I recommend to look Cupid's Roundup movie
Movie Issued - in 1919.
Eleventh of twelve episodes in the Franklyn Farnum 2-reel Western series produced by Canyon Pictures Corporation.
Color Info: Black and White
Countries: USA
Genres: Short, Western
Languages: English
Runtimes: USA:20
Sound Mix: Silent
Tech Info: MET:500 m, OFM:35 mm, PCS:Spherical, PFM:35 mm, RAT:1.33 : 1
Release Dates: USA:November 1919
In movie have been taken:
Franklyn Farnum (actor)
Daughter Martha Lillian Smith (b. 3/3/1898) in Boston, MA, One of four people to have appeared in a record five Best Picture Oscar winners: The Lost Weekend, Gentlemen's Agreement, All About Eve, Around the World in Eighty Days, and The Life of Emile Zola. The others are 'Wallis Clark' (qv), 'Bess Flowers' (qv), and 'Sam Harris (II)' (qv).
Death Notes: Woodland Hills, Los Angeles, California, USA (cancer)
Boston-born dancer Franklyn Farnum be by the vaudeville dais at the age of 12 and feature in a irrelevant drama and marvellous production using the occurrence he enter unspeaking films fundamental the age of 40. He appear to be at his best well-appointed in a saddle, his occupation dominated predominantly by westerns. Some of his more great films cover the serial The Vanishing Trails (1920) and the features The Clock (1917), The Firebrand (1922), The Drug Store Cowboy (1925) and The Gambling Fool (1925). In 1925, he gone films, but return five years subsequent at the advent of clatter, beside the only one of its kind occupation to find himself billed markedly further fluff the credit, if billed by any set-up. He relentless on, in ill will, in these controlled role capably into the 50s. Largely forgotten today, he be not connected to silent actor and brothers Dustin and William Farnum. One of his three wives was the ill-fated actress Alma Rubens whom he was briefly married to in 1918. Farnum passed towards the al fresco cancer in 1961.
Height: 5' 11"
Birth Notes: Boston, Massachusetts, USA
Birth Name: Smith, William
Spouse: 'Mary E. Casey (c. 1897 - 1900) (1st wife), 'Edith ?' (? - ?) (second wife), 'Alma Rubens' (qv) (14 June 1918 - July 1918) (divorced)
Death Date: 4 July 1961
Birth Date: 5 June 1878
Buck Jones (actor)
His daughter Maxine Jones was born in 1918; she married actor 'Noah Beery Jr.' (qv)., His body had been so badly burned in the Cocoanut Grove fire that skin from his fingers had been pulled off onto the fingerprint card sent to the Technical Section of the FBI's Identification Division. It took nearly 48 hours to identify the prints because so many fingers had to be searched in so many different places., In 1928 he formed his own production company but the stock market crashed the following year and took him for everything. In response, he formed his own 'Wild West' show performing on his white steed 'Silver (III)' (qv). His wife, Odille Osborne, rode her own horse "Bumper" and their 11-year-old daughter Maxine rode her little pony. The tour was also a failure, and he returned to the movies after being off screen for over a year., On the night of the tragic Cocoanut Grove fire, a large number of guests and close friends was at the club for a combination testimonial dinner in honor of Buck and a promotional event for his "Rough Rider" series for Monogram Pictures. Although the story is that Jones managed to escape the fire but returned back inside to help rescue people, the truth is that he was trapped inside along with all the others and never made it out. Monogram's studio head 'Scott R. Dunlap' (qv) was one of those critically injured in the fire that killed over 500 people. Buck died two days later in a hospital before his wife, who luckily was out of town that night, could reach him., Inducted into the Hall of Great Western Performers of the National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum in 1973., On his World War I draft registration filed on May 28, 1917, he gave 24 years as his age., He gave permission for his name to be used in a comic book series that was later taken over by the Dell Publishing House. The series ran roughly until 1953 and was a needed source of revenue for his wife Odille., Profiled in "Back in the Saddle: Essays on Western Film and Television Actors", Gary Yoggy, ed. (McFarland, 1998).
Death Notes: Boston, Massachusetts, USA (fire)
Books: Buck Rainey. _The Saga of Buck Jones._, Buck Rainey. _The Reviews of the Life and Films of Buck Jones._ 1996., Buck Rainey. _Buck Jones: The Silent Era._ World of Yesterday,, Buck Rainey. _Buck Jones: The Sound Era._ World of Yesterday,
One of the paramount of the B-Western star. Although born contained by Indiana, (on December 12, 1891, not before in branch of one source enjoy it) Jones reportedly (but disputedly) germinate uphill next to a smallholding in the centre of population Red Rock in Indian Territory (now Oklahoma), and in that intellectual the ride and shooting skill that would abdomen him in righteous stead as a hero of Westerns. He both the army as a babyish person and serve on US-Mexican circumstance limit until that time seeing provision in the Moro insurrection in the Philippines. Though fatalities, he recuperate and reenlisted, hoping to become a pilot. He be not run of the mill in favour of pilot grounding and departed the army in 1913. He take a menial assignment beside the Miller Brothers 101 Ranch Wild West Show and in two shakes of a lamb`s tail become triumph bronco buster for the present. He moved on to the Julia Allen Show, but with the outset of the First World War, Jones took career training horses for the Allied army. After the period of war, he and his wife, 'Odelle Osborne', whom he have meet in the Miller Brothers show, tour with the Ringling Brothers circus, consequently settled in Hollywood, where on earth Jones get work in several Westerns starring 'Tom Mix' (qv) and 'Franklyn Farnum' (qv). 'William Fox (I)' (qv) slant Jones lower than licence and promote him as a modern Western big shot. He previously owned the label Charles Jones firstly, then Charles 'Buck' Jones, before settle on his enduring adapt for the stage name. He summarily climb to the upper ranks of Western stardom, playing a more full of atmosphere, less significant amount gaudy hero than Tom Mix, except as abstemious as 'William S. Hart' (qv). With his famed foal Silver, Jones was one of the legend victorious and desirable actor in the genre, and at one barb he was reception more enthusiast assignment than any actress in the world. At the epidemic of World War II, Jones reentered the army and was send on a bond-selling pleasure passage. On November 28, 1942, he was a guest of district citizens in Boston at the famed Coconut Grove nightclub. Fire broken out and nearly five hundred inhabitants die in one of the worst discharge disaster on record. Jones was repugnantly burn and died two days latter before his wife Dell could arrive to conviction him. Although story have it that he died returning to the fire to rescue others (a story probably originate with company 'Trem Carr' (qv) for anything reason), the actual confirmation indicate that he was stuck with all the others and succumbed as most apply, testing to bring away from. He deposit, even consequently, a hero to thousands who follow his motion icon adventures.
Height: 6'
Quotes: In my pictures we never let up on the action. They've got as much movement as the silents. In the last one I rode a horse through a plate-glass window, and that's the sort of thing pictures need., [on songs in western movies] They use 'em to save money on horses and riders and ammunition. Why, you take Gene Autry and lean him up against a tree with his guitar and let him sing three songs and you can fill up a whole reel without spendin' any money.
Birth Notes: Vincennes, Indiana, USA (some sources erroneously say 4 December 1889)
Salary History: _Desert Vengeance (1931)_ (qv)::$300/week, _The Avenger (1931)_ (qv)::$300/week, _The Lone Rider (1930)_ (qv)::$300/week, _Shadow Ranch (1930)_ (qv)::$300/week, _Men Without Law (1930)_ (qv)::$300/week, _The Dawn Trail (1930)_ (qv)::$300/week, _The Last Straw (1920)_ (qv)::$150/week
Magazine Covers: "IFK-Berlin" (Germany), 1934, Vol. 10, Iss. 2474 a
Birth Name: Gebhart, Charles Frederick
Spouse: 'Odelle Osborne' (11 August 1915 - 30 November 1942) (his death)
Death Date: 30 November 1942
Birth Date: 12 December 1891
Bud Osborne (actor)
Articles: "Motion Picture World" (USA), 24 September 1921, pg. 421, "Bud Osborne to Produce"
Death Notes: Hollywood, California, USA (heart attack)
One of the finest teamsters contained by Hollywood peak times of yore, Osborne handle the reins in favour of horse-drawn coach and wagon in immense westerns and historical photoplays from the untimely 20's through unpunctually 50's. And near his weathered, rumpled face, his Texas drawl and his nasal strum, he be normally call upon to display a grubby pickpocket in any of those same westerns., Bud Osborne's almost 50-year career in films began - as far as is known - in 1912 with, naturally, a western. Originally from Texas, Osborne worked for "Wild West" shows where he was noted for his astonishing prowess in handling six-horse stagecoaches, a talent that carried over into films. He began as a stuntman but the fact that he not only was a cowboy but actually looked like one meant that he was soon playing cowboys in front of the camera, in addition to his stunting and horse-handling chores. His stocky, somewhat rugged appearance and Texas accent carried him easily through the transition to talkies, and he soon became one of the busiest supporting players in westerns of the 1930s and 1940s (altogether he appeared in more than 550 films, in addition to much television work, almost all of it in westerns). Age began catching up with him in the 1950s, and he wound out his career appearing in several of director 'Edward D. Wood Jr.' (qv)'s no-budget horror and sci-fi extravaganzas.
Birth Notes: Knox County, Texas, USA
Birth Name: Osborne, Lennie B.
Unlike most, if not all, movie cowboys, Osborne almost always wore the drawstring on his cowboy hat firmly cinched under his chin., Noted for his amazing ability to handle a team of horses, whether a four- or six-horse team, a skill he picked up while working in Wild West shows in his youth and never lost.
Death Date: 2 February 1964
Birth Date: 20 July 1884
Vester Pegg (actor)
Death Notes: Los Angeles, California, USA (coronary thrombosis)
Height: 5' 10"
Birth Notes: Appleton City, Missouri, USA
Birth Name: Pegg, Sylvester House
Spouse: 'Nina L. ?' (1923 - ?)
Death Date: 19 February 1951
Birth Date: 23 May 1887