
Music in the Air
Music in the Air

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Dave O'Brien (born David Poole Fronabarger, May 31, 1912 – November 8, 1969) was an American film actor, director, and writer. O'Brien was best known to movie audiences in the 1940s as the hero of the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer comedy short film series Pete Smith Specialties narrated by Pete Smith. O'Brien wrote and directed many of these subjects under the name David Barclay. He also appeared in many low-budget Westerns, often billed as Tex O'Brien. In 1942, O'Brien starred in the movie serial Captain Midnight. Modern audiences perhaps best remember O'Brien as a frantic dope addict in the 1936 low-budget exploitation film Tell Your Children (better known under its reissue title, Reefer Madness). As a writer for The Red Skelton Show, O'Brien shared an Emmy Award for Outstanding Writing for a Comedy Series in 1961 and shared a nomination for the same award in 1963. O'Brien died, aged 57, of a heart attack while competing in a yachting race.
Born: 1912-05-31 in Big Spring, Texas, USA
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Music in the Air

The Kettles in the Ozarks

The Big Parade of Comedy

That's Entertainment, Part II

Rasputin and the Empress

The Sign of the Cross

Kiss Me Kate

Wonder Bar

She Married Her Boss

No More Ladies

Roar of the Dragon

The Dawn Patrol

42nd Street: From Book to Screen to Stage

Woman Wanted

Murder at the Vanities

On Your Toes

The Adventures of Frank Merriwell

Good News

Bowery at Midnight

The Phantom of 42nd Street
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