Warren Lewis (screenwriter)


Warren Lewis is an American film producer and screenwriter. He is best known for his screenwriting contributions on the films Black Rain and The 13th Warrior. He also worked as an assistant film director on numerous studio and independent films, including Boaz Davidson's Hospital Massacre, Penelope Spheeris' The Boys Next Door and McTiernan's directorial debut film Nomads. Lewis has an extensive background in film and video production.
Lewis' original and developed screenplays, television pilots and adaptations include the adaptation of the novel Cold, Cold Heart; The Tale of the Bloodstone Riders, a western set against the background of post Civil War reconstruction Texas; and Dress Blues, a story set in the home front of the Vietnam War and the events of the 1968 Democratic National Convention. A World Away, an adaptation of S. Ansky's play The Dybbuk, is casting.
Lewis is an active educator in screenwriting. He is an adjunct professor in the screenwriting program at the California State University at Fullerton and teaches beginning and advanced screenwriting at the UCLA Writer's program via UCLA Extension and University of California, San Diego Extension. He is a frequent guest lecturer at University film and writing programs. His academic research on the contributions of Vitagaph Studios to U.S. film authorship is ongoing.
Lewis is the 2014 recipient of the Person of Letters award from the La Jolla Writers Conference.

Biography

Lewis studied media at CUNY, cinema at The State University of New York at Binghamton and is a graduate of New York University. He studied screenwriting at Columbia University with Samson Raphaelson.
In 2000, Lewis married the author Constance Young.