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  1. Eustace Cockrell. and the Art of Story Telling. Eustace Cockrell (1909 – 1972) is an American writer whose works encompassed the transition from the pulp fiction magazines of the 1930s to the television shows of Hollywood’s “Golden Age” of the 1950s. This website is dedicated to the recognition of Cockrell’s contribution as a pioneer ...

    • Biography
    • Hollywood
    • Pulp Fiction Magazines
    • Family of Writers
    • 1951-1955

    Eustace Cockrell was born in Warrensburg, Missouri, in 1909. Like his father and his grandfather before him, he left home to pursue his own dream, the dream of being a writer.

    Eventually that dream led him to Hollywood where he became, along with his brother Frank (Francis M.), one of the early writers for the growing television industry. While under contract with Warner Brothers, Eustace wrote for many of the popular western shows (Have Gun Will Travel, Maverick, etc.). He also contributed scripts to such diverse progra...

    Prior to the advent of television, however, Eustace was a major contributor to “pulp” fiction magazines such as Blue Book and Argosy as well as to “slick” publications like Colliers, Saturday Evening Post and The American Magazine. Several of his stories became screenplays including Fast Company (1953), starring Howard Keel and Polly Bergen, and Te...

    Eustace was literally surrounded by a family of writers. As he wrote in one of his short stories, “It was inevitable … that he end up as a writer: his sister married a writer; his brother was a writer, married a writer; another sister was also a writer.” In 1939, Eustace himself married a writer, Betty Barnett. Together they had four children – Lea...

    From 1951 to 1955, Eustace was the political correspondent and later the managing editor of Fortnight Magazine, a California news magazine. He was the ghostwriter of The Stardust Road, an autobiography of songwriter Hoagy Carmichael. Eustace died in 1972 and though the storyteller has long since passed, the gift of his stories remains.

  2. Eustace Cockrell published 84 short stories between 1932 and 1957. His early writings, mostly sports tales with boxing and college football settings, appeared in major pulp fiction adventure magazines including Adventure, All-American Fiction, Argosy, Blue Book, Detective Tales and Fifteen Sports Stories.

  3. Feb 13, 2024 · In total, between 1932 and 1957, Eustace published 84 short stories and his work was used in countless movies and television shows. ‘The Mark Twain of his time’ Eustace Cockrell wasn’t a perfect person – he was a lifelong member of Alcoholics Anonymous – but, like a lot of his stories, he believed in uplifting others.

  4. The two-volume Masterpieces of Eustace Cockrell have been organized to reflect a division within Cockrell’s writings. His early stories in Volume I (1936-1945) portray the darkness of the Great Depression and the coming of World War II. Here, orphans, ex-cons, and soldiers often serve as heroes and sources of inspiration.

  5. Eustace Cockrell was born on 5 November 1909 in Warrensburg, Missouri, USA. He was a writer, known for Tennessee Champ (1954), Target (1958) and The Walter Winchell File (1957). He died on 25 June 1972 in Santa Barbara, California, USA.

  6. Eustace Cockrell was a pioneer television writer who contributed to many of the early Western shows, including Man Without A Gun and Cheyenne.He also wrote for such high-profile television programs as Philco Television Playhouse, The Loretta Young Show, Alfred Hitchcock Presents, This Man Dawson, and Naked City.

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