Ed Naha
- Writer
- Producer
- Soundtrack
Writer/producer Ed Naha was born June 10, 1950 in New Jersey in the
town of Linden, where he was raised. He attended Kean College. Naha
started his career as a rock music and film journalist. He made
contributions to such publications as "Playboy," "The Village Voice,"
"Rolling Stone," "Heavy Metal," "Science Digest," and "The Twilight
Zone." Ed was a onetime columnist for "The New York Post." Naha was a
co-editor for the science fiction magazine "Starlog" and wrote a
regular column for "Starlog" called "L.A. Offbeat." He was the founding
editor for the popular horror magazine "Fangoria." Moreover, Naha even
worked in the A&R Department at Columbia Records and helped get Bruce
Springsteen's debut album "Born to Run" released. Ed also produced the
album "Gene Roddenberry: Inside Star Trek" for CBS Records in 1976. He
has written over twenty-five novels in the horror, mystery and science
fiction genres. Naha wrote the "Traveler" science fiction series under
the pseudonym DB Drum. His mystery novel "Cracking Up" was nominated
for an Edgar Award by the Mystery Writers of America in 1992. Ed penned
the novelizations for the movies "Dead-Bang," "Ghostbusters II," and
the first two "Robocop" pictures. In addition, Naha has written the
nonfiction books "The Science Fictionary," "The Films of Roger Corman:
Brilliance on a Budget," and "Science Fiction Aliens." He wrote the
screenplays for the comedy "Oddballs" and the fantasy flick "Wizards of
the Lost Kingdom" for Roger Corman. Ed penned three scripts for
producer Charles Band: the fun "Troll," Stuart Gordon's excellent
"Dolls," and the shoddy "Spellcaster." Naha achieved his greatest
commercial success by co-writing the script for the hit comedy "Honey,
I Shrunk the Kids." He's served as a writer and producer on the TV
shows "Honey, I Shrunk the Kids" and "The Adventures of Sinbad." Ed
Naha resides in California.