Fort Massacre
Fort Massacre
Joel Albert McCrea (November 5, 1905 – October 20, 1990) was an American actor whose career spanned a wide variety of genres over almost five decades, including comedy, drama, romance, thrillers, adventures, and Westerns, for which he became best known. He appeared in over one hundred films, starring in over eighty, among them Alfred Hitchcock's espionage thriller Foreign Correspondent (1940), Preston Sturges' comedy classics Sullivan's Travels (1941), and The Palm Beach Story (1942), the romance film Bird of Paradise (1932), the adventure classic The Most Dangerous Game (1932), Gregory La Cava's bawdy comedy Bed of Roses (1933), George Stevens' romantic comedy The More the Merrier (1943), William Wyler's These Three, Come and Get It (both 1936) and Dead End (1937), Howard Hawks' Barbary Coast (1935), and a number of western films, including Wichita (1955) as Wyatt Earp and Sam Peckinpah's Ride the High Country (1962), opposite Randolph Scott. Description above from the Wikipedia article Joel McCrea, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Born: 1905-11-05 in South Pasadena, California, USA
Fort Massacre
Dead End
The Virginian
Espionage Agent
Union Pacific
Foreign Correspondent
The Richest Girl in the World
Wichita
Barbary Coast
Rockabye
Ramrod
Hollywood Story
These Three
Cattle Drive
Private Worlds
The Most Dangerous Game
Sam Peckinpah's West: Legacy of a Hollywood Renegade
Border River
Frenchie
The Great Man's Lady