Frank De Felitta was born in
The Bronx, New York City,
New York on August 3, 1921. He served as a pilot in World War II and in 1945 returned to New York, where he began to write scripts. His first effort, for the weekly radio program
The Whistler, a popular thriller series, earned him $350 and started him on his writing career. He continued to write radio scripts before turning to television, where he was successful as a writer, producer, and director, winning Emmy nominations in 1963 and 1968 for his documentaries as well as a Peabody Award and several Writers Guild nominations. By the early 1970s he was working on film scripts, including two he wrote with
Max Ehrlich,
The Edict (1971) and
The Savage is Loose (1974).
The Edict was filmed as
Z.P.G. (1972), and both it and
The Savage is Loose were published as novels by Max Ehrlich. De Felitta's first novel,
Oktoberfest (1973), a thriller, though not a bestseller nonetheless earned him enough to finance the year and a half he devoted to his next novel,
Audrey Rose (1975). This novel, a horror story involving reincarnation, was a smash bestseller, selling more than 2.5 million copies and spawning a successful 1977
film adaptation (scripted by De Felitta) and a sequel,
For Love of Audrey Rose (1982). His novel
The Entity (1978), based on the real-life case of a woman named
Doris Bither who claimed to have been haunted by a spectral rapist, was also a bestseller and was adapted by De Felitta for
a 1982 film starring
Barbara Hershey. Other successes include
Golgotha Falls (1984) and the horror film
Dark Night of the Scarecrow (1981), directed by De Felitta. He also directed the 1991 film
Scissors, starring
Sharon Stone and distributed by Paramount Pictures. Frank De Felitta died on March 30, 2016, of natural causes. ==Bibliography==