Edward J. White
Edward J. White (March 15, 1903 – September 24, 1973) was an American film producer.[1]
Edward J. White | |
---|---|
Born | New York, New York, United States | March 15, 1903
Died | September 24, 1973 70) Culver City, California, United States | (aged
Occupation | Producer |
Years active | 1939–1959 (film & TV) |
He was best known for Westerns, particularly ones starring Roy Rogers and Dale Evans. He also produced the TV series Stories of the Century, which won an Emmy Award for Best Western or Adventure Series in 1955.[2][3]
He died in Culver City, California on September 24, 1973.[2]
Selected filmography
- Outlaws of Pine Ridge (1942)
- Days of Old Cheyenne (1943)
- Black Hills Express (1943)
- San Fernando Valley (1944)
- Along the Navajo Trail (1945)
- Eyes of Texas (1948)
- The Golden Stallion (1949)
- The Far Frontier (1949)
- Belle of Old Mexico (1950)
- North of the Great Divide (1950)
- Bells of Coronado (1950)
- Colorado Sundown (1952)
gollark: Nim is. I am complaining about Nim.
gollark: I don't mean change C accordingly, I mean don't propagate the mistake to new languages.
gollark: A byte, i.e. "foolish ASCII or extended ASCII character", should just be `byte` or `u8` or something.
gollark: Unicode should be the default, and something should not be named `char` if it cannot actually hold a character.
gollark: Just because many old languages do the char-is-byte thing doesn't make it not stupid and harmful in this era of unicode.
References
- Martin p.17
- "Services Set for Producer E. J. White". Los Angeles Times. September 26, 1973. p. 28. Retrieved April 20, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
- "Stories of the Century". Emmy Awards. Retrieved April 20, 2020.
Bibliography
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