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  1. Sally Stubblefield. Writer: The Green-Eyed Blonde. Sally Stubblefield was a real person who contributed the story for this screenplay. She had been a matron in a school for at-risk girls and worked for Warner Bros as copy editor and knew Adrian Scott.

    • Writer, Producer
    • Sally Stubblefield
  2. Sally Stubblefield. Writer: The Green-Eyed Blonde. Sally Stubblefield was a real person who contributed the story for this screenplay. She had been a matron in a school for at-risk girls and worked for Warner Bros as copy editor and knew Adrian Scott.

  3. THE STORY OF A TEEN-AGE FIRE-BOMB! LOOK OUT, SHE'S SET TO EXPLODE! Overview. Blacklisted screenwriter Dalton Trumbo (working under the pseudonym “Sally Stubblefield”) tells a rough-edged tale of life inside a 1950s womens reformatory.

  4. Jun 17, 2008 · After Trumbo was released from prison, he went on to have a prodigious writing career under a list of at least 13 pseudonyms — including "Sally Stubblefield." According to Christopher, his sister...

  5. The Green-Eyed Blonde is a 1957 American drama film directed by Bernard Girard and written by Dalton Trumbo, a blacklisted Hollywood screenwriter; the script was credited to his front, Sally Stubblefield.

  6. The Green-Eyed Blonde (1957), one of many exploitative "women in prison" films popular in the 1940s and 50s, was directed by Bernard Girard from a screenplay credited to Sally Stubblefield. Although Stubblefield was an editor in the Warner Bros. story department, she did not write the script.

  7. Blacklisted screenwriter Dalton Trumbo (working under the pseudonym “Sally Stubblefield”) tells a rough-edged tale of life inside a 1950s women’s reformatory.

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