" and "Spectator".
Screenplay “The Gambler” from Dostoyesvsky, by Norman Klenman 1987, 1988
Part of Norman Klenman fonds
Project is also called “Passion”.