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  1. Harry Joe Brown was born in 1890 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.As a producer, he had a partnership with director Budd Boetticher, actor Randolph Scott and screenwriter Burt Kennedy, which generated a series of five westerns between 1957 and 1960 (The Tall T, Decision at Sundown, Buchanan Rides Alone, Ride Lonesome, Comanche Station) via a company he created with Scott which eventually became ...

  2. Harry Joe Brown. Producer: The Winner. Harry Joe Brown got his start in the theater, where he was an actor and director. He went to Hollywood and became a director--mostly of second features--at Universal Pictures in 1930, then went over to Paramount from 1932 to 1933.

    • Producer, Director, Additional Crew
    • September 22, 1890
    • Harry Joe Brown
    • April 28, 1972
  3. Nov 23, 2005 · "Harry Joe Brown Jr. was born Sept. 1, 1934, in Beverly Hills and grew up there. His mother, Sally Eilers, starred in movies with Buster Keaton and Spencer Tracy. His father, for whom he was named, produced many movies for RKO, Warner Bros. and 20th Century Fox, among other studios.

  4. Harry Joe Brown. Producer: The Winner. Harry Joe Brown got his start in the theater, where he was an actor and director. He went to Hollywood and became a director--mostly of second features--at Universal Pictures in 1930, then went over to Paramount from 1932 to 1933.

    • September 22, 1890
    • April 28, 1972
  5. Apr 29, 1972 · PALM SPRINGS, Calif., April 28 (UPI)—Harry Joe Brown, producer and director of many Western and adventure motion pictures, died apparently of heart attack today at his home at the age of 78.

  6. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Harry Joe Brown (September 22, 1890 – April 28, 1972) was an American film producer and supervisor who was also a theatre and film director. Harry Joe Brown was born in 1890 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. As a producer, he had a partnership with director Budd Boetticher, actor Randolph Scott and screenwriter Burt Kennedy, which generated a series of five ...

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  8. Aug 6, 2021 · But beginning with Seven Men from Now, Boetticher and Scott—often in collaboration with the veteran producer Harry Joe Brown and the young screenwriter Burt Kennedy—made a series of westerns in which everything seemed to fit perfectly, nothing too loose and nothing too tight. These movies, known collectively to film critics and scholars as the Ranown cycle (after Scott and Brown’s ...