Bud Osborne(1884-1964)
- Reparto
- Producción
Bud Osborne nació el 20 de julio de 1884 en Texas, Estados Unidos. Fue un actor y productor, conocido por Without Orders (1926), A Texas Cowboy (1929) y The Tiger's Trail (1919). Estuvo casado con Elderine. Murió el 2 de febrero de 1964 en Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, Estados Unidos.
Reparto
- 1963
- 1960–1962
- 1959–1962
- 1960–1962
- 1961
- 1958–1961
- 1958–1961
- 1959–1960
- 1958–1960
- 1955–1960
- 1960
- 1960
- La llamada del Oeste7,5Serie de TV
- Freight Office Clerk
- 1st Stage Driver
- Stage Driver (sin acreditar) ...
- 1952–1960
- 1960
- 1960
Producción
- The Prairie Mystery
- producción
- 1923
- Nombres alternativos
- Bud Osborn
- Nacimiento
- Fallecimiento
- 2 de febrero de 1964
- Hollywood, Los Ángeles, California, Estados Unidos(un ataque al corazón)
- Cónyuge
- Elderine? - February 2, 1964 (su muerte, 2 niños)
- Listings de publicidad
- CuriosidadesUnlike most, if not all, movie cowboys, Osborne almost always wore the drawstring on his cowboy hat firmly cinched under his chin.
- Citas[on how he got his start in films] I came out to Hollywood from Indian Territory in 1912 with a consignment of horses and cattle for the Thomas H. Ince movie outfit. The studio was located on the beachfront at the foot of Santa Inez Canyon, four miles north of Santa Monica. There were just a few sets, and interiors were built outdoors just the same as exteriors. Transportation from the end of the trolley line was the stagecoach and ranch wagon we used in the pictures. And it wasn't the smoothest riding in the world. We found it took too much time traveling back and forth from Santa Monica so Ince decided to build a tent city at the studio. I put up the 24 tents, including a cook and mess tent. The place became known as Inceville. And I became an actor. Our bathtub was the Pacific. Our recreation hall was the beach. When we went on location we used horses and stagecoaches and wagons. We had sandwiches and cold coffee for lunch. In the old days, we didn't draw salaries. We got wages. Five dollars a day. Leading men and women sometimes got $60 a week. And no limit on working hours. Overtime? Everything was overtime. But there were compensations. You could get a room at the swank Hollywood Hotel for three dollars a week. A good meal from soup to nuts cost two bits. A drink was a dime instead of a dollar.
- Apodos
- Lennie Miles Osborne
- Bud Osburne
- Bud Osbourne
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