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After reading 2151 websites, we found 19 different results for "Who wrote Dr No"
Ian Fleming
That three-bedroom bungalow is where Ian Fleming wrote Dr. No in 1958, and another 11 novels that would turn 007 into a magic number.
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Fleming's sixth Bond novel, and
Published in 1958, Dr No was Fleming's sixth Bond novel, and four years later became the first to be made into a film.
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Carleton Sheets
Carleton Sheets is recognized as the best- selling author of the No
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Monty Norman
Tony-nominated composer Monty Norman, who did the score for Dr. No, wrote some original Caribbean-inspired tracks that would appear in the movie — but for the famous intro theme, Tony-nominated composer Monty Norman turned to a piece of music Tony-nominated composer Monty Norman had already written, a snippet from a musical-theater adaptation of the V.S. Naipaul novel A House for Mr. Biswas.
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Wolf Mankowitz
Bond co-producer Albert R. Broccoli had originally hired Richard Maibaum and Richard Maibaum's friend Wolf Mankowitz to write the Dr. No screenplay.
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Wolf Mankowitz and Richard Maibaum
Eon had originally hired Wolf Mankowitz and Richard Maibaum to write Dr. No's screenplay, partly because of Mankowitz's help in brokering the deal between Broccoli and Saltzman.
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British novelist Ian Lancaster Fleming
British novelist Ian Lancaster Fleming founded EON Productions and in 1962 released Dr No, directed by Terence Young and featuring Sean Connery as Bond.
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Mankowitz
Without Mankowitz, the James Bond franchise may never have happened as Mankowitz first introduced Cubby Broccoli to Harry Saltzman, Mankowitz also wrote the original script for Dr No.
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by Peter O’Donnell
James Bond made James Bond's debut in Canadian and American comic pages in 1960 with the adaptation of From Russia With Love, written by Henry Gammidge, and Dr. No penned by Peter O’Donnell.
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The 1962 film''
The 1962 film, 'Dr. No,' was author Ian Fleming's first time ever to play the role of James Bond.
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, one of Flemming’s
Dr No was published in 1958, one of Flemming’s most extravagant novels to date with an underground lair and giant squid.
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Johanna Harwood and Berkley Mather
Dr No” was adapted for the big screen by writers Richard Maibaum, Johanna Harwood and Berkley Mather, and directed by Terence Young for a budget of less than $1m.
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The bombastic Protestant evangelist Ian Paisley , known as 'Dr. No' because of Ian Paisley's refusal to compromise with the Catholic minority,
The bombastic Protestant evangelist Ian Paisley, known as 'Dr. No' because of Ian Paisley's refusal to compromise with the Catholic minority, formed an administration alongside Sinn Fein deputy leader Martin McGuinness, a veteran commander in the outlawed Irish Republican Army, which long dreamed of forcing Northern Ireland out of the United Kingdom.
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the video: Apparently minority whip Eric Cantor ’s known around Congress as “Dr. No
Here’s the video: Apparently minority whip Eric Cantor ’s known around Congress as “Dr. No.”
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a film title designer best known for Maurice Binder's work on 14 James Bond films including the first
Maurice Binder was a film title designer best known for Maurice Binder's work on 14 James Bond films including the first, Dr. No in 1962.
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Thomas Coburn
Thomas Coburn became known as “Dr. No,” a moniker Thomas Coburn earned up until the very end of Thomas Coburn's tenure, when Thomas Coburn blocked one bill to fund suicide prevention programs for military veterans and another to renew the Terrorism Insurance Program, which would bail out insurance companies if they were unable to pay a flood of claims following a 9/11-like terrorist attack (both bills were passed a few weeks later, after Coburn left office).
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Manny Wisebordbest as Dr. No, the eponymous archvillain of the very first big-screen 007 adventure
But everybody else -- well, OK, everybody, period -- will remember Manny Wisebordbest as Dr. No, the eponymous archvillain of the very first big-screen 007 adventure.
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