Ambassador to the US Michael Wilson of Canada

Wilson was appointed by California Assembly Speaker Fabian Nez to the nine-member California Environmental Contaminant Biomonitoring Program Scientific Guidance Panel.
Wilson was appointed to Cal/EPA's Green Chemistry Science Advisory Panel.
Wilson was born and raised Roman Catholic in McAlester, Oklahoma.
Michael Wilson was posthumously awarded his second Academy Award in 1984 for The Bridge on the River Kwai.
In 1995, Wilson was credited by the Academy Board of Directors with an Academy Award nomination as a co-writer of Lawrence of Arabia and credited as the winner of the Writers' Guild of Great Britain Award for Best British Dramatic Screenplay.
American screenwriter Michael Wilson was first a short story writer and instructor before going to write screenplays for Hopalong Cassidy Westerns in Hollywood in 1940.
The 25-year-old Wilson has terrific power, but there's not much else to his game.
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Michael Wilson Send to FriendOccupationScreenwriterBirthJul 1,1914 - McAlester, OKDeath1978 Years Active191020304050607080902000CountriesUSAGenresDrama WesternAMG Artist IDP 116994Corrections to this Entry?Biographyby Sandra BrennanAmerican screenwriter Michael Wilson was first a short story writer and instructor before going to write screenplays for Hopalong Cassidy Westerns in Hollywood in 1940.
Upon his return, Wilson was assigned to write for important productions, resulting in his winning an Oscar for his collaboration for the script of A Place in the Sun (1951.
That year, Wilson was also summoned to appear before the House UN-American Activities Committee who blacklisted him after he refused to say whether or not he had been a member of the Communist Party.
Following this, Wilson was only able to find work on Herbert Biberman's independently produced docudrama Salt of the Earth (1954.
Wilson was not able to work publicly again until the late '60s.
spanning over 27 years in the construction industry.
Wilson said it's meant to be both ironic and provocative.
Wilson says he hopes that people of all persuasions come to see his film.
His crew was politically eclectic, including Democrats and Republicans (Wilson is a registered independent); the editor worked on campaign ads for Ralph Nader.
Wilson is remarkably ambitious, cramming far more into his one-and-a-half-hour film than a mere point-by-point debunking of Moore's movies (though there is a fair share of that.
Afterward, producer Chris Ohlsen admonishes Wilson for using false pretenses indeed, Wilson is in danger of becoming another Michael Moore.
As of this writing, Wilson is still hammering out the final details of a distribution deal, but he is optimistic that the film will be in theaters by early October.
Wilson was blacklisted by the Hollywood studios.