Loring Mandel (May 5, 1928 – March 24, 2020) was an American playwright and screenwriter whose notable works include the television film Conspiracy. He wrote for radio, television, film and the stage.
Mandel's first job upon returning to Chicago after graduation was as a music arranger for the American Broadcasting Company's house orchestra. He supplemented his income by writing film trailers for motion pictures as well as television variety shows. Mandel next worked full-time for the Doner Company until 1952 when he entered the army for service in the Korean War.
Besides his prolific work in television, Mandel wrote the screenplays for three produced feature films: Countdown (1967), a science fiction drama directed by Robert Altman, starring James Caan and Robert Duvall; Promises in the Dark (1979), a medical drama produced and directed by Jerome Hellman, starring Marsha Mason; and The Little Drummer Girl (1984), a political drama directed by George Roy Hill and starring Diane Keaton.
Mandel's best known and most acclaimed work was the 2001 TV film Conspiracy, which dramatized the 1942 Wannsee Conference and featured an ensemble cast, including Kenneth Branagh, Stanley Tucci, and Colin Firth. The film was nominated for multiple awards and Mandel personally won the 2001 Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Writing For a Miniseries or a Movie.
In 2004, Mandel received the Paddy Chayefsky lifetime achievement award at the 56th Writers Guild of America Awards. On June 15, 2010, Steven Bowie interviewed Mandel for the Archive of American Television.
Mandel's papers, scripts, articles, and correspondence are collected by the Wisconsin Center for Film and Theater Research, an archive of the University of Wisconsin-Madison and the Wisconsin Historical Society. In total, he and his dramas have been awarded two Emmy awards (out of five total nominations), a Sylvania award, a number of Writers Guild Awards, two , and a BAFTA as well.
Mandel died on March 24, 2020,at age 91 in Lenox, Massachusetts
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