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  1. James Warner Bellah (1899-1976) was an American Western author and screenwriter. He wrote novels, short stories, and screenplays based on his experiences in World War I and II, and influenced Elmore Leonard's style.

  2. James Warner Bellah (1899-1976) was a prolific writer of novels, stories and screenplays, and a veteran of World War I and II. He wrote the classic western The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, among other films and TV shows.

    • Writer, Actor
    • September 14, 1899
    • James Warner Bellah
    • September 22, 1976
  3. Browse the list of books by James Warner Bellah, a prolific author of western novels and short stories. See ratings, reviews, editions and genres of his works.

  4. Sep 24, 1976 · James Warner. Bellah was a prolific writer, specializing in historical, particularly western subjects, a war correspondent, a prodigious world traveler, an air pioneer, a veteran of both World ...

  5. Sep 13, 2015 · Originally published in Points West in Winter 1999 James Warner Bellah: “In the Finest Tradition of the Cavalry” By Dan Gagliasso, Guest Author. Ed. note: This is the second of three posts tracing the evolution of the public’s perception of the cavalry in the West from novelist Charles King to short story and script writer James Warner Bellah whose stories were then translated to the ...

  6. James Warner Bellah was a popular American Western author from the 1930s to the 1950s. His pulp-fiction writings on cavalry and Indians were published in paperbacks or serialized in the Saturday Evening Post. Bellah was the author of 19 novels, including The Valiant Virginian (the inspiration for the 1961 NBC television series The Americans ...

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  8. Sea Chase, The (1955) -- (Movie Clip) Against The New Regime. Novelist and journalist whose main contributions to cinema were not his (few) screenplays but the stories he provided for several notable John Ford films, particularly the 7th Cavalry trilogy: "Fort Apache" (1948), "She Wore a Yellow Ribbon" (1949) and "Rio Grande" (1950).