Tom Baum Explained

Thomas Henle Baum (born 1940 in New York) is an American playwright, screenwriter, novelist, and short-story writer. A graduate of Harvard, where he majored in math, Baum is best known for writing The Sender and Carny, both of which he wrote directly (as Thomas Baum) for the screen. He lives in Los Angeles with his producer wife, Carol Baum. He has two sons, Will Baum and Henry Baum, and three grandchildren. He is a descendant of the German anatomist Friedrich Gustav Jakob Henle, who discovered and named the loop of Henle in the human kidneys.[1]

Awards and nominations

Film and television credits

Books

Short stories

Short films

Co-directed with Dennis Lo

Produced plays

Miscellaneous

Tom Baum was a columnist for Filmmaking Review, and columnist and puzzlemaster for the Innuendo, a Los Angeles free paper. He taught screenwriting at UCLA and USC.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Reading my roommate's illustrious ancestor: To T. H. Huxley, 10 June 1868 . 13 December 2022 .