
Bruce Bennett
Multiple people share this name — showing the most well-known match (Acting).
Acting · Born 1906-05-19 · age 100 at death · Tacoma, Washington, USA
Bruce Bennett (born Harold Herman Brix) was an American actor and Olympic silver medalist shot putter. His first career was as an athlete. At the University of Washington, where he majored in economics, he played football (tackle) in the 1926 Rose Bowl and was a track-and-field star. Two years later, he won the Silver medal for the shot put in the 1928 Olympic Games. Brix moved to Los Angeles in 1929 after being invited to compete for the Los Angeles Athletic Club and befriended actor Douglas Fairbanks Jr., who arranged a screen test for him at Paramount. In 1931, MGM, adapting author Edgar Rice Burroughs's popular Tarzan adventures for the screen, selected Brix to play the title character. Brix, however, broke his shoulder filming the 1931 football film Touchdown, so swimming champion Johnny Weissmuller replaced Brix and became a major star. After Ashton Dearholt convinced Burroughs to allow him to form Burroughs-Tarzan Enterprises, Inc., and make a Tarzan serial film, Dearholt cast Brix in the lead. Pressbook copy has it that Burroughs made the choice himself, but, in fact, in his biography, Brix confirmed that Burroughs never even saw him until after the contract was signed, and then only briefly. The film was begun on location in Guatemala, under rugged conditions (jungle diseases and cash shortages were frequent). Brix did his own stunts, including a fall to rocky cliffs below. The Washington Post quoted Gabe Essoe's passage from his book Tarzan of the Movies: "Brix's portrayal was the only time between the silents and the 1960s that Tarzan was accurately depicted in films. He was mannered, cultured, soft-spoken, a well educated English lord who spoke several languages, and didn't grunt."[4] Brix shown in the opening credits of the serial The New Adventures of Tarzan (1935). Due to financial mismanagement, Dearholt had to complete filming of much of the serial back in Hollywood, and Brix, although his travel and daily living expenses in Guatemala were covered throughout the shoot, never received his contracted salary, along with the rest of the cast. The finished film, The New Adventures of Tarzan, was released in 1935 by Burroughs-Tarzan, and offered to theatres as a 12-chapter serial or a seven-reel feature. A second feature, Tarzan and the Green Goddess, was culled from the footage in 1938.
Titles

The Treasure of the Sierra Madre

Mildred Pierce

Dark Passage

Sahara

Sudden Fear

Perry Mason

The More the Merrier

Love Me Tender

Treasure Island

Lassie

Mystery Street

The Alligator People

A Stolen Life

Strategic Air Command

Three Violent People

The Virginian

Before I Hang

Silver River

Angels in the Outfield

The Man I Love

Invisible Stripes

Dream Wife

77 Sunset Strip

Movie Crazy

Shakedown

The Man with Nine Lives

Undertow

Nora Prentiss

Million Dollar Legs

Branded

Island of Doomed Men

Without Honor

No Census, No Feeling

Danger Signal

The Cosmic Man

Robbers' Roost

So Long Mr. Chumps

The Lone Wolf Meets a Lady

Tarzan and the Green Goddess

Dutiful But Dumb

How High Is Up?

Cheyenne

Smart Girls Don't Talk

Cafe Hostess

The Outsider

The Lone Wolf Keeps a Date

Deadhead Miles

College Humor

Blondie Brings Up Baby

The Great Missouri Raid

Beer Barrel Polecats

The Doctor and the Girl

The New Adventures of Tarzan

The Clones

Daniel Boone, Trail Blazer
Lux Video Theatre

Letter to Loretta

The Last Outpost

I'm from Arkansas

Submarine Raider