
The Girl from Frisco
The Girl from Frisco

Robert N. Bradbury (March 23, 1886 – November 24, 1949) was an American film director and screenwriter who directed 125 movies between 1918 and 1941. He is most famous for directing early western films starring John Wayne in the 1930s, including Riders of Destiny (1933; an early singing cowboy movie), The Lucky Texan (1934), West of the Divide (1934), Blue Steel (1934), The Man From Utah (1934), The Star Packer (1934), The Trail Beyond (1934; co-starring Noah Beery, Sr. and Noah Beery, Jr.), The Lawless Frontier (1934), Texas Terror (1935), Rainbow Valley (1935), The Dawn Rider (1935), Westward Ho (1935), and Lawless Range (1935). These were inexpensively shot "Poverty Row" movies; many were also written by Bradbury and almost all of them featured character actor George "Gabby" Hayes. Bradbury also shot numerous similar films during this period starring his son Bob Steele or Johnny Mack Brown. Bradbury occasionally billed himself as "Robert North Bradbury", "R.N. Bradbury", or "Robert Bradbury". From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Born: 1886-03-23 in Walla Walla, Washington, USA
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The Girl from Frisco

The Target
The Poisoned Dart

The Fighting Heiress
Tennessee's Pardner

North of Nome

A Gutter Magdalene

The Turquoise Mine Conspiracy
The Gun Runners

Cavanaugh of the Forest Rangers

The Woman in the Web

To Have and to Hold

Colorado

The Wild Strain

A Bathtub Bandit

The Man from Tia Juana
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