Larry Rhine
Biography
San Francisco, California, USA
Larry Rhine was a prolific comedy writer who typed through the golden age of radio, television and film. Rhine had a fifty year record as a television staff writer for the top ten runs of such comedy shows as: All In The Family, Red Skelton, Bob Hope, Mr. Ed, Here's Lucy, Oh Susanna and Private Secretary. Freelance credits include: The Odd Couple, The Brady Bunch, Sanford and Sons, Tugboat Annie, Gimme a Break, Different Strokes, Bachelor Father and animated shows Pebbles and Bam Bam and The Barkleys, amongst many others. Read more...
In 1936, Rhine went to work as a screenwriter for Universal Pictures and Twentieth Century Fox. Credits include: _Chip of the Flying U (1940)_, The Devil's Pipeline (1940), The Leather Pushers (1940), A Dangerous Game (1941), and Six Lessons from Madame La Zonga (1941). While at Universal, he was hired to create numerous musical shorts from the leftover sets of feature films.
A serious war assignment found him Chief of the Philippine Division, Office of War Information, for all shortwave broadcasts. Rhine helped set up MacArthur's famous "I Shall Return" speech. When Rhine informed MacArthur that he felt he should say, "We Shall Return", MacArthur removed him from shore boat that was later fire-bombed on that fateful day. Rhine received many citations including one from President of the Philippines Manuel Quezon and Foreign Minister Carlos Romulo, along with countless letters of gratitude from the Philippine people. During his years as a television writer for All in the Family (1971), Rhine received two Emmy Award nominations, a Writers Guild Award, a Humanitas Award, a Golden Globe and a Heartfund Award. Rhine was Trustee to the Producer-Writer's Pension Plan L.A. 1960-70 (Chairman 1968). In 1974, he received the Founders Award, reading, "With our deepest gratitude to Larry Rhine, whose diligence and wisdom has guided us through the crucial years." He received the Producer-Writer Pension Plan Founders Plaque in 1980. A member of both the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences and Pioneer Broadcasters, he received the Pioneer Broadcasters Diamond Circle Plaque. In 1999, Rhine was filmed as part of the Television Academy of Art and Sciences Archive of American television. During hiatus and semi-retirement, Larry and his wife Hazel were travel journalists. Larry, the writer, and Hazel, the photographer. Their international travel stories appeared on the front page of travel sections in major national papers throughout the United States and Canada for over nine years.
In 1936, Rhine went to work as a screenwriter for Universal Pictures and Twentieth Century Fox. Credits include: _Chip of the Flying U (1940)_, The Devil's Pipeline (1940), The Leather Pushers (1940), A Dangerous Game (1941), and Six Lessons from Madame La Zonga (1941). While at Universal, he was hired to create numerous musical shorts from the leftover sets of feature films.
A serious war assignment found him Chief of the Philippine Division, Office of War Information, for all shortwave broadcasts. Rhine helped set up MacArthur's famous "I Shall Return" speech. When Rhine informed MacArthur that he felt he should say, "We Shall Return", MacArthur removed him from shore boat that was later fire-bombed on that fateful day. Rhine received many citations including one from President of the Philippines Manuel Quezon and Foreign Minister Carlos Romulo, along with countless letters of gratitude from the Philippine people. During his years as a television writer for All in the Family (1971), Rhine received two Emmy Award nominations, a Writers Guild Award, a Humanitas Award, a Golden Globe and a Heartfund Award. Rhine was Trustee to the Producer-Writer's Pension Plan L.A. 1960-70 (Chairman 1968). In 1974, he received the Founders Award, reading, "With our deepest gratitude to Larry Rhine, whose diligence and wisdom has guided us through the crucial years." He received the Producer-Writer Pension Plan Founders Plaque in 1980. A member of both the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences and Pioneer Broadcasters, he received the Pioneer Broadcasters Diamond Circle Plaque. In 1999, Rhine was filmed as part of the Television Academy of Art and Sciences Archive of American television. During hiatus and semi-retirement, Larry and his wife Hazel were travel journalists. Larry, the writer, and Hazel, the photographer. Their international travel stories appeared on the front page of travel sections in major national papers throughout the United States and Canada for over nine years.