释义 |
- Biography
- Death
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- Bibliography Novels
- References
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Clyde Coster Ware, Jr (December 22, 1930 – August 30, 2010) was an American television and film screenwriter, director, and producer, best known for his teleplays for The Spy with My Face (1965), Gunsmoke (1965–67) and Coward of the County (1981). BiographyBorn in Clarksburg and raised in West Union — both in north-central West Virginia — Ware arrived in Hollywood in 1961 after several years working as an actor in New York City. In the early 1970s, he formed his own independent film production company — Jud-Lee Productions, named after his two children. Ware returned to his native state to film two feature films — No Drums, No Bugles (1972), filmed in Tyler and Doddridge Counties, and When the Line Goes Through (1973), filmed in West Union. (Both starred a young and relatively unknown Martin Sheen.) Ware produced two novels. The second — The Eden Tree (1971) — was a roman à clef about his family and youth in West Virginia which scandalized his hometown upon publication. DeathHe died of cancer in Los Angeles on August 30, 2010.[1] FilmographyWriter{{div col|colwidth=30em}}- The Great Adventure
- The Man from U.N.C.L.E.
- "The Double Affair" (1964)
- Rawhide
- "The Photographer" (1964)
- "Piney" (1964)
- The Alfred Hitchcock Hour
- "Final Performance" (1965)
- The Spy with My Face (1965)
- The Road West
- The Iron Men (1966)
- Daniel Boone
- "The Mound Builders" (1965)
- "Delo Jones" (1967)
- The Invaders (1967)
- The Guns of Will Sonnett
- "Meeting at Devil's For" (1967)
- Gunsmoke
- "Major Glory" (1967)
- "Cattle Barons" (1967)
- "Ladies from St. Louis" (1967)
- "Noose of Gold" (1967)
- "The Lure" (1967)
- "Old Friend" (1967)
- "Saturday Night" (1967)
- "The Wrong Man" (1966)
- "The Goldtakers" (1966)
- "Treasure of John Walking Fox" (1966)
- "Part 2" (1966)
- "Part 1" (1966)
- "Outlaw's Woman" (1965)
- "The Hostage" (1965)
- "Seven Hours to Dawn" (1965)
- "Twenty Miles from Dodge" (1965)
- "Chief Joseph" (1965)
- Catalina Caper (1967)
- The Silent Gun (1969)
- Bracken's World
- "Love It or Leave It, Change It or Lose It" (1970)
- The High Chaparral
- "Wind" (1970)
- "A Man to Match the Land" (1971)
- Cade's County
- No Drums, No Bugles (1972)
- When the Line Goes Through (1973)
- ABC Afterschool Specials
- The Story of Pretty Boy Floyd (1974)
- All the Kind Strangers (1974)
- The Hatfields and the McCoys (1975)
- The Last Convertible (1979)
- Knots Landing
- "Land of the Free" (1980)
- Coward of the County (1981)
- Sizzle (1981)
- Airwolf
- "Proof Through the Night" (1984)
- Whiz Kids
- "The Sufi Project" (1984)
- Thirteen Days to Glory (1987)
- Human Error (1988)
- Dynasty
- Bad Jim (1990)
- Another Time, Another Place (1992)
- Mary-8 (2009)
- Dreamkiller (2010)
{{div col end}}Director{{div col|colwidth=30em}}- No Drums, No Bugles (1972)
- When the Line Goes Through (1973)
- The Story of Pretty Boy Floyd (1974)
- The Hatfields and the McCoys (1975)
- 300 Miles for Stephanie (1981)
- Human Error (1988)
- Bad Jim (1990)
- Another Time, Another Place (1992)
{{div col end}}Producer{{div col|colwidth=30em}}- No Drums, No Bugles (1972)
- When the Line Goes Through (1973)
- Airwolf (1984)
- "Proof Through the Night" (1984)
- "Bite of the Jackal" (1984)
- "Daddy's Gone a Hunt'n" (1984)
- Bad Jim (1990)
- Another Time, Another Place (1992)
- Dreamkiller (2010; executive producer)
{{div col end}}Consultant- Bonanza (1972)
- "Riot" (1972), executive story consultant
- "The Initiation" (1972), executive story consultant
- Back to Freedom (1988), script consultant
BibliographyNovels- The Innocents (1969)
- The Eden Tree (1971)[1]
References1. ^1 {{Cite web |url=https://variety.com/2010/scene/news/writer-director-clyde-ware-dies-1118024261/ |title=Writer-director Clyde Ware dies |last=Harrison |first=Alexa |work=Variety |date=September 16, 2010 |access-date=February 16, 2017}}
External links{{authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Ware, Clyde}} 8 : 1930 births|2010 deaths|American male screenwriters|American television writers|Deaths from cancer in California|Male television writers|People from West Union, West Virginia|Television producers from West Virginia |