Busch appears in the film The Unbearable Lightness of Being, playing the role of "Old Man" in the scene in which Sabina (Lena Olin) receives the letter informing her of Tómas and Tereza's deaths.
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The Carrington Incident, published in 1941, was followed by the best-seller Duel in the Sun, which Lewis Selznick's other son David purchased and turned into the 1946 blockbuster of the same title.
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In 1932, realizing he had gone as far as he was likely to go as a New York-based magazine writer/editor, Busch re-connected with agent Myron Selznick, whom Busch knew through his father, an executive who had worked for Myron's father Lewis in the teens and early twenties.
Larry Niven | David Niven | Anheuser-Busch | Budweiser (Anheuser-Busch) | Busch Stadium | Anheuser-Busch InBev | Wilhelm Busch | Kurt Busch | Gussie Busch | Busch Gardens | Puerto Busch | Mae Busch | Ernst Busch | Adolphus Busch | Peter Busch Orthwein | Niven Busch | Neil Busch | Michael E. Busch | Inferno (Niven and Pournelle novel) | Ilene Busch-Vishniac | Germán Busch Province | Derek Niven | David D. Busch | Busch-Reisinger Museum | Busch Gardens Tampa | Busch | August "Gussie" Busch | August Anheuser Busch, Sr. | Adolf Busch | Adam Busch |
The screenplay by Sonya Levien and Lamar Trotti was based on the Niven Busch story, "We the O'Learys." The film is a fictionalized account about the Great Chicago Fire of 1871 and stars Alice Brady as Mrs. O'Leary, the owner of the cow which started the fire, and Tyrone Power and Don Ameche as her sons.