Bob Steele(1907-1988)
- Actor
- Writer
- Soundtrack
American Western star and character actor whose career spanned six
decades. The son of director Robert N. Bradbury, he appeared in vaudeville with
his parents and with his twin brother Bill Bradbury appeared as a child in a
series of 16 semi- documentary short films directed by their father,
The Adventures of Bob and Bill. As Bob Bradbury Jr., he played juvenile
roles in silent films, then took the stage name Bob Steele in 1927. He
appeared in scores of films during the Thirties, rising to B-Western
stardom and an apparently solid position as one of Republic Studios'
top draws. Occasionally he made an appearance in more prominent films,
as in his role as Curly in Of Mice and Men (1939). But he remained primarily a figure
in Westerns. His stardom diminished by the mid-40s, and he spent the
next quarter-century in character roles, some highly visible, such as
his part in The Big Sleep (1946). But he also eventually turned up as a virtual
extra in pictures like Shenandoah (1965). He appeared often on television and
regained some fame in his role as Trooper Duffy in F Troop (1965). He died at
St. Joseph's Hospital in Burbank, California, following a long
illness.