Buster Crabbe

Buster Crabbe

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Birthday: 
February 7, 1908 in Oakland, California, USA
Birth Name: 
Clarence Linden Crabbe
Height: 
185 cm
Buster Crabbe graduated from the University of Southern California. In 1931, while working on That's My Boy (1932) for Columbia Pictures, he was tested by MGM for Tarzan and rejected. Paramount Pictures put him in King of the Jungle (1933) as Kaspa, the Lion Man (after a book of that title but clearly a copy of the Tarzan stories). Publicity f... Show more »
Buster Crabbe graduated from the University of Southern California. In 1931, while working on That's My Boy (1932) for Columbia Pictures, he was tested by MGM for Tarzan and rejected. Paramount Pictures put him in King of the Jungle (1933) as Kaspa, the Lion Man (after a book of that title but clearly a copy of the Tarzan stories). Publicity for this film emphasized his having won the 1932 Olympic 400-meter freestyle swimming championship and suggested a rivalry with Johnny Weissmuller. Producer Sol Lesser wanted Crabbe for an independent Les nouvelles aventures de Tarzan l'intrépide (1933), though he first had to get James Pierce to waive rights to the part already promised to him by his father-in-law, Edgar Rice Burroughs. The film was released as both a feature and a serial; most houses showed only the first serial episode, which critics panned as a badly organized feature. Just prior to the film's release, Crabbe married his college sweetheart and gave himself one year to either make it as an actor or start law school at USC. Paramount put him in a number of Zane Grey westerns, then Universal Pictures gave him the lead in very successful sci-fi serials (Flash Gordon, Buck Rogers) from 1936 to 1940. In 1940, he began a string of Billy the Kid westerns for low-budget (very low-budget) studio PRC. After World War II, he devoted much of his time to his swimming pool corporation and operation of a boys' camp in New York. In 1950, he made the serials Pirates of the High Seas (1950) and King of the Congo (1952). In addition, he was very active on television in the 1950s. In 1953, he hosted a local show in New York City that featured his serials. He played the title role in the adventure series Captain Gallant of the Foreign Legion (1955). During television's "Golden Age", he had several "meaty" lead roles on such weekly anthology series as "Kraft Theater" ("Million Dollar Rookie") and "Philco Television Playhouse" ("Cowboy for Chris") He later returned to western features to play Wyatt Earp in Le pays des sans-loi (1958) and gave a stellar performance. Buster Crabbe died at age 75 of a heart attack on April 23, 1983. Show less «

Buster Crabbe's FILMOGRAPHY

These Amazing Shadows

HD

Action Heroes of Movies And T.V.: A Campy Compilation

SD

Buck Rogers in the 25th Century - Season 2

EPS11

B.J. and the Bear - Season 3

EPS15

The Alien Dead

SD

Buck Rogers in the 25th Century - Season 1

EPS21

B.J. and the Bear - Season 1

EPS12

B.J. and the Bear - Season 2

EPS21

Arizona Raiders

HD

The Red Skelton Show - Season 1

EPS32

Flash Gordon Conquers the Universe

SD

Buck Rogers - Season 1

EPS12

Flash Gordons Trip to Mars

SD

Flash Gordon

SD

Search for Beauty

HD

Tarzan the Fearless

SD
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