Jed Buell (May 21, 1897 - September 29, 1961) was an American film producer, director, and screenwriter who specialized in low-budget B pictures in a variety of subjects including singing cowboy films featuring midgets and black actors.
The next year, Buell utilized his own production company for one of the strangest westerns of all time, The Terror of Tiny Town with an all-midget cast, which would also feature songs.
[4] During this time Buell rejoined Sam Newfield with whom he'd worked on his Fred Scott Westerns by producing several non-Western films for Producers Releasing Corporation such as Misbehaving Husbands (1940), Emergency Landing, (1941) and Broadway Big Shot (1940) with William Beaudine.
After the war, Buell went into television by producing the soap opera The Adventures of Kitty Gordon, but the show ended when he disagreed with network executives.
She was no relation to Helen Gurley Brown; she served as story editor on several of Buell's films.