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Earl Arthur Bellamy (March 11, 1917 – November 30, 2003) was an American television and film director.
Earl Bellamy. Directed more than 1,600 episodes of television. Graduated from Hollywood High School in 1935 and got a job as a messenger at Columbia Studios, working his way up to second assistant director by 1939.
Earl Bellamy. Second Unit or Assistant Director: From Here to Eternity. Directed more than 1,600 episodes of television. Graduated from Hollywood High School in 1935 and got a job as a messenger at Columbia Studios, working his way up to second assistant director by 1939.
Dec 2, 2003 · Earl Bellamy, a prolific television director who amassed a diverse list of more than 1,600 episode credits ranging from "The Lone Ranger" to "Leave It to Beaver" and from "I Spy" to "MASH," has...
Dec 3, 2003 · Earl Bellamy, who directed scores of popular television shows in a long and prolific career, died here on Sunday. He was 86 and lived in Rio Rancho, N.M.
Nov 30, 2003 · Department. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Earl Arthur Bellamy (March 11, 1917 – November 30, 2003) was an American film and television director, producer, writer, and set decorator. Description above from the Wikipedia article Earl Bellamy, licensed under CC-BY-SA,full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
In his three-and-a-half-hour interview Earl Bellamy (1917-2003) talks about his early years in the business working in films as an assistant director to George Cukor. He discusses making the transition to full-fledged director in features and television.
Dec 4, 2003 · ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. - Earl Bellamy, who directed scores of popular TV shows in a prolific career that began with the birth of commercial television and continued well into the 1980s, has died of a...
Earl Bellamy, who directed scores of popular television shows during a prolific career that began with the birth of commercial TV and continued well into the 1980s, has died of a heart attack at...
Earl Bellamy was an American screen director, producer, and writer who is best remembered for his work on 1950s TV Westerns. The Minnesota-born Bellamy settled with his parents in Hollywood in the late 1920s at the height of the town's transformation into a movie production center.