Niven Busch (April 26, 1903 – August 25, 1991) was an American novelist, screenwriter, and journalist whose career spanned journalism, popular fiction, and Hollywood adaptations.[1][2][3]Born in New York City to a family of British and New York banking heritage, Busch grew up in Oyster Bay on Long Island and attended Princeton University before entering journalism as an associate editor at Time magazine in the 1920s, also contributing to The New Yorker.[4][5][1] His transition to fiction yielded over fifteen novels, including the bestselling Duel in the Sun (1944), a Western romance adapted into a controversial David O. Selznick film, and The Furies (1948), which inspired Anthony Mann's cinematic take on family vendettas.[6][7][8]Busch's screenwriting credits included the Oscar-nominated In Old Chicago (1937), derived from his novel We the O'Learys, the taut noir The Postman Always Rings Twice (1946), and The Westerner (1940), while he also produced the psychological Western Pursued (1947) starring Robert Mitchum.[2][2][9] Later works like California Street (1959) and The San Franciscans chronicled urban and historical narratives, reflecting his shift toward San Francisco settings in his later years.[7][8] He died of heart failure in San Francisco at age 88.[2][10][5]
Early Life and Education
Family Background and Childhood
Niven Busch was born Briton Niven Busch Jr. on April 26, 1903, in Manhattan, New York City, to Briton Niven Busch Sr. (1874–1950) and Christine Marie (née Fairchild) Busch.[11][12] His father, a stockbroker descended from a established New York banking family, ensured a privileged and affluent environment for the family.[8] Busch's mother, of British origin, contributed to the household's transatlantic cultural influences.[9]The family resided in Oyster Bay, Long Island, where Busch experienced a luxurious childhood marked by the comforts of upper-class suburban life in early 20th-century New York society.[9] He had at least one sibling, brother Noel Fairchild Busch, sharing in this stable, wealth-secured upbringing amid the region's elite enclaves.[13] Busch's extended family included notable figures, such as his cousin Briton Hadden, co-founder of Time magazine, reflecting connections to influential journalistic and business circles that later shaped his professional path.[3]
Academic Years at Princeton
Busch enrolled at Princeton University in the fall of 1921 as a member of the class of 1926.[14][15] During his time there, he focused more on creative writing than on formal academics, composing stories and poems that appeared in national magazines, reflecting his early literary ambitions.[4] He left Princeton before completing his sophomore year, around 1923, without earning a degree.[14][9] This departure has been attributed to family financial pressures, including the death of his father and troubles in the family publishing business.[9] In 1924, shortly after leaving, Busch joined Time magazine as an associate editor, marking the start of his professional journalism career.[14]
Journalistic Beginnings
Work at Time Magazine
Busch began his professional writing career shortly after graduating from Princeton University in 1923, joining Time magazine in its formative years through his familial connection to co-founder Briton Hadden, his cousin.[3][9]Hadden and Henry Luce had launched the weekly news magazine on March 3, 1923, aiming to condense global events into concise summaries.[2] Busch initially contributed as a writer, focusing on assembling and editing content amid the publication's rapid expansion from a startup to a influential periodical.[1]Advancing within Time's editorial ranks, Busch served as an associate editor and eventually rose to a full editorial position, participating in the magazine's signature inverted pyramid style of journalism that prioritized brevity and factual aggregation.[2][1] His work involved covering diverse topics, though specific bylines from this era remain sparsely documented in available records; the emphasis was on collective editorial output rather than individual attribution. This period sharpened Busch's prose, blending analytical insight with narrative flair, skills later evident in his fiction and screenplays.[5]Busch's tenure at Time spanned approximately eight years, concluding around 1931 when he relocated to Hollywood to pursue screenwriting opportunities.[6][5] During Hadden's tenure as editor until his death in 1929, Busch benefited from the cousin's mentorship, contributing to Time's establishment as a digest of current affairs amid the Roaring Twenties' economic boom. Post-Hadden, under Luce's leadership, the magazine grew circulation to over 100,000 subscribers by the late 1920s, providing Busch a platform to refine his reporting amid competitive pressures from rivals like The New Yorker, where he concurrently freelanced.[9][1]
Contributions to The New Yorker
Busch joined the staff of The New Yorker in the mid-1920s, shortly after his time at Time magazine, and contributed regularly through the early 1930s with a focus on character-driven profiles and sports reporting.[16] His pieces often captured the personalities of public figures and athletes in vivid, anecdotal detail, aligning with the magazine's emerging style of urbane, observational journalism.[16] These contributions helped establish The New Yorker's reputation for in-depth portraits amid the cultural ferment of the Jazz Age and Prohibition era.[16]In the "Profiles" section, Busch profiled diverse subjects including snow-removal innovator Urbain Ledoux in "Snow Man" (February 5, 1927), political figure "The Emerald Boss" (March 5, 1927), and concessionaire Harry Stevens in "Red Hot" (August 11, 1928).[17][18][19] A standout was "The Little Heinie," his 1929 examination of New York Yankees slugger Lou Gehrig, which highlighted the player's home life and reticent demeanor amid his rising stardom.[20][21] These and other profiles—totaling over twenty—were later assembled into his debut book, Twenty-One Americans, published by Doubleday, Doran in 1931.[22]Busch's sports writing, often under "Sports of the Week," covered boxing matches, hockey games, and golf tournaments with sharp analysis of strategy and personalities.[23] Examples include "Reflections on the Open," a review of the U.S. Open golf tournament (June 25, 1927), and pieces on heavyweight boxing contenders like Tom Heeney (July 14, 1928).[24][23] He reported on New York Rangershockey playoff runs, such as "The Rangers Spurt—Pity the Modern Goalie" (March 14, 1931), emphasizing tactical shifts in the sport.[25] His coverage reflected a keen interest in athletic undercurrents, predating his later fictional works on competition and ambition.[23]
Screenwriting Career
Transition to Hollywood
In 1931, after serving as an associate editor at Time magazine—co-founded by his cousin Briton Hadden—and contributing profiles to The New Yorker, Niven Busch left New York journalism for Hollywood, seeking opportunities in the burgeoning film industry.[6][5] This move reflected a recognition that his career in magazine publishing had plateaued, with limited paths for further advancement in the East Coast media landscape.Busch's entry into screenwriting came swiftly; his debut credit was on The Crowd Roars (1932), a pre-Code drama directed by Howard Hawks for Warner Bros. Pictures.[1] The film starred James Cagney as Joe Greer, a veteran auto racer who returns home to prevent his impressionable younger brother Eddie (Eric Linden) from entering the perilous world of professional racing, amid tensions with family and romantic interests including Ann Dvorak and Joan Blondell.[26] Busch contributed additional dialogue to the script, originally by Joseph Jackson, Kubec Glasmon, and John Bright, adapting elements from a 1928 novel by Gerald Beaumont.[27]The project established Busch at Warner Bros., one of the major studios dominating early sound-era production, and launched his two-decade tenure scripting for entities including 20th Century Fox, Samuel Goldwyn, Paramount, and Universal.[6] His Hollywood shift capitalized on his journalistic skills in concise, dramatic narrative, aligning with the demands of adapting stories for the screen during the transition from silent films to talkies.[5]
Key Screenplays and Films
Busch's early screenwriting breakthrough came with In Old Chicago (1937), for which he received an Academy Award nomination for Best Original Story, adapted from his own narrative "We, the O'Learys" about Irish immigrants during the lead-up to the Great Chicago Fire of 1871.[1][6] The film, produced by 20th Century Fox, starred Tyrone Power and Alice Faye and highlighted Busch's ability to blend historical drama with personal stakes.[1]In 1946, Busch adapted James M. Cain's novel for The Postman Always Rings Twice, a taut film noir directed by Tay Garnett and starring Lana Turner and John Garfield, emphasizing themes of fatal attraction and moral descent that aligned with Busch's narrative strengths in psychological tension.[1][6] That same year, his 1944 novel Duel in the Sun was adapted into a lavish Western epic by producer David O. Selznick, though Busch sold the rights without scripting involvement; the film, featuring Gregory Peck and Jennifer Jones, grossed significantly despite critical mixed reception for its operatic style.[1][6]Busch wrote and produced Pursued (1947), a pioneering psychological Western directed by Raoul Walsh and starring Robert Mitchum and Teresa Wright, exploring Freudian undertones of revenge and trauma in a post-Civil War setting, which cemented his reputation in the genre.[1][6] Other notable screenplays include The Westerner (1940), a Samuel Goldwyn production with Gary Cooper as Judge Roy Bean, blending frontier myth with character-driven conflict.[1][6]Later works such as The Furies (1950), adapted from his novel and starring Barbara Stanwyck and Walter Huston, delved into familial power struggles in the Old West, while Distant Drums (1951) and The Man from the Alamo (1953) further showcased his interest in Western revisionism and heroism under duress.[1][6] Across more than 20 credited screenplays from 1931 to 1952 at studios including Warner Bros. and Paramount, Busch favored stories of ambition, betrayal, and American expansion, often drawing from his journalistic eye for detail.[6]
Productions and Collaborations
Busch's screenwriting often involved collaborations with other writers to adapt literary sources or develop original stories for studio productions. In 1934, he co-wrote the screenplay for He Was Her Man, directed by Lloyd Bacon, alongside Tom Buckingham and Robert Lord, starring James Cagney and Joan Blondell in a crime drama about a fugitive and his romantic entanglements.[28] This early Warner Bros. effort exemplified his initial forays into collaborative scripting under studio constraints.[29]A pivotal collaboration came with Harry Ruskin on The Postman Always Rings Twice (1946), adapting James M. Cain's 1934 novel for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer under director Tay Garnett's guidance. The screenplay retained the story's core of adulterous lovers plotting murder, starring Lana Turner and John Garfield, and emphasized moral ambiguity and fatalism central to Cain's hardboiled style.[30] This adaptation, released on May 23, 1946, grossed over $5 million domestically and influenced subsequent noir films through its tense dialogue and plot twists.[31]For Pursued (1947), Busch penned the original screenplay solo but collaborated closely with director Raoul Walsh at United States Pictures, incorporating Freudian themes of trauma and Oedipal conflict into a post-Civil War western noir. Filmed with cinematography by James Wong Howe, it starred Robert Mitchum as a haunted orphan and Busch's wife, Teresa Wright, as his stepsister; the March 2, 1947, premiere highlighted its psychological depth, blending revenge motifs with expressionistic visuals.[32][33]Busch's 1944 novel Duel in the Sun served as the basis for the 1946 Selznick International Pictures film, where he contributed an initial treatment before David O. Selznick and Oliver H.P. Garrett refined the screenplay. Directed primarily by King Vidor amid production turmoil involving multiple helmers, the epic western starred Jennifer Jones and Gregory Peck, exploring interracial tensions and forbidden desire; its December 1946 release, budgeted at $5.75 million, marked one of Hollywood's most extravagant collaborations, yielding over $20 million in rentals despite critical division over its melodramatic excess.[5]Later, Busch's novel The Furies (1948) was adapted by Charles Schnee for Anthony Mann's 1950 Paramountfilm, a collaboration emphasizing patriarchal strife and vengeance in a Montana ranch setting, with Barbara Stanwyck and Walter Huston; released August 16, 1950, it underscored Busch's recurring influence on western genres through source material shaping directorial visions of familial hatred.[34]
Literary Career
Major Novels
Niven Busch's major novels often explored themes of ambition, family conflict, and the American West or urban landscapes, drawing from his journalistic background to infuse narratives with vivid historical detail. His breakthrough as a novelist came with Duel in the Sun, published in 1944 by Harper & Brothers, which sold over 100,000 copies in its first year and topped bestseller lists amid World War II readership demands for escapist drama.[1] The novel depicts the turbulent life of Pearl Chavez, a mixed-race woman orphaned after her father's execution for murdering her mother, who seeks refuge with her distant relatives on a Texas ranch, igniting rivalries between the rancher's sons and challenging traditional moral codes in a post-Civil War setting.[35] Its adaptation into a 1946 film directed by King Vidor, starring Jennifer Jones and Gregory Peck, amplified its cultural reach, though critics noted the book's sensationalism as a calculated appeal to wartime audiences craving romance and violence.[36]In 1948, Busch released The Furies, a tale of vengeance and power struggles within a cattle baron family in early 20th-century Idaho, where daughter Vance Jeffords confronts her domineering father amid land disputes and romantic entanglements. Published by Harper & Brothers, it earned praise for its psychological depth and realistic portrayal of frontier economics, reflecting Busch's research into historical ranching practices.[37] The novel's success led to a 1950 film adaptation starring Barbara Stanwyck and Walter Huston, underscoring Busch's dual proficiency in prose and screen narrative.[38]Busch's later work California Street (1959, Simon and Schuster) shifted to urban San Francisco at the turn of the century, chronicling the rise of immigrant entrepreneur Anchylus Saxe from poverty to wealth through ruthless business tactics, intertwined with family secrets and generational clashes. The narrative spans the 1906 earthquake's aftermath, using it as a pivot for character arcs, with sales reflecting sustained interest in saga-style epics.[39] Critics observed its formulaic elements akin to earlier works but commended the authentic depiction of California's economic boom, grounded in Busch's familiarity with the region's history.[40]The San Franciscans (1962) extended this focus, examining post-earthquake rebuilding through interconnected family sagas, though it received mixed reviews for repetitive plotting compared to his peak efforts.[7]Other notable novels include They Dream of Home (1944), a war-themed story of soldiers' aspirations, and Day of the Conquerors (1946), probing postwar power dynamics, both published amid Busch's rising literary profile but overshadowed by his Western epics.[41] These works collectively established Busch as a commercial novelist whose output prioritized dramatic tension over literary experimentation, with sales figures driven by adaptations and serializations in magazines like The Saturday Evening Post.[42]
Short Stories and Other Writings
Busch published several short stories, many of which served as the basis for film adaptations during his early screenwriting career. His story "College Coach," co-written with Manuel Seff and published in 1933, depicted the intense world of college athletics and corruption, directly inspiring the 1933 Warner Bros.film of the same name directed by William A. Wellman.[43] Similarly, "Cut Rate," co-authored with Samuel G. Engel in 1934, explored bootlegging and counterfeit goods in urban America, forming the foundation for the 1934 filmThe Big Shakedown starring Bette Davis and Charles Farrell.[44]Another notable short story, "We the O'Learys" from 1936, centered on Irish immigrant family dynamics and urban strife in 19th-century Chicago, leading to the 1937 epic In Old Chicago with Tyrone Power and Alice Faye, which earned Busch an Academy Award nomination for Best Original Story.[45] In 1941, Busch's story "Belle Starr," co-credited with Cameron Rogers, fictionalized the life of the outlaw queen, resulting in the 1941 20th Century Fox Western starring Gene Tierney and Randolph Scott.[46] Later works included "Distant Drums" (1951), adapted into a 1951 adventure film, and "The Man from the Alamo" (1953), which underpinned the 1953 John Wayne vehicle of the same title.[47]Beyond fiction, Busch produced non-fiction writings early in his career. His 1931 book Twenty-One Americans compiled biographical profiles of prominent figures such as a baseball player, hotel owner, and aviation pioneer, originally appearing as sketches in The New Yorker and illustrated with drawings.[48] In the 1950s, he contributed the essay "The Fellowship of the World" to the radio series This I Believe, reflecting on themes of faith, human connection, and everyday spirituality during subway commutes.[49] These pieces demonstrated Busch's versatility in capturing American character through concise, observational prose outside his novelistic and screen work.
Recurring Themes and Style
Busch's novels frequently explored themes of intense familial rivalries and psychosexual tensions within isolated, patriarchal environments, often set against the backdrop of the American West or urban family dynasties. In works like Duel in the Sun (1944), a half-Native American woman becomes entangled in a destructive love triangle with two brothers vying for their father's ranch, highlighting conflicts over inheritance, identity, and unchecked passion that blur lines between love and violence.[6] Similarly, The Furies (1948) depicts a cattle baron's obsessive bond with his daughter, evolving into hatred laced with lingering affection, where power struggles over land and fortune exacerbate Oedipal undercurrents and revenge motifs.[50] These narratives underscore a recurring motif of love's transformation into hate without erasure of its original intensity, driving characters to self-destructive extremes amid themes of ambition and betrayal.Family sagas dominate Busch's output, portraying communities bound by blood or business as crucibles for human frailty, where external progress—railroads in Duel in the Sun or economic shifts in California Street (1959)—catalyzes internal decay.[51]Brotherhood and loyalty appear idealized yet corroded by envy, as in sibling contests for dominance that echo Greek tragedy, reflecting Busch's view of community as vital yet volatile to human survival.[52] His westerns, while rooted in historical details of frontier life, prioritize psychological realism over mere adventure, examining how isolation fosters ungoverned impulses and moralambiguity.[53]Stylistically, Busch employed melodramatic intensity suited to pulp-infused epics, blending brisk pacing with Freudian depth to probe subconscious drives, often at the expense of subtlety—critics dismissed Duel in the Sun for overwrought prose despite its commercial success.[6] His prose favored vivid, obsessive character interiors over detached narration, inverting genre norms by foregrounding emotional turmoil in ranching patriarchs and their heirs, as seen in the "unnerving" psychosexual layers of The Furies.[54] This approach yielded entertaining, convention-subverting tales that prioritized causal chains of passion leading to ruin, with historical accuracy anchoring the excess.[55]
Personal Life
Marriages and Family
Busch was married five times and fathered seven children across his marriages: five sons (Jerry, Peter, Briton, Nick, and Timothy) and two daughters (Liza and MaryKelly).[6][14]His first marriage to Sonia Frey took place in 1926 and ended in divorce in 1934; no children resulted from the union.[56]The second, to actress Teresa Wright, began on May 12, 1942, and produced two children—a son, Niven Terence Busch (born December 2, 1944), and a daughter, Mary Kelly Busch—before ending in divorce in 1952.[56][11][57]Busch married West Coast socialite Carmencita Baker on March 14, 1956; their union yielded three children—son Jerry Busch, daughter Liza Busch, and son Nick Busch (twin to Liza)—and concluded in divorce in September 1969.[56][58]Details on his fourth marriage are sparse in available records, but his fifth and final marriage was to Suzanne (Sue) de Sanz in 1973, lasting until his death in 1991 and producing the remaining sons, Peter and Timothy.[59][5]
Beliefs and Worldview
Niven Busch contributed an essay to the 1950s NPR radio series This I Believe, titled "The Fellowship of the World," in which he described balancing individual solitude with the necessity of human interconnection. He contrasted the tranquility of a lone horseback ride across his ranch with the energizing disorder of a packed city subway, positing that shared human experiences foster an inherent global fellowship essential to fulfillment.[49]This perspective aligned with Busch's broader emphasis on community as vital to human existence, a theme recurring in his reflections on personal and societal bonds.[52]Busch maintained that the archetype of the omnipotent Western hero formed a core element of the American collective unconscious, influencing national identity and storytelling traditions. He referenced this conviction in analyses of his own Western-themed novels and screenplays, viewing it as a persistent cultural foundation rather than mere entertainment.[6]
Later Years
Post-Hollywood Activities
In 1952, Busch left Hollywood and acquired a cattleranch in Hollister, California, located near Salinas in San Benito County, transitioning to a life centered on ranching in the region's South Valley.[5][10][60] This move followed his divorce from actress Teresa Wright and marked a deliberate shift away from the film industry toward rural pursuits, including the management and operation of livestock operations on the property.[2][60]Busch maintained the ranch for several years, integrating it into his lifestyle while residing in northern California, before eventually relocating to San Francisco.[10] In addition to ranching, he took on academic roles, serving as a professor at the University of California and contributing to educational efforts in writing and literature.[10][1] These activities reflected a post-industry phase emphasizing independence, land stewardship, and intellectual engagement over studio production.
Final Works and Death
In the 1980s, Busch resided in San Francisco, where he continued his literary output, culminating in his final novel, The Titan Game, published by Random House in 1989.[61][1] The book, spanning 253 pages, marked the end of his prolific novel-writing career that had spanned decades. Additionally, Busch made a brief on-screen appearance in the 1988 film adaptation of Milan Kundera's The Unbearable Lightness of Being, directed by Philip Kaufman.[3]Busch died on August 25, 1991, at his home in San Francisco, California, at the age of 88, from congestive heart failure.[6][11] His son, Jerry Busch, confirmed the cause of death to the press.[6]
Reception and Legacy
Critical Evaluations
Niven Busch's novels and screenplays received mixed critical reception, often praised for their commercial appeal and narrative drive but faulted for superficial characterization and melodramatic excess. His 1944 novel Duel in the Sun, a tale of interracial romance and familial conflict in post-Civil War Texas, was particularly derided by reviewers for featuring unreal characters and historical inaccuracies, despite its adaptation into a commercially successful film.[6] Critics viewed the work as prioritizing sensationalism over depth, aligning with Busch's broader reputation for accessible, plot-heavy fiction suited to Hollywood translation rather than literary subtlety.[62]Later novels like California Street (1959), a family saga spanning early 20th-century San Francisco, were similarly critiqued for lacking psychological insight while offering eventful entertainment akin to popular prototypes. Kirkus Reviews described it as "very short on psychology and reasonably long on entertainment," appealing primarily to fans of formulaic best-sellers.[51] TIME magazine echoed this, faulting the solemn tone, routinely drawn figures—such as the bombastic newspaper publisher Anchylus Saxe—and uneven prose, noting that chapter epigraphs from sources like T.S. Eliot often outshone the narrative itself, rendering the King Lear-inspired plot merely "slightly turbulent" despite its length.[63]Busch's screenplays, numbering over 20 and spanning studios like Warner Brothers and Paramount from 1931 to 1952, fared better in terms of innovation, particularly in pioneering psychological elements in the Western genre. His work on Pursued (1947) and the novel They Dream of Home (1944) initiated a vogue for Freudian-inflected Westerns, blending noir introspection with frontier action, though adaptations sometimes diluted the source material's intensity.[64] An Academy Award nomination for In Old Chicago (1937) highlighted his skill in crafting spectacle-driven stories, yet overall evaluations positioned him as a reliable popular entertainer rather than a profound auteur, with commercial hits like The Postman Always Rings Twice (1946 adaptation) underscoring his facility for taut, marketable drama over critical prestige.[6]
Cultural Impact and Influence
Busch's contributions to screenwriting, particularly his adaptation of James M. Cain's novel for The Postman Always Rings Twice (1946), co-authored with Harry Ruskin, helped solidify key elements of film noir, including inexorable fate, illicit desire, and moral descent, establishing it as a cornerstone of the genre's early canon.[1][65] The film's portrayal of a doomed affair between a drifter and a married woman, constrained by Production Code alterations yet retaining psychological tension, influenced subsequent noir narratives focused on entrapment and betrayal.[66]In the Western genre, Busch pioneered noir-infused hybrids through original screenplays like Pursued (1947), which integrated Freudian trauma, revenge cycles, and shadowy cinematography by James Wong Howe into frontier mythology, marking an early fusion that prefigured darker postwar revisions of the form.[67][68] His novel Duel in the Sun (1944), adapted into a 1946 epic directed by King Vidor, amplified familial strife and erotic undercurrents—earning the moniker "Lust in the Dust" for its boundary-pushing sensuality—thereby shifting Westerns toward introspective psychodramas over simplistic heroism.[69] These elements, evident also in The Furies (1950), contributed to the genre's evolution by embedding Greek-tragic motifs and Oedipal conflicts, as Busch explicitly drew from classical sources to deepen character motivations amid ranchland violence.[70]Busch's broader influence extended to Hollywood's literary-to-screen pipeline, where his prolific output—spanning over a dozen novels and credits on films grossing millions—facilitated the mainstreaming of hard-edged realism from pulp fiction into prestige cinema, though often tempered by studio censorship that diluted raw impulses from his prose.[1] This legacy persists in the enduring appeal of psychologically layered genre films, with adaptations like Duel in the Sun cited for reshaping audience expectations of Western moral ambiguity.[70]
Works Overview
Novels List
Busch's novels, spanning from the early 1940s to the early 1960s, frequently explored interpersonal conflicts, historical events, and American societal dynamics, with several achieving commercial success and film adaptations.[38][41]
Title
Publication Year
The Carrington Incident
1941
Duel in the Sun
1944
They Dream of Home
1944
Day of the Conquerors
1946
The Furies
1948
The Hate Merchants
1953
California Street
1959
The San Franciscans
1962
These works represent his primary fictional output, distinct from his earlier non-fiction profiles and later screenwriting credits.[38][41]
Screenplays and Film Credits
Busch entered Hollywood in the early 1930s, initially working as a contract writer for Warner Bros., where he contributed screenplays and stories to B-pictures and features.[5] His original story for In Old Chicago (1937), a historical drama depicting the Great Chicago Fire and based on his unpublished work "We the O'Learys," earned him an Academy Award nomination for Best Writing, Original Story at the 10th Academy Awards.[71] This success established him as a versatile screenwriter capable of blending action, romance, and period elements.Throughout the 1940s and 1950s, Busch adapted both his own novels and others' works, often specializing in Westerns and film noir. Notable adaptations include the screenplay for The Postman Always Rings Twice (1946), drawn from James M. Cain's novel, which featured heightened tension in its portrayal of adultery and murder.[5] He also penned scripts for Pursued (1947), a psychological Western directed by Raoul Walsh, and The Westerner (1940), starring Gary Cooper as Judge Roy Bean.[6] Busch occasionally produced, as with The Capture (1950), which he also adapted from his novel about an oil executive's moral reckoning.[72]His later credits leaned toward Western genres, including Distant Drums (1951), The Man from the Alamo (1953), The Moonlighter (1953), and The Treasure of Pancho Villa (1955).[5][6] Films based on his novels, such as Duel in the Sun (1946) and The Furies (1950), credited him for source material, though screenplays were often collaborative or by others.[72] Busch's contributions emphasized character-driven narratives amid spectacle, reflecting his transition from pulp fiction roots to studio assignments.[56]