Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Elizabeth Beecher

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Occupation
  
Screenwriter

Died
  
8 March 1973

Born
  
February 19, 1898 (
1898-02-19
)

Movies
  
Swing in the Saddle, Rough Riders of Cheyenne

Elizabeth Beecher is an American screenwriter best known for her work on western themed movies and television shows in the 1940s and 1950s.

Contents

Early life

Beecher was born on February 19, 1898 in Bridgeport, Connecticut and is a descendant of Harriet Beecher Stowe, author of the book Uncle Tom's Cabin. She graduated from Syracuse University in 1920 with majors in English and History.

Career

Beecher worked as a news reporter and writer for the Syracuse Journal, San Francisco Chronicle, and the New York American. She moved to Hollywood in 1937 where she took up work as a freelance writer. She began writing screenplays for western film producers as well as television shows such as Lassie and The Gene Autry Show.

Outside of film, Beecher wrote comic and children's books, including adaptions of Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea and Tonka for the Walt Disney Corporation. Additional writings included a cookbook of early American family recipes, seven Little Golden Books, four Big Golden Books, and The Bar-Twenty Cowboy, a book selected for inclusion in the Children's Library at the British Museum. She also rewrote or ghost wrote more than 100 manuscripts.

Television

  • The Cisco Kid (various)
  • Movies

  • Bullets and Saddles, 1943 (writer)
  • Rough Riders of Cheyenne, 1945 (writer)
  • Personal life

    Beecher died on Saturday, March 3, 1973, in Burbank, California. She was survived by her son Guy Snowden Miller,her sister, Dorothy Shidler grandson, Gene and granddaughter, Kerry.

    References

    Elizabeth Beecher Wikipedia