Howard Bretherton(1890-1969)
- Director
- Editor
- Additional Crew
Former propman Howard Bretherton was one of the legion of unknown
directors who made the films--mostly westerns--that generations of kids
trudged to see at the Saturday afternoon matinées. Bretherton's long
career as an action/western director began in the late 1920s and ended
more than 25 years later. In between he ground out scores of cowboy
flicks, action/adventure yarns, serials, and just about anything anyone
would hire him for. He made films the way "B" picture producers wanted
them made--fast, with a minimum of fuss and within budget. The fact
that Bretherton was also an editor--a skill he passed on to his son,
David Bretherton, who was an editor for
more than 40 years--who could cut "in the camera" must have added to
his desirability in the eyes of producers. Bretherton was one of the
directors of the long-running "Hopalong Cassidy" series, and also spent
a lot of time at Warner Bros. cranking out many of that studio's gritty
little action pictures. Unlike many of his fellow "B" directors who
turned to series television toward the end of their careers, Bretherton
stayed mostly in features until his retirement in 1952, with only the
occasional venture into episodic TV.