Jack Buetel

Personal Info

Known For

Acting

Known Credits

12

Gender

Male

Birthday

1915-09-05

Deathday

1989-06-27 (73 years old)

Place of Birth

Dallas, Texas, USA

Also Known As

  • Jack Beutel
  • Warren Higgins

Jack Buetel

Biography

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jack Buetel (September 5, 1915 – June 27, 1989) was an American film and television actor.

Born in Dallas, Texas, Buetel moved to Los Angeles, California in the late 1930s with the intention of establishing a film career. Unable to find such work, he was employed as an insurance clerk when he was noticed by an agent who was impressed by his looks.

Introduced to Howard Hughes, who was about to begin filming The Outlaw, Buetel was signed to play the lead role as Billy the Kid, with the previously signed David Bacon being dropped from the film. Hughes also signed another newcomer, Jane Russell, for the female lead, and realizing the inexperience of his two stars, also signed veteran actors Thomas Mitchell and Walter Huston.

Buetel was signed to a standard seven-year contract at $150 per week and was assured by Hughes that he would become a major star. Filmed in late 1940 and early 1941, The Outlaw officially premiered in 1943 but was not widely seen until 1946. It was notable for suggesting the act of sexual intercourse, uncommon in mainstream movies of the era, and for allowing characters to "sin on film", without a suitable punishment also being depicted, in violation of the Production Code. Much of the publicity surrounding the release of the film focused on Jane Russell, and she established a solid film career, despite critics giving her performance in The Outlaw poor reviews.

Buetel's performance was also highly criticised, and he languished with Hughes refusing to allow him to work. The director Howard Hawks tried to secure his services for the film Red River (1948), but after Hughes refused to allow Buetel to take part, Montgomery Clift was chosen and Clift went on to an active film career.

In 1951 Buetel appeared in Best of the Badmen, his first film appearance in eleven years. Over the next few years he appeared in five more films, and made infrequent appearances on television. In 1956, he landed the role of 41-year-old Jeff Taggert in Edgar Buchanan's syndication western series, Judge Roy Bean. Others who appeared regularly in the 39-episode series, set in Langtry, Texas, were Jackie Loughery, X Brands, Tristram Coffin, Glenn Strange, and Lash La Rue. Buetel's last acting role was in a 1961 episode of Wagon Train. He also appeared as himself in the 1982 Night of 100 Stars television special.

He died in Portland, Oregon, and was buried at Portland Memorial Park.

Description above from the Wikipedia article Jack Buetel, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Known For

The Outlaw
5.4%

The Outlaw

Feb 5, 1943

Maverick
6.8%

Maverick

Sep 22, 1957

Best of the Badmen
6.5%

Best of the Badmen

Aug 9, 1951

Lawman
5.4%

Lawman

Oct 5, 1958

Hawaiian Eye
5.2%

Hawaiian Eye

Oct 7, 1959

Jesse James' Women
4.4%

Jesse James' Women

Sep 4, 1954

Rose of Cimarron
5.0%

Rose of Cimarron

Jan 28, 1952

Night of 100 Stars
6.5%

Night of 100 Stars

Mar 8, 1982

The Half-Breed
5.0%

The Half-Breed

May 3, 1952

Judge Roy Bean
5.0%

Judge Roy Bean

Sep 1, 1955

Mustang!
0.0%

Mustang!

Mar 14, 1959

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Acting

2006
Jane Russell - Der Star aus dem Heu as Self (archive footage)
1982
Night of 100 Stars as Self
1959
Hawaiian Eye as Dr. Eliot (as Jack Beutel)
1959
Mustang! as Gabe
1958
Lawman as Ryder (as Jack Beutel)
1957
Maverick as Phillips (as Jack Beutel)
1955
Judge Roy Bean
1954
Jesse James' Women as Frank James
1952
The Half-Breed as Charlie Wolf
1952
Rose of Cimarron as Marshal Hollister
1951
Best of the Badmen as Bob Younger
1943
The Outlaw as Billy the Kid
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Jack Buetel