Born in 1898, Edward Bartlett Cormack wrote his first play as a nineteen year-old college student before taking a job as a newspaper reporter. In 1927, he wrote The Racket as a stage play; a year later he created the silent screen version of the story for Howard Hughes. The film was nominated for a best picture award in 1929. Bartlett would go on to write twenty-five plays and screenplays before his death in 1944.
Leslie Bradley was a British character actor, born in Aldershot, England in 1907. Best known for his strong supporting roles in films of the 1950s, including The Crimson Pirate (1952) and The Conqueror (1956), Bradley moved to television in the 1960s. He died in California in 1974.
American actor of European descent. Most widely known for playing a Native American character on the CBS television show Yancy Derringer. He was generally well-received by the Pawnee Nation of Oklahoma at the time; they believed that he made a sincere effort to accurately represent their culture and language. He died in 2000.
Source:
Rowan, Terry M. Who's Who In Hollywood! N.p.: Lulu.com, 2015, pg. 391.
Another young star who got her start in silent films, Elizabeth "Betty" Bronson was born in Trenton, New Jersey in 1906. She is best known for portraying Peter Pan in the 1924 silent film of that name. She was chosen for the role over more well-known actresses by the story's author, J. M. Barrie. Following the success of Peter Pan, she continued acting in silent and sound films until 1933, when she married and retired to private life. In 1961, Bronson returned to roles on stage, in film, and on television; she died in 1971.
Cliff Broughton was born in Iowa in 1898 and resident in Los Angeles, California by 1924. In 1925, he is credited with his work as production manager in his first film, The Red Kimono. He worked primarily on independent productions until 1942, when he took the role of production supervisor for RKO/Hughes Productions. As a director, he made his last film, The Bat, for Universial Studios in 1959. Broughton died in 1979.
Thomas Putnam Buckingham was born in Chicago, Illinois in 1894. His family moved to Los Angeles, California around 1910, and Buckingham was working as a camera operator for the Triangle Film Company by 1917. Between 1920 and 1932, Buckingham directed over twenty films and wrote screenplays for fifty more, including Howard Hughes' air comedy Cock of the Air. He died from surgical complications in 1934.
Source:
The Long Beach Sun. "Movie Director Dies". Long Beach, California. 07 Sep 1934. Pg. 12
Walter Leland Catlett was born to a locally prominent San Francisco, California family in 1889. He won his first stage role as a thirteen year-old in a comedic opera; this early stage career lasted over twenty years. He moved to Hollywood in the early 1920s to make films and by 1930 was in demand as a character actor. After a foray behind the camera, directing a series of comedy shorts for RKO, Catlett returned to acting. His film career spanned another thirty years and 163 films. Catlett died in 1960.