Elizabeth Beecher
Elizabeth Beecher was an American screenwriter best known for her work on Western-themed movies and television shows in the 1940s and 1950s.
Early life
Beecher was born 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 Seas and Tonka for the Walt Disney Company. 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.
Filmography
Television
- ''The [Cisco Kid (TV series)|The Cisco Kid]''
Movies
- Bullets and Saddles, 1943
- Rough Riders of Cheyenne, 1945
Personal life