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Burt Kennedy (September 3, 1922 - February 15, 2001) was an American screenwriter and director known for mainly directing film Westerns. After World War II service in the 1st Cavalry Division, Muskegon, Michigan-born Kennedy found work writing for radio, then used his training as a cavalry officer to secure a job as a fencing trainer and fencing stunt doubles in films. That led to Kennedy being hired to write for a television program with a fencing theme for John Wayne's Batjac productions. Although the TV program was never produced it led the young writer to write screenplays for a number of Batjac films starting with the 1956 film Seven Men from Now. In the 1960s, after also becoming a film director, Kennedy moved on to write for western television programs.
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Directing
68
Male
1922-09-03
Muskegon, Michigan, USA
Burton Raphael Kennedy, Burton Kennedy
Wayne Train
Big Guns Talk: The Story of the Western
John Wayne - Eine amerikanische Legende
The Three Musketeers
The Making of Comanche
Suburban Commando
Support Your Local Sheriff!
Hannie Caulder
The Rounders
The War Wagon
Return of the Seven
Ride Lonesome
The Train Robbers
The Killer Inside Me
All the Kind Strangers
The Money Trap
Young Billy Young
Dirty Dingus Magee
Support Your Local Gunfighter
The Good Guys and the Bad Guys
More Wild Wild West
The Wild Wild West Revisited
Where the Hell's That Gold?!!?
Welcome to Hard Times
The Deserter
The Trouble with Spies
Mail Order Bride
Sidekicks
Big Bad John
The Canadians
Louis L'Amour's Down the Long Hills
The Alamo: Thirteen Days to Glory
Once Upon a Texas Train
Kate Bliss and the Ticker Tape Kid
Concrete Cowboys
Wolf Lake
Comanche
Six Black Horses
Shootout in a One-Dog Town