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Andrew Klavan (/ ˈ k l eɪ v ən /; born July 13, 1954) is an American novelist and conservative political commentator. He has also worked in film and as an essayist and video satirist. He is also known for being a political commentator and hosts The Andrew Klavan Show podcast on the conservative site The Daily Wire.
Andrew Klavan (brother-in-law) Caitlin Flanagan (born November 14, 1961) is an American writer and social critic . [ 1 ] A contributor to The Atlantic since February 2001, [ 2 ] [ 3 ] she was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for Commentary in 2019.
In 1949, he married Jane Parker, a nurse; they had two children, writer Caitlin Flanagan and Ellen Flanagan Klavan. [1] His son-in-law is writer Andrew Klavan. [4] [5] He and his wife spent much of their time in Ireland. They lived in East Setauket, Long Island. He died on March 21, 2002, at the age of 78 in Berkeley. [1]
Don't Say a Word is a 2001 American psychological thriller film starring Michael Douglas, Sean Bean, Brittany Murphy, Guy Torry, Jennifer Esposito, Famke Janssen, Skye McCole Bartusiak and Oliver Platt based on the novel Don't Say a Word by Andrew Klavan. It was directed by Gary Fleder and written by Anthony Peckham and Patrick Smith Kelly. It ...
For Andrew Flanagan this past January, it was becoming CEO—of the fourth-largest renewable energy business in the U.S. At RWE Clean Energy , a subsidiary of German power giant RWE, Flanagan hasn ...
White of the Eye is a 1987 British horror [3]-thriller film directed by Donald Cammell, starring David Keith and Cathy Moriarty.It was adapted by Cammell and his wife China Kong from the 1983 novel Mrs. White, written by Margaret Tracy (pseudonym of the brothers Laurence and Andrew Klavan).
A Play of Our Time [2] is a 1931 play by Hallie Flanagan and her former student Margaret Ellen Clifford, based on the short story "Can You Make Out Their Voices" by Whittaker Chambers. The play premiered at Vassar College on May 2, 1931, [ 1 ] and ran most recently Off Broadway June 3–27, 2010.
Politicon was an annual, non-partisan political convention in the United States. [1] Politicon's vision was to bring "Republicans, Democrats, and people of all political stripes together to banter and spar over the most topical issues in smart and entertaining ways that often poke fun at both sides of the aisle."