Bruce Feirstein was born on 1956 and is an American screenwriter and humorist, best known for his contributions to the James Bond series and his best-selling humor books, including Real Men Don't Eat Quiche and Nice Guys Sleep Alone.
15 Facts About Bruce Feirstein
Bruce Feirstein attended Boston University, where he was the managing editor for the student newspaper, The Daily Free Press.
Bruce Feirstein then became a freelance writer for many publications, including The New York Times Magazine, The New Republic, New York, The Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times, The New Yorker, The East Hampton Star, and Playboy.
Bruce Feirstein was a contributing editor at Spy, worked for Howell Raines writing editorials for The New York Times, and has written the humorous "New Yorker's Diary" for The New York Observer since 1994.
Bruce Feirstein has been a contributing editor at Vanity Fair since 1995, and a columnist at Strategy+Business magazine since 2000.
Bruce Feirstein was the story editor on the Fox series Mr President, starring George C Scott and produced by Johnny Carson.
Bruce Feirstein has appeared in documentaries about the 1980s, the "Hollywood Award Season", James Bond, and Pierce Brosnan.
Bruce Feirstein has appeared as an on-air political commentator for CNBC and Fox News, and has been interviewed on The Today Show and Good Morning America.
Bruce Feirstein appeared as himself in the 1992 feature film Naked in New York, directed by Daniel Algrant.
In 2008, Bruce Feirstein was named to the board of Overseers of Boston University.
In 1995, Bruce Feirstein began working within the James Bond franchise by writing the screenplay for the film GoldenEye, with story by Michael France.
Bruce Feirstein followed this up in 1997 by writing the story and the screenplay for Tomorrow Never Dies.
In 1999, Bruce Feirstein co-scripted The World Is Not Enough with story writers Neal Purvis and Robert Wade.
Bruce Feirstein has written four video games in the Bond series.
In 2004, Bruce Feirstein wrote the critically acclaimed Everything or Nothing for developer and publisher Electronic Arts.