Awards & Winners

Ted Allan

Date of Birth 26-January-1916
Place of Birth Montreal
(Canada, Urban agglomeration of Montreal, Québec)
Nationality Canada
Also know as Alan Herman
Profession Writer, Actor, Cinematographer
Ted Allan was a Jewish Canadian writer, several of whose books were made into motion pictures. Ted Allan was born in Montreal as Alan Herman. In the early 1930s returning he worked as a Montreal based journalist for the Communist Party of Canada's newspaper, The Clarion. He adopted the name Ted Allan so that he could infiltrate a fascist organization and write an exposé, and subsequently kept the pseudonym. In 1936, he met and became friends with Norman Bethune. The next year, Allan joined the Mackenzie–Papineau Battalion to fight against fascism in Spanish Civil War and met up with Bethune again. In 1952 Allan and Sydney Gordon published Bethune's biography, The Scalpel, The Sword. He fought for many years to have a film made about Bethune; it was finally accomplished in the early 1990s. In 1939 he published This Time a Better World about the Spanish Civil War Allan left the Labor-Progressive Party, as it was known at the time, in 1957 when the party split following a party crisis fomented by Khrushchev's Secret Speech, the Soviet invasion of Hungary and revelations of state supported anti-Semitism in the Soviet Union. In 1976, Allan received a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Writing for his story that became the screenplay for the movie Lies My Father Told Me.

Awards by Ted Allan

Check all the awards nominated and won by Ted Allan.

1993


Nominations 1993 »

Award Nominated Nominated Work
Gemini Award for Best Writing in a Dramatic Program or Mini-series Bethune

1980


Nominations 1980 »

Award Nominated Nominated Work
Genie Award for Best Screenplay It Rained All Night the Day I Left

1975


Nominations 1975 »

Award Nominated Nominated Work
Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay Lies My Father Told Me