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*''[[Bonanza]]'' (1972)
*''[[Bonanza]]'' (1972)
**”[[Riot]]” (1972), executive story consultant
**”[[Riot]]” (1972), executive story consultant
**”[[The Initiation]]” (1972), executive story consultant
**”[[The Initiation]]{{Disambiguation needed|date=December 2016}}” (1972), executive story consultant
*''[[Back to Freedom]]'' (1988), script consultant
*''[[Back to Freedom]]'' (1988), script consultant



Revision as of 00:59, 5 December 2016

Clyde Coster Ware, Jr (22 December 1930, Clarksburg, West Virginia-30 August 2010, Los Angeles, California) 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).

Born and raised 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.

Filmography

Writer

Director

Producer

Consultant

Bibliography

Novels

  • The Innocents (1969)
  • The Eden Tree (1971)

External links