Paul I. Wellman


Biography

Filmography

 

Writer (Feature Film)

Cheyenne (1947)
Story

Life Events

Videos

Movie Clip

Jubal (1956) -- (Movie Clip) Most Horses Is Better Than Humans First scene after the opening, in which rancher Shep (Ernest Borgnine) found Glenn Ford (title character) staggering out of the Wyoming woods, introducing Pinky (Rod Steiger), Sam (Noah Beery Jr.) and Carson (John Dierkes), in Jubal, 1956, directed by Delmer Daves, often cited as a Western treatment of Shakespeare’s Othello.
Jubal (1956) -- (Movie Clip) They'll Steal You Blind Director Delmer Daves introduces key characters, as new ranch foreman Glenn Ford (title character) has to intervene when Pinky (Rod Steiger) and friends tangle with a caravan of Christian pilgrims (Basil Ruysdael as Shem Hoktor, Felicia Farr his daughter, Charles Bronson riding shotgun), in Jubal, 1956.
Jubal (1956) -- (Movie Clip) We're Ending This Before It Starts Joining dinner with big-hearted rancher Shep (Ernest Borgnine) who’s taken a liking to his new hand (Glenn Ford, title character) and offers him a job, with no idea about the misdeeds of his youthful Canadian wife Mae (English ingenue Valerie French, in her first Hollywood role), in director Delmer Daves’ dark Western, Jubal, 1956.
Jubal (1956) -- (Movie Clip) You Might Get Burned Glenn Ford (title character) is winning over folks at the Wyoming cattle ranch, where he was brought by the owner who found him wandering in the mountains, especially the rancher’s young wife Mae (Valerie French), whose intentions are barely disguised, in director Delmer Daves’ Jubal, 1956.
Jubal (1956) -- (Movie Clip) Promised Land, I Guess If you wondered whey they were called “psychological Westerns,” ranch foreman Glenn Ford (title character) surprises himself, opening up to Naomi (Felicia Farr), whose father leads a band of pilgrims passing through, in Jubal, 1956, Delmer Daves directing from the screenplay he co-wrote with Russell S. Hughes, from a novel by Paul I. Wellman.
Apache (1954) -- (Movie Clip) A Warrior's Peace Santos (Paul Guilfoyle) and Nalinle (Jean Peters) discover Massai (Burt Lancaster), escaped from his white captors and hiding in their tent, promoting a new idea, in Robert Aldrich's Apache, 1954.
Apache (1954) -- (Movie Clip) Nobody Sings About Handcuffs Tail-end of the credits into Geronimo surrendering, Massai (Burt Lancaster) explaining to Nalinle (Jean Peters) why he won't go along, only to be grabbed by Seiber (John McIntire), in Robert Aldrich's Apache, 1954.

Bibliography