
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jack Rose was an American screenwriter and producer born on November 4, 1911, in Warsaw, Russian Empire, and died on October 21, 1995, in Los Angeles, California. Rose began writing gags for Milton Berle and radio lines for Bob Hope before moving to screenplays. His first was 1943's Road to Rio starring Hope and Bing Crosby. In 1955, Rose produced the Hope film The Seven Little Foys, co-written and directed by his frequent collaborator Melville Shavelson. He also wrote and produced a 1962 Dean Martin romantic comedy, Who's Got the Action? Rose was nominated for Academy Awards three times for The Seven Little Foys, 1958's Houseboat, and 1973's A Touch of Class.
A Marriage
1983
Lost and Found
1979
A Touch of Class
1973
On the Double
1961
The Five Pennies
1959
Houseboat
1958
Beau James
1957
Living It Up
1954
April in Paris
1952
On Moonlight Bay
1951
The Great Lover
1949
Sorrowful Jones
1949
Road to Rio
1947
Ladies' Man
1947
The Good Guys
1968






























