
Bob Steele
Multiple people share this name — showing the most well-known match (Acting).
Acting · Born 1907-01-23 · age 81 at death · Portland, Oregon, USA
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Bob Steele (January 23, 1907 - December 21, 1988) was an American actor. He was born Robert Adrian Bradbury in Portland, Oregon, into a vaudeville family. After years of touring, the family settled down in Hollywood in the late 1910s, where his father, Robert N. Bradbury, soon found work in the movies, first as an actor, later as a director, and by 1920, he hired Bob and his twin brother Bill (1907–1971) as juvenile leads for a series of adventure movies entitled "The Adventures of Bob and Bill". Bob's career began to take off for good in 1927, when he was hired by production company Film Booking Offices of America (FBO) to star in a series of Westerns. Bob—who was rechristened Bob Steele at FBO—soon made a name for himself, and in the late 1920s, 1930s and 1940s starred in B-Westerns for almost every minor film studio, including Monogram, Supreme, Tiffany, Syndicate, Republic (including several films of the Three Mesquiteers series) and Producers Releasing Corporation (PRC) (including the initial films of their "Billy the Kid" series), plus he had the occasional role in an A-movie, as in the adaptation of John Steinbeck's novel, Of Mice and Men from 1939. In the 1940s, Bob's career as a cowboy hero was on the decline, but he kept himself working by accepting supporting roles in many big movies like Howard Hawks' The Big Sleep, or the John Wayne vehicles Island in the Sky, Rio Bravo and Rio Lobo. Besides these he also made occasional appearances in science fiction films like Atomic Submarine and Giant from the Unknown and did lots of television work, culminating in a regular supporting role in the army comedy F Troop (1965–1967), which allowed him to show his comic talent. Steele played the character of Trooper Duffy who claimed to have been "shoulder to shoulder with Davy Crockett at the Alamo"-in fact Steele played in With Davy Crockett at the Fall of the Alamo in 1926. Bob Steele died on December 21, 1988 from emphysema after a long sickness. Bob Steele is said to have been the inspiration for the character "Cowboy Bob" in the Dennis The Menace comic strip. Description above from the Wikipedia article Bob Steele (actor), licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Titles

Rio Bravo

The Big Sleep

Hang 'em High

The Shootist

Rio Lobo

Charley Varrick

McLintock!

The Comancheros

Shenandoah

The Enforcer

Gunsmoke

Of Mice and Men

No Name on the Bullet

Decision at Sundown

Pork Chop Hill

Island in the Sky

Pardners

4 for Texas

Rawhide

The Atomic Submarine

Have Gun, Will Travel

Maverick

Family Affair

Hell Bent for Leather

City for Conquest

Skin Game

The Wonderful World of Disney

F Troop

Revenge of the Zombies

Ride a Crooked Trail

Drums Across the River

Bullet for a Badman

Cheyenne

Six Black Horses

Something Big

The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp

South of St. Louis

Taggart

Giant from the Unknown

Cattle Drive

Gun for a Coward

Bugles in the Afternoon

Cheyenne

The Great Bank Robbery

Column South

The Bounty Killer

Lawman

Town Tamer

The Rebel

Fort Worth

The Bonnie Parker Story

The Steel Jungle

Rose of Cimarron

The Spoilers

The Parson and the Outlaw

The Outcast

The Lion and the Horse

Alias John Law

Killer McCoy

Billy the Kid in Texas